Shared posts

31 Aug 23:31

dutchbag: babyslime: cyprith: basedgaben: garconniere: tothe...



dutchbag:

babyslime:

cyprith:

basedgaben:

garconniere:

tothecabaret:

1930’s Teen Delinquents

i.e. life role models

I’m just gonna reblog this again because it’s one of my favorite pictures ever.

That girl in the chair seems like such a badass I bet she was the leader of the crew.

I want to write about these girls.

When I was a teenager my mother found my grandmother’s (her mother) school scrapbook. It included things like photos, notes, and a two page spread of every demerit she ever received over the course of her formal education. Each of them set aside with little tags like she was so fucking proud of them. They were all for things like, “Unladylike behavior” or, “Skirt too short” or, “refuses to listen to authority”. I loved that spread so much.

I always have to reblog this.

31 Aug 23:31

bibulb: rnightiest: every-kiss-begins-with-potassium: a)...















bibulb:

rnightiest:

every-kiss-begins-with-potassium:

a) perfect example of people discrediting clever idea & intelligence of a female due to her appearance, and
b) all these people wouldn’t have noticed her kit, which was her goal in the first place

Lol “she also wears sexy clothing to distract people from the bulky shoes” She’s a genius, really

What’s extra-wonderful is how much she calls attention to that in her notes on her Imgur for this project

So I got to thinking- if I had to do penetration testing on a corporate facility, how would I do it? Social engineering for one- I’m a natural honeypot. I think there’s a reasonable chance that a guy might invite me back to their office after a few drinks in the neighborhood? :-P But a handbag would be suspicious and leaving cell phones at the gate would be standard practice in any reasonably secure facility. My typical clothing does not leave room to hide anything- but that’s all the more reason they would not be suspicious of me. 

And then at the end : 

Edit: Normally I have to sort though about 50% identical replies to my posts on Reddit. For those flexing their fingers and getting ready to give me a hard time: Yes, they are fake. Yes, I feature them prominently and deliberately in everything I do. No, most of my projects do not have all that much technical merit- they are 90% silicone and 10% silicon ;-) No, if you point out the absolutely obvious no one will think you are insightful, edgy or cool. They will think you are 12. 

And that very last part deserves repeating with a call-out : 

No, if you point out the absolutely obvious no one will think you are insightful, edgy or cool. They will think you are 12.


I’m not 100% on board with her aesthetic in general, but meh - she doesn’t need me to be so. IT AIN’T FOR ME, IT’S FOR HER. 

And in the meantime, DAMN those are some awesome shoes. Go back to her general Imgur page for some of her other projects - I wanna see someone do her Hikaru skirt sometime soon.

31 Aug 23:28

Been waiting for this: the frame-by-frame animation of the New...



Been waiting for this: the frame-by-frame animation of the New Horizons Pluto flyby.

So fleeting but SO COOL. A view from a passing starship…

31 Aug 23:28

On Writing Too Much

by Ian MacAllen

The works of prolific writers are often viewed as less-than-literary, like the largely forgotten books of mystery novelist John Creasey, author of 564 books. Even serious novelists like Joyce Carol Oates, author of more than fifty novels, can write so much they lose the critics’ interest. Semi-prolific author Stephen King (fifty-five novels) looks out how we consider highly productive writers, and justifies writing and publishing a lot.

Related Posts:

31 Aug 22:47

Taking Donald Trump Seriously (Or Not)

by Rude One
Okay, fine, so we're supposed to pretend to take Donald Trump seriously and continue to indulge this fantasy so narcissistic that Kanye West has called him to take that shit down a notch. Well, then, let's do it. Let's say that Trump actually has proposals worthy of consideration beyond "Are you fucking kidding?" If you go to his website and click on "issues," there is still only one: immigration reform. That's it.

And if you read it, you'll see that Trump fully believes (or doesn't - it's hard to tell what shit he actually believes and what shit is just expediency for the moment) that "solving" the problem of undocumented workers will solve pretty much every other problem in the country, from terrorism to poverty. It's so fuckin' miraculous that no one ever thought before to scapegoat one group and order their purging. It cures all that ails a nation, no?

Beyond actual, seriously-stated proposals like that we should economically sanction and diplomatically isolate Mexico until that nation pays for a 2000 mile border wall, what's most fascinating are the links to articles that make up the "research" that's gone into the plan. No less than half a dozen times, Trump cites the conservative news port-a-potty, Breitbart, which means either he's paying good money in exchange for blow jobs and clicks or he just doesn't give a shit what his sources are.

