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1200 hp GT-R from Boost Logic that I shot for indyrpm.com.
Follow me on Instagram @_sg_photography_
Nissan GT-R | Indianapolis, IN
Logic on the "Bobby Tarantino vs Everybody" Tour.
Photo by Anton Mak (@iAmAntonMak).
Taken on July 5, 2018 at Budweiser Stage.
Systematic Logic; Life is a sequence of events...
Art Photography - Original macro painting was specifically made to be photographed. Acrylic, powder paint, paper and various other substances for texture, color and reflectivity.
This I truly feel is something different in my portfolio of photographs, time consuming to create, unreliable results but at the end, very unique...a few people on Flickr might remember these as I did it back in the beginning of the year and at the end of 2008 (I removed it and I thought it was more fitting for deviant art). I'm already planning on restarting as I have the equipement and supplies to do it again and the other photography will have to wait a little while as I'm a bit burnt out; I need a little change in direction again...
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"Vote with Logic Not Emotion".
Not the time or place to get into studies that show people with neurologically disabled emotional capacity can't make any decisions at all. Vote with logic and emotion!
Symposium in Memoriam Helmut Veith, was dedicated to Prof. Helmut Veith's inspiring collaborative spirit leading scientists and science from the labs on the streets among the people. Helmut Veith, FMCAD co-chair in 2016, and co-founder of Vienna Center for Logic and Algorithms at TU Wien - VCLA, tragically passed away in March last year. The Symposium featured presentations of invited contributions published in the Special Issue of the journal on Formal Methods in System Design in Memoriam Helmut Veith. The Symposium concluded with LogicLounge on Teaching Logic in Computer Science with Michael Huth (Imperial College London) and Janos Makowsky (Technion – Israel Institute of Technology). More information on the event at: www.vcla.at
Cow Logic
They are dumb,
I think.
All those years behind
gates and stalls,
Eating silage.
Getting milked.
Females
listening to the voices
of feeders and milkers,
recovering phrases
the way mothers
overhear conversations
that rise for the backseat of the car.
What do cows do? my son asks.
The live out there in the green fields.
All they have to do is eat grass
and moo all day
and take care of their babies,
I say.
And maybe that's all
kids in backseats
need to know
about what we do-
we make milk
we have babies
we stand up a lot
we give ice cream
and look at the big sky
all day.
January Gill O'neil
From the book "Underlife" CavanKerry Press LTD.
There are 3 main chips on the board. The square BGA in the centre is the ARM processor. To the left are the flash ROM and RAM ICs.
screen shot of the output from the logic analyzer from the 2 data lines from the linear encoder AS5306 Board.
Video this corresponds to is here:
That's *eigth* DVD:s of content. According to Logic web site, that's about 46 GB of material alltogether.
One of the subsidiary panels adorning the nave ceiling at Peterborough Cathedral.
The late Romanesque / early medieval nave ceiling is a unique survival in England, an almost flat timber surface retaining its original painted decoration (completed in the early 13th century, c1230) for its entire length, consisting of a pattern of lozenges containing vignettes of mostly allegorical and symbolic figures (some of the subjects seemingly quite random following no real sequence). The painting has however undergone at least two major restoration in the 18th and 19th centuries which involved overpainting much of the original surface, so that whilst the effect is much as it presumably always was the detail of the figures often betrays the blurring hand of the restorer (a few figures appear to be almost entirely crude 18th century work, whilst others clearly follow the medieval designs more closely).
Peterborough Cathedral is one of England's finest buildings, an almost complete Romanesque church on an impressive scale sitting behind one of the most unique and eccentric Gothic facades found anywhere in medieval Europe. The church we see today is little altered since its completion in the 13th century aside from inevitable 19th century restorations and the serious depradations of Civil War damage in the mid 17th century.
The bulk of the church is 12th century Norman, retaining even its apse (a rarity in England) and even the original flat wooden ceilings of nave and transept. The nave ceiling retains its early medieval painted decoration with an assortment of figures set within lozenge shaped panels (mostly overpainted in the 18th and 19th centuries but the overall effect is preserved). The 13th century west facade is the most dramatic and memorable feature of the building, with three vast Gothic arches forming a giant porch in front of the building, a unique design, flanked by small spires and intended to be surmounted by two pinnacled towers rising just behind the facade, though only that on the north side was finished (and originally surmounted by a wooden spire which was removed c1800). The central tower is a surprisingly squat structure of 14th century date (with a striking vaulted ceiling within) and along with its counterpart at the west end makes surprisingly little presence on the city's skyline for such an enormous building. The final addition to the church prior to the Reformation is the ambulatory around the apse, a superb example of late medieval perpendicular with a stunning fan-vaulted ceiling.
Given the vast scale of the building it is perhaps surprising to learn that it has only had cathedral status since 1541, prior to that it had been simply Peterborough Abbey, but it was one of the most well endowed monastic houses in the country, as witnessed by the architecture. It was once the burial place of two queens, Katherine of Aragon lies on the north side of the choir and Mary Queen of Scots was originally interred here before her son James I had her body moved to the more prestigious surroundings of Westminster.
Sadly the cathedral suffered miserably during the Civil War when Parliamentarian troops ransacked the church and former monastic buildings in an orgy of destruction, much of which was overseen by Cromwell himself in person (which helps explain its thoroughness). Tombs and monuments were brutally defaced, and nearly all the original furnishings and woodwork were destroyed, along with every bit of stained glass in all the vast windows (only the merest fragments remain today in the high windows of the apse). Worse still, the delightful cloisters on the south side, once famed for the beauty of their painted windows, were demolished leaving only their outer walls and some tantalising reminders of their former richness. The magnificent 13th century Lady Chapel attached to the north transept (an unusual arrangement, similar to that at Ely) was another major casualty, demolished immediately after the war so that its materials could be sold in order to raise funds for the restoration of the cathedral following the Cromwellian rampage.
In the following centuries much was done to repair the building and bring it back into order. There were major restorations during the 19th century, which included the dismantling and rebuilding of the central tower (following the same design and reusing original material) owing to impending structural failure in the crossing piers.
What we see today is thus a marvel of architecture, a church of great beauty, but a somewhat hollow one owing to the misfortunes of history. One therefore doesn't find at Peterborough the same clutter of the centuries that other cathedrals often possess (in terms of tombs and furnishings) and there are few windows of real note, but for the grandeur of its architecture it is one of the very finest churches we have.
For more history see the link below:-
The question: "What does someone with baker's leg suffer from?"
The logic: "If a baker's dozen is one extra... then a baker's leg is... an extra leg?"
The correct answer: "Knock knees."
Logic Cookies for the 2017 National Day of Reason. I'm using the same symbol set from my 2016 Logic Cookies including a variety of symbols from the fields of symbolic logic, set theory, boolean algebra, algebraic logic, and calculus. But the cookies themselves have several improvements this year: they are now hexagonal to optimize the cookie-cutting process (and hexagons look cooler!), the cookie recipe is improved and tastes better, and this year's icing is proper royal icing designed for cookies that hardens to a nice glossy finish.