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with 2 different style fronts and running the gainsborough 106 services in my stagecoach fleet.

We're happy for our images in this group to be used non-commercially with attribution.

The Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility hosted Women in Computing's "Introduce Your Daughter to Code" for the second time on June 16, giving daughters of staff members at ORNL a chance to engage in fun programming activities and code on the Cray XK7 Titan supercomputer. This year, 25 girls ages 10 to 18 participated in the labwide event.

 

OLCF User Support Specialist Suzanne Parete-Koon kicked off the event with an introduction to parallel computing and Titan before ORNL intern Dasha Herrmannova and ORNL postdoctoral research associate Anne Berres walked the girls through the basics of coding in Python.

 

Katie Schuman, a Liane Russell Distinguished Early Career Fellow, helped the girls use a program called fractalName to generate colored fractals—repeating patterns that form shapes—based on their names and ages. The fractals were displayed on the visualization wall in the Exploratory Visualization Environment for Research in Science and Technology, or EVEREST. The girls also used Schuman's Birthday Pi code to find their birthdays in the first 100,000 digits of the number pi.

 

"It was really exciting to see the girls' enthusiasm and curiosity when they were coding," Katie says. "Seeing them already thinking creatively about the code is the most rewarding thing to me."

 

After they coded on the leadership-class machine, the girls explored the interactive Tiny Titan, which features eight Raspberry Pi processors and provides a visual simulation of a liquid in space. Tiny Titan demonstrates how additional nodes in a compute system can increase the speed of a simulation.

 

Katie says the feedback WiC continues to receive about the event will inform future coding activities. "Some of the parents have already said the girls wanted to download everything and keep playing with the code when they got home," she says. "There is already a desire for the next phase. We will definitely continue running the same curriculum and possibly expand it in the future."

 

The following staff members contributed to "Introduce Your Daughter to Code:" Berres, Harken, Herrmannova, Parete-Koon, Schuman, Megan Bradley, Kate Carter, Amy Coen, Katherine Engstrom, Megan Fielden, Shang Gao and Ashley Nguyen.

On saturday 24th june we woke up, had breakfast and got ourselves ready. Then we marched to our target of the day: the OBA coal terminal of the Amsterdam harbour.

all-night coding session with tabascoeye

The Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility hosted Women in Computing's "Introduce Your Daughter to Code" for the second time on June 16, giving daughters of staff members at ORNL a chance to engage in fun programming activities and code on the Cray XK7 Titan supercomputer. This year, 25 girls ages 10 to 18 participated in the labwide event.

 

OLCF User Support Specialist Suzanne Parete-Koon kicked off the event with an introduction to parallel computing and Titan before ORNL intern Dasha Herrmannova and ORNL postdoctoral research associate Anne Berres walked the girls through the basics of coding in Python.

 

Katie Schuman, a Liane Russell Distinguished Early Career Fellow, helped the girls use a program called fractalName to generate colored fractals—repeating patterns that form shapes—based on their names and ages. The fractals were displayed on the visualization wall in the Exploratory Visualization Environment for Research in Science and Technology, or EVEREST. The girls also used Schuman's Birthday Pi code to find their birthdays in the first 100,000 digits of the number pi.

 

"It was really exciting to see the girls' enthusiasm and curiosity when they were coding," Katie says. "Seeing them already thinking creatively about the code is the most rewarding thing to me."

 

After they coded on the leadership-class machine, the girls explored the interactive Tiny Titan, which features eight Raspberry Pi processors and provides a visual simulation of a liquid in space. Tiny Titan demonstrates how additional nodes in a compute system can increase the speed of a simulation.

 

Katie says the feedback WiC continues to receive about the event will inform future coding activities. "Some of the parents have already said the girls wanted to download everything and keep playing with the code when they got home," she says. "There is already a desire for the next phase. We will definitely continue running the same curriculum and possibly expand it in the future."

 

The following staff members contributed to "Introduce Your Daughter to Code:" Berres, Harken, Herrmannova, Parete-Koon, Schuman, Megan Bradley, Kate Carter, Amy Coen, Katherine Engstrom, Megan Fielden, Shang Gao and Ashley Nguyen.

password : [pas-wurd] - noun. A secret word or phrase that one uses to gain admittance or access to information.

Protoype of Code controller with built in iPad/netbook dock

The Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility hosted Women in Computing's "Introduce Your Daughter to Code" for the second time on June 16, giving daughters of staff members at ORNL a chance to engage in fun programming activities and code on the Cray XK7 Titan supercomputer. This year, 25 girls ages 10 to 18 participated in the labwide event.

 

OLCF User Support Specialist Suzanne Parete-Koon kicked off the event with an introduction to parallel computing and Titan before ORNL intern Dasha Herrmannova and ORNL postdoctoral research associate Anne Berres walked the girls through the basics of coding in Python.

 

Katie Schuman, a Liane Russell Distinguished Early Career Fellow, helped the girls use a program called fractalName to generate colored fractals—repeating patterns that form shapes—based on their names and ages. The fractals were displayed on the visualization wall in the Exploratory Visualization Environment for Research in Science and Technology, or EVEREST. The girls also used Schuman's Birthday Pi code to find their birthdays in the first 100,000 digits of the number pi.

 

"It was really exciting to see the girls' enthusiasm and curiosity when they were coding," Katie says. "Seeing them already thinking creatively about the code is the most rewarding thing to me."