'Cause, see, for example, Trump offers the kind of proposal makes stupid people smile stupidly because they think it's common sense: "Use the monies saved on expensive refugee programs to help place American children without parents in safer homes and communities, and to improve community safety in high crime neighborhoods in the United States." And he links to two Breitbart articles. For "high crime neighborhoods," he sends us not to crime statistics or even a report of criminality. No, we get to click over to an article that is a summary of a caller to Laura Ingraham's radio ear bleeder. No shit, it's a woman claming to be black and living in Baltimore who says she wants asylum from crime in her neighborhood, which may well be true, except if you're passing it off as news, you motherfucking confirm that it is a real person with a real opinion and not some fucknut who wants to hear their bullshit on the radio. But for a presidential candidate to use that as a demonstration of the effects of high crime rates is laughably absurd, if we still had the capacity to find all this absurd anymore.

On it goes. Another link is to a Breitbart article that is, shit you not, a reprint of an abstract of a study, along with the first paragraph of the introduction. In other words, the article's "writer" didn't even bother to read the fucking study about how immigrant workers affect native workers in the United States. One other frightening thing comes out of looking at Trump's "research." Most of these articles are about the effects of documented and undocumented workers. In other words, it's not just an attack on "illegals." It's an attack on immigrants coming here and taking our jobs or some such fucked-up lie.

This isn't an indictment of Breitbart. If you go to the circus, expect to see heaps of elephant dung. But it is an indictment of Trump, who doesn't give a fuck who his "experts" are. You been on TV saying shit Trump likes? You're hired. Who the fuck cares if you're associated with white supremacists. And it's an indictment of the knuckle-dragging yahoos and racist opportunists who see in Trump their idiot god who says what they really want said.

Sure, sure, we can pretend that these are serious proposals. But if we do, we have to seriously contend with the hatred from which they spring and the hatred that they provoke. We have to seriously understand that a large contingent of the Republican Party is no longer hiding its racist anger. Instead, it's out in the open. We thought that would make it less frightening, if we could see its face and hear its awful words.

It doesn't.
31 Aug 22:46

Car Model Names

CLIMAX is good, but SEXCLIMAX is even better.
31 Aug 21:54

How a Set of Rediscovered 19th-Century Japanese Doors Leads to Frank Lloyd Wright

by Claire Voon
The Japanese Phoenix Pavilion, known as the Ho-o-den, from the 1983 World's Columbian Exposition (photo via Wikipedia)

The Japanese Phoenix Pavilion, known as the Ho-o-den, from the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition (photo via Wikipedia)

Last week, a trio of late-19th-century Japanese sliding door paintings, originally believed to be missing or destroyed, finally emerged after years spent hidden in a Chicago Park District storage facility. Decorated with long-tailed phoenixes and painted by artist Hashimoto Gahō, the golden doors first appeared at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, which was an important six-month-long international event that attracted 27 million visitors from 46 countries. The rediscovery of these doors warrants revisiting the Japanese building in which they were originally installed: the Ho-o-den — or Phoenix Pavilion — which, though long gone, has a lasting albeit quiet legacy in US architecture, most notably in Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie Style.

(image via Wikipedia) (click to enlarge)

Frank Lloyd Wright’s early ideas on his Prairie House concept, as published in a 1901 issue of Ladies’ Home Journal. (image via Wikipedia) (click to enlarge)

According to Robert Karr Jr., a director at the Japan America Society of Culture, Wright first encountered Japanese architecture through visits to the Ho-o-den. The architect had moved to Chicago in 1887, just three years before construction of the Ho-o-den began on Wooded Island at the center of the fair. Gifted to the city by the Emperor of Japan, the Pavilion was first designed by Masamichi Kuru in Tokyo, where its parts were also built. It then made the journey via steamer to San Francisco, before traveling by rail to Jackson Park, where Japanese workmen pieced together the three buildings connected by covered walkways.

Wright, working on the Exposition’s Transportation Building, would have been able to observe the Ho-o-den’s construction from its start, as Robert McCarter notes in his account of Wright’s career. Additionally, Okakura Kakuzō, whose writings had “an enormous impact on Wright,” also penned the accompanying illustrated description of the Pavilion. Karr writes that the young architect, just 26 years old, had “a revelation” upon seeing the Ho-o-den that led him to explore new paths:

Soon after encountering the Phoenix Pavilion, Wright would begin experimenting with what he eventually called, “the elimination of the insignificant,” an approach that would lead him to transform American residential design by focusing upon principles inspired by Japan rather than formulas found in the West.

A scaled-down replica of an ancient wooden temple in Uji, near Kyoto, the Phoenix Pavilion adopted a symmetrical, cruciform plan and was actually meant to represent the mythological bird: a two-storied central hall signified the body while the right and left colonnades, the wings; a corridor at the back, accordingly, formed its tail. Wright’s own early Prairie rooms reflected this plan, reducing the established complex, boxy interiors at the turn of the century into expansive and fluid ones. As Kevin Nute describes in his study of the role of Japanese architecture in Wright’s work, the Ho-o-den’s central hall consisted of four main spaces. The configuration, he writes, is one that “appears to have quite logically given rise to its Western equivalent in the early Prairie House plan”:

[T]he jodannoma [private sitting area] became a sitting area directly in front of the hearth, which had replaced the traditionally decorative wall-alcove, the tokonoma; the tsuginoma [where one received guests] becoming a living area; the konnoma a dining room; and the shosai, a study or library.

