Monday, February 28, 2011
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Sunday, February 27, 2011
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Friday, February 25, 2011
Are Beauty Contests Harmful?

Thursday, February 24, 2011
Quote About Cell Phones
In the journal "The Debate" No. 163, Jerome Batout focuses on the psychological causes of the success of Facebook
"In the absence of institutionalized conflict lies the success Facebook. (...) The only possible relationship is friendship. (...) An event conflict is systematically sterilized, neutralized. "
" Is it safe to project regularly a social space that systematically represses the size of dissent? "
" The conflict is part of the lives of men, among them, and in them. (...) Without these conflicts, no social life. (...) For democracy to live, it needs citizens who assume the dimension of the conflict, so that is open the door to compromise. "
Source: Stéphane Dreyfus lacroix; com
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Lauren London 2010 Hair
by Antonio A. Casilli (EHESS, Paris)
"My speech will focus on the social structures that users of communication networks online (including the Web and social media) to help implement. I would like to show that over the past decade, scientific understanding of the modes of sociability based on the Internet has dramatically increased, and public policy related to the Internet, its regulation and governance, must take into account these developments.
But where are the pariahs of the computer?
Early assessments of the social impact of ICT (Information and Communication) at the micro level (that is to say, at the user level) date from the early 70's and insist on the negative effects of these technologies. The beginnings of computer culture has emerged from the stereotype of hacker, computer geek uncomfortable in social interactions, isolated by giant calculating machines which alienate and cut of his fellows. This characterization goes back to before the Internet. In Computer Power and Human Reason: From Judgement to Calculation (1976), Joseph Weizenbaum portrays the subculture of programmers monomaniacal - or, as he calls, "computer bums". It is "fanatical students," who "work to exhaustion, twenty or thirty hours. When they think about eating, they are refueling at home: coffee, cola, sandwiches. [...] Their development neglected, approximate their hygiene, their contempt of the comb and razor, testify to the few cases they do with their bodies and the world in which they operate. They exist, at least when at the computer, by and for the computer. "
From that first appear and for many years, public opinion Current is almost always associated with computer use and social isolation. Cultural analysts, writers and commentators have grown this shot. The novelist William Gibson, cyberpunk culture icon, is known for having created Neuromancer (1984) the character of Case, a cyber-dependent incapable of functioning in a social context offline. "(...)
> read more about OWNI
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Call lyrics for the Real-Virtual Journal No. 3
After interviewing digital as texture in its handy extension (No. 1) and the virtual in relation to the context of the everyday (No. 2), the online journal Real-Virtual proposes to rethink the "new technologies" through the concept of " Archaeology. In addition to updating their research innovative specificity, this third edition test the hypothesis of a recent grounding of these devices, beyond the limits of the contemporary era. This question is open reflections multidisciplinary and will be particularly informed by references to artistic approaches to both contemporary and not current, making visible links with other times.
"Archaeology" is derived from the Greek Arkhe , which means origin: both the point of beginning, end, the principle , which contains in itself its upcoming deployment, and command, the sovereign power, which sets the laws, which is authoritative. The archaeological perspective and presents his subject, questioning its relationship to time, its essentiality, and what determines its layout. How can we expect an archeology of new technologies which, by its very name, are defined present in a break with the past, and who disclose as simple praxis?
But in a number of artistic approaches, it appears that the stories, theories and observations on the origin of man are reinvested by the use of new technologies. Understand how such a work of Bill Viola where biblical scenes are revisited throughout the videographic slowed, that of Daniel Lee refigure the evolution from animals to humans through the hybridization of photographs, or the seams cell Nicole Tran Ba Vang manipulations that evoke it operates pixels on the screen? According to Agamben, the contemporary, whose posture is exemplary of the artist, is defined by a look out of touch, untimely, which detects the signs of this archaic taking the original meaning in the making. So rather than diversions, such references in earlier times would they reveal what is essentially at work, more subtle or invisible in the new technologies? How far can we extend the approach Couchot, which traced the history of technology in art, linking the virtual reality the prospect Albertian?
Despite an apparent break with the past, new technologies so they could start thinking in relative regularity? Following a Foucauldian archeology, can we discover deep strata discourse? How to question their emergence, their positivity, their power of repetition and weathering processes? The challenge is to redefine the new technology by updating the broader context in which they operate: without obscure the specific, the research will attempt to identify anchorages and to clarify the details. For example, starting from the Optical timeline Tony Oursler, to what could trace their beginnings story? The study of prototyping Michael Rees, inspired Hindu mudra as putti of the Renaissance, she would detect trends that run through timeless, even driving them? Would they also deploying a human essence, as suggested by the "portraits" of synthesis Catherine Ikam giving a new face to the themes of the report to another and identity? New technologies do they fit in a time when continuous or discontinuous, dynamic or static, linear, cyclic, or spiral, or crumpled (Serres)? Can they apply to the images as an anachronistic epistemology (Didi-Huberman)? They will prove to update (Deleuze), survival (Warburg), trace (Derrida), ruin (Benjamin), resonance (Bachelard) or symptom (Freud)?
> the journal site
Itunes Encountered Error System Not Been Modified
By Hubert Guillaud
"" The promise of the Internet of things is to build a loose network of heterogeneous devices connected together to form a unique and coherent. But in fact, this promise is a scam ", attacking, ball head, Vlad Trifa engineer at the Institute of pervasive computing Institute of Technology in Zurich on the scene Lift in Geneva. There are already more than a dozen technical protocols for communications and home automation machines machines (M2M), but they remain largely unknown programmers who are not experts on these topics. If industry standards built to control the Internet of Things, it is far from achieved a agreement. "The reality today is that we have instead built intranets for a number of things that a web of objects, each forming an isolated island some connected devices that have virtually no way to interact with each others ". The Internet of Things is a utopia. "(...)
> read more about InternetActu
Monday, February 21, 2011
Pajama Pattern Footed