 

After they coded on the leadership-class machine, the girls explored the interactive Tiny Titan, which features eight Raspberry Pi processors and provides a visual simulation of a liquid in space. Tiny Titan demonstrates how additional nodes in a compute system can increase the speed of a simulation.

 

Katie says the feedback WiC continues to receive about the event will inform future coding activities. "Some of the parents have already said the girls wanted to download everything and keep playing with the code when they got home," she says. "There is already a desire for the next phase. We will definitely continue running the same curriculum and possibly expand it in the future."

 

The following staff members contributed to "Introduce Your Daughter to Code:" Berres, Harken, Herrmannova, Parete-Koon, Schuman, Megan Bradley, Kate Carter, Amy Coen, Katherine Engstrom, Megan Fielden, Shang Gao and Ashley Nguyen.

with stagecoach logos removed with nail pollish remover. now in my stagecoach fleet.

 

As promised here is the whole cover, so you can see the bar-code, it’s important... And also the table of content of the 152 (!) pages of Photo Analogies #3:

 

Large features:

Madagascar seen by Arnaud De Grave and Chris Huby, with splendid portfolios from Pierrot Men and Rijasolo,

Timeline, man within personal history and global History, a project achieved and in progress, already done by Arnaud De Grave and the CCCP group in Denmark 2010, and by BOP in 2012…

Beijing Lu, the mythical street crossing Shanghai, by Barthélémy Longueville,

 

Photoreportage with:

Champark, a theme park in Gaza by Chris Huby,

SOS Méditarranée, rescue boat for migrants, a topic sadly very attuned with our times, by Edouard Elias,

The walnut mill of Pinsot, in le Grésivaudan, by Jean-François Boujut, Arnaud Thurel and Jon Ellis

 

We collaborate with Thomas Lehne about Caffenol (film developing with instant coffee) with a long interview by Jon Ellis and pictures from Thomas and some BOP members. Then Jean-François Boujut shows his open-source pinhole camera.

 

BOP archives, this time with Arnaud Rivière and Arnaud Thurel.

Also we interviewed Christian Sauvan-Magnet from Le Pictorium agency concerning the role of film photography in photoreportage and Arnaud Thurel has a discussion with Bernard Plossu in a 16 pages long piece including unreleased pictures from Scotland.

 

And the traditional guest one-shots: Denis Uzdyaev, Edouard Beau, Benjamin Larderet et Brett Richardson.

 

We cannot wait to hold a copy in our hands...

 

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Comme promis voici la couverture en entier... avec le code barre en cadeau, ça manquait.

Voici le sommaire de Photo Analogies #3, 152 pages (couverture non comprise) de photographie 100% analogique :

 

Gros dossiers :

Madagascar vue par Arnaud De Grave et Chris Huby, avec de magnifiques portfolios de Pierrot Men et Rijasolo,

Le concept de Timeline, l’homme dans son Histoire et dans son histoire, projet déjà réalisé par Arnaud De Grave et le groupe de photographes CCCP au Danemark en 2010 et par BOP en 2012 et toujours en cours…

Beijing Lu, une plongée dans la rue mythique de Shanghai par Barthélémy Longueville,

 

Du photoreportage avec :

Champark, un parc d’attraction à Gaza par Chris Huby,

Le bateau de secour SOS Méditarranée et les migrants, sujet tristement d’actualité, par Edouard Elias,

Le moulin de Pinsot, dans le Grésivaudan, par Jean-François Boujut, Arnaud Thurel et Jon Ellis

 

Nous collaborons avec Thomas Lehne sur la technique du Caffénol (développement au café soluble), une longue interview menée et illustrée par Jon Ellis et des photos de Thomas et de quelques membres de BOP… En plus, Jean-François Boujut nous montre son sténopé open-source.

 

Quelques archives BOP avec Arnaud Rivière et Arnaud Thurel.

Nous interviewons Christian Sauvan-Magnet de l’agence Le Pictorium à propos de la place de l’argentique dans le photoreportage et Arnaud Thurel s’entretient avec Bernard Plossu dans un sujet incluant 16 pages de photos inédites d’Ecosse.

 

Sans oublier nos traditionnels invités en one-shot : Denis Uzdyaev, Edouard Beau, Benjamin Larderet et Brett Richardson.

 

Vivement que nous ayons un numéro tout chaud sortie de la presse entre les mains !

 

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Photographes ayant collaborés à BOP PA#3 / photographers in BOP PA#3:

Arnaud Riviere, Arnaud De Grave, Arnaud Thurel (oui oui it's a lot of Arnauds), Barthelemy Longueville, Jon Ellis, Jean-François Boujut, Amanda Thomsen, Jesper NinjaAxel Nielsen, Mike van der Poel, Louise Felding, Dave Stott, David Koji Kariyado Hansen, Pierrot Men, Rija Solo, Thomas Lehne, Edouard Elias, Chris Huby, Christian Sauvan-Magnet, Manoël Pénicaud, Bernard Plossu, Denis Uzdyaev, Benjamin Larderet, Brett Richardson, Edouard Beau

Nothing works yet, but at least things are talking.

Not a good photo but that dress code is so good I had to upload it.. and guess if I was nervous before entering.. and the reason was not Burberry!

 

Cambridge, England

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