The William Winslow House, whose construction began the same year of the Ho-o-den’s completion, reflects a similar layout, as does the Ward Willits House, designed in 1901. Many of Wright’s houses, like the Ho-o-den, are essentially symmetrical and build on a cruciform foundation, with some having additional, latched-on porches.

Top: Floor plan of the Ho-o-den (image digitized by National Diet Library); bottom: floor plan of the Winslow House (image via Wikipedia) (click to enlarge)

Top: Floor plan of the Ho-o-den (image digitized by National Diet Library, Japan); bottom: floor plan of the Winslow House (image via Wikipedia) (click to enlarge)

How much of a direct influence Japanese architecture actually had on Wright’s work has been widely debated: the architect, who in 1905 travelled extensively throughout Japan and also passionately collected woodblock prints, supposedly rejected any himself; many, however, do consider his viewing of the Ho-o-den as formative to the development of his Prairie style, and the similarities between the Eastern and Western structures are clear and go beyond those in basic configuration. As McCarter writes:

The effect on Wright of the “Ho-o-den” was immediate, and in his work he took as his own and transformed numerous of its aspects, including the cruciform plan; the horizontal proportions; the screen-like walls that slid open and closed under the continuous wrapping door-top beam; the lack of rigid interior room division; the overhanging, shade-giving roof, cantilevered outwards from its inset supports; as well as the tokonoma at the center, where Wright located the fireplace — all aspects of the interior space of the “Ho-o-den.” It is also interesting to note that this hybrid structure, joining as it does the temple and the house, may also have served as an inspiration for Wright’s tendency “to treat the dwelling as a form of temple to traditional family life — based around the ‘altar’ or central communal hearth.”

Room from the Central Hall of the Ho-o-Den, featuring shoji and a view of the found door paintings (photo digitized by National Diet Library)

Room from the Central Hall of the Ho-o-Den, featuring shoji and a view of the found door paintings (photo digitized by National Diet Library, Japan)

The Prairie homes’ embrace of the Ho-o-den’s features is observed through striking similarities like their overhanging eaves, but their translation of the Pavilion’s sliding door paintings — like the recently found trio — are less evident. Wright’s sightings of such paintings, also known as fusuma or shoji, interestingly influenced his design for, not doors, but windows. Writing for the April 2001 issue of Magazine Antiques, stained glass historian and restorer Julie L. Sloan explains:

Details of staircase window from the Isidore Heller House (image via Wikipedia) (click to enlarge)

Details of staircase window from the Isidore Heller House (image via Wikipedia) (click to enlarge)

The shoji of the earlier Fujiwara period, shown in the Ho-o-den, were “elaborately ornamented with paintings of various kinds.” Thus, the decorative quality of these shoji may have been the liberating concept that triggered Wright’s development of the screenlike, purely decorative, rectilinear Prairie window.

The windows in the 1897-constructed Isidore Heller House, for example, broke from the curvilinear patterns Wright previously favored. They were also the first for which Wright incorporated color, possibly inspired by the colorful sliding door paintings in the Ho-o-den, as Sloan surmises. The three fusuma found in the storage facility even attest to this vibrancy: relatively well preserved, they boast iridescent colors, especially on the plumages of the phoenixes.

The three sliding door paintings originally shown at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition (courtesy Chicago Park District) (click to enlarge)

The three sliding door paintings originally shown at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition (courtesy Chicago Park District) (click to enlarge)

Unlike the rest of the buildings constructed for the Exposition that were intentionally destroyed when the fair ended, the Ho-o-den remained until 1946, when it tragically burned in a fire started by two boys. It may be easy to glance over the Wright connection, as today only a Japanese garden (currently evolving) alludes to its site’s former occupant. The emergence of signs of the past like the fusuma are, therefore, necessary, occasional reminders: of a slice of history and, equally significant, of the diversity of works that have left —and continue to leave — lasting impressions on Western art.