June 26, 1994 and February 11, 2011
Sunday, February 20, 2011
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Posted to the directory of podcasts from the iTunes Store.
Geek Inc. 95: Geeks VS The Superbowl - Summary
Culture: Captain America
-Nuka-break-
Transformers 3-The Prodigies
-Cowboys & Aliens
Gallica
-Wolverine-japan-
Thundercats
-NGP
Sony Electronics:
-Hologram in airports
-Ubiquisys
-Noteslate
-iControlPad
Epic Weekend:
-Epic Win: Helmet-skimming
Epic Fail: Nintendo games and cheap ...
Twitter
@ @ cedricbonnet
julien_geekinc
Desert Eagle .50 Gold Softair

July 1965 and
Can You Get Foot And Mouth Diease Twice
Byook is a company who was born in 2009 in Valenciennes, France.
It was founded by three friends and associates specializing in gaming and digital entertainment.
The byooks are new ways of reading on the iPhone and iPad.
Using the magic codes and book and film, they depict the text. The images, animations and sounds give life to the classics and bestsellers today.
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Tom Delon'gs Bunny Tattoo
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Source: OWNI
"A few days after the leak of memos diplomatic American organized by Wikileaks, Sunday, November 28, 2010, the Directorate General for External Security (DGSE) has decided to activate a cell thinking about this new break in the information landscape. The French intelligence analysts are dedicated to answer two questions:
This flight suffered by the United States is likely to occur in France? The "model Wikileaks" - secret information transmitted from a whistleblower - can be emulated, here or elsewhere?
Soon, the men of the DGSE understand that they will answer "no" to the first question and yes to the second. Or rather, find strong arguments to support such responses. Exercise is not easy, because if the second assertion is very likely, the first is much less certain. It must be said that Le Monde, as four major foreign newspapers, then multiplies the front pages on the thundering "leaks" from Wikileaks. Continuously for at least two weeks. This annoys power.
the early days, a pretty chorus worthy of dinosaurs of the Cold War is heard to condemn "greater information leakage" ever held. Bernard Guetta, columnist International France Inter, in Libération vilifies "the press and transparency Informatics ; Europe 1 radio, journalist Catherine Nay compares Internet Stasi , " because nothing is never erased "; Hubert Védrine, former foreign minister and custodian of the temple Mitterrand, denounces a" Big Brother electronic . But the policy has also put his finger on the deep historical change. November 30, in Libération , he argues that "electronic security will be strengthened [and that] trade through other channels" . So, a wiki-leak hex Is it possible? "(...)
> read more about OWNI
Friday, February 18, 2011
No Prescription Catheter


September 13, 1991 and February 13, 2011
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by JC Feraud
" A ave you ever thought that will become your mails, tweets, Facebook page or your blog once spent passing? The ghost will haunt your digital double there in cyberspace forever blow automatic posts and "it's your birthday" on the "Social Network"? Your Twitter account he will continue to live powered by robotic posts in 140 characters or will it usurped by a relative or a stranger maintaining the illusion for your 4000 followers? Without thinking, you plant every day, every hour, sometimes every minute traces of your existence and your thoughts on the tens of thousands of servers that are the heartbeat of the network. and you will insure a digital posterity, a form of immortality unprecedented in the history of mankind. "(...)
> read more about the blog author
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Use Ipod As A Mic Fof Ps3
by Curt Hopkins
" Wael Ghonim the head of Google who played a key role in the recent Egyptian Revolution used a homemade product, Google Moderator, for help pave the way to the future of Egypt.
Entitled 2.0 Egypt, what do we need? Why do we dream? "page brings together 35,000 users to date. Together they surveyed more than 45,300 ideas.
Contributors to speak of many things. The errors of the past, their hopes for the future the best way to fight against corruption, or even the immediate needs in terms of reconstruction.
The most popular ideas topped the page. "(...)
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Shoots His Load On Her Chikan
Instruction To Make A Baby Carriage Diaper Cake
by Marie Benilde
" What role did New Media in the fall of autocratic regimes in Tunisia and Egypt ? Should we pay to Facebook, and social networks in general, the ability to mobilize crowds and generate opposition movements? Lessons politico-media revolts and revolutions "in line".
regime of Hosni Mubarak's act the most draconian in the world in terms of access to the Internet, the daily Liberation 28 January. Neither Burma in 2007, neither China in 2008, neither Iran in 2009 would have gone as far as Egypt faced the challenge on the web. Only the country's despot rais completely cut off access to the network for nine tenths of the 23 million Internet Egyptian with occasional or regular access to the Web - including five million subscribers to the network Facebook. This break could not prevent the fall of Hosni Mubarak. The Egyptian revolution, like that which preceded it in Tunisia, shows both the power of new media, the difficulty of their opposing conventional forces control and repression, and their articulation, too often undervalued, with traditional media such as television or newspapers. "(...)
How Big Were Your Breast When You Were 13

Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Answers For Lab Manual Biology


October 23, 1958 and February 13, 2011