The Phoenix Pavilion, or Ho-o-den, at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition (photo via Wikipedia) (click to enlarge)

The Phoenix Pavilion, or Ho-o-den, at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition (photo via Wikipedia)

Frank Lloyd Wright's Robie House, designed in 1908 (photo by Luiz Gadelha Jr. / Flickr)

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Robie House, designed in 1908 (photo by Luiz Gadelha Jr. / Flickr)

Dana_Elevation (wiki)

Plans for the Dana-Thomas House, built in 1902 (image courtesy Wikipedia)

Sliding door paintings in situ, from Okakura Kakuzō's catalog (photo digitized by National Diet Library)

Sliding door paintings in situ, from Okakura Kakuzō’s catalog (photo digitized by National Diet Library, Japan)

Study Room in the Ho-o-Den, from Okakura Kakuzō's catalog (photo digitized by National Diet Library)

Study Room in the Ho-o-Den, from Okakura Kakuzō’s catalog (photo digitized by National Diet Library, Japan)

Cover of Okakura Kakuzō's 1893 illustrated catalog of the Ho-o-den (digitzed by HathiTrust)

Cover of Okakura Kakuzō’s 1893 illustrated catalog of the Ho-o-den (image digitized by HathiTrust)

Bird's-eye-view of the 1893 World's Fair Exposition (image via Stuart Rankin / Flickr)

Bird’s-eye-view of the 1893 World’s Fair Exposition (image via Stuart Rankin / Flickr)

31 Aug 21:54

Implementation of ‘A Neural Algorithm of Artistic...





Implementation of ‘A Neural Algorithm of Artistic Style’

Data scientist Kai Sheng Tai has produced public available code to transform images into the style of various painters (as first seen in this paper I covered last Friday here):

This is a Torch7 implementation of the method described in the paper 'A Neural Algorthm of Artistic Style’ by Leon Gatys, Alexander Ecker, and Matthias Bethge.

You can access the code at Github here

[Original PK post on the subject here]

31 Aug 21:51

http://4erep-i-kosti.livejournal.com/4756749.html

Sophianotloren

Space Jam.



31 Aug 21:36

iraffiruse: Logan Paul street splits

Sophianotloren

Now my crotch hurts.

















iraffiruse:

Logan Paul street splits

31 Aug 21:34

Photo



31 Aug 21:34

Aragorn: I am Aragorn, son of Arathorn.

Aragorn: I am Aragorn, son of Arathorn.
Aragorn: This is Gimli, son of Gloin
Aragorn: And this is Legolas...
Legolas: he's fucking forgotten my dad's name
Aragorn: ...of the woodland realm
Legolas: oh my god
31 Aug 21:34

alex-v-hernandez: wormwoman

31 Aug 21:34

alex-v-hernandez: elysedc: The ultimate dad joke...





















alex-v-hernandez:

elysedc:

The ultimate dad joke compilation

wormwoman
31 Aug 21:31

5 Amazing Citizen Science Projects You Can Join Right Now #scienceprojects #science

by Jessica

NewImage

Via All That Is Interesting.

When a new word makes its way to the pages of the Oxford English Dictionary, something’s up. Such was the case with the term “citizen science,” which entered the English language canon in 2014. For those unfamiliar, citizen science draws on the power of the people to help make scientific discoveries. And these volunteers often do: in 2011, a puzzle-solving, citizen science game called Foldit made headlines when configurations found by the players led scientists to discover the structure of an enzyme that helps the AIDS virus reproduce.

Since then, the Internet has only continued to expand the possibilities for connecting curious people with projects that seek to understand our world. For those interested in exploring the great outdoors, some projects involve outdoor monitoring of plant or animal species. But even the most dedicated homebody can participate in these projects, many of which require nothing more than wifi and a set of eyes.

So take a seat in your favorite armchair, cozy up to your laptop screen, and join the ranks of the amateur gentleman scientists of yore in the following citizen science projects:

1. Season Spotter

If you have an Internet connection and a few minutes to click through pictures of plants, you can help researchers from Harvard University and the National Ecological Observatory Network figure out how climate change affects vegetation.

Phenologists, scientists who study the way that plant and animal cycles change from year to year, have a wealth of images collected from PhenoCams. But these cameras produce about 6,000 images every day – far too many for a single lab group to keep up with.

By answering just a few multiple choice questions, you can help scientists sort each image and figure out when the seasons are starting each year, which will aid researchers in eking out patterns or significant shifts within plant and animal cycles.

Read more.

31 Aug 21:31

EVERYONE STOP I JUST LEARNED A NEW EMOTICON

31 Aug 21:30

kateordie: meesherbeans: DYINGGGGGGGGG omg NO



kateordie:

meesherbeans:

DYINGGGGGGGGG

omg NO

31 Aug 21:30

alex-v-hernandez: clubjade: Star Wars is not here...



alex-v-hernandez:

clubjade:

Star Wars is not here for your armor misconceptions. In a response that’s getting some digital ink, the official Star Wars page’s reply to a clueless comment on Phasma’s armor. Just say no to actually dangerous boob-plates!

wormwoman
31 Aug 21:30

sirlightbulb: Do you ever just see the first sentence of a text message and just think “oh fuck no...

sirlightbulb:

Do you ever just see the first sentence of a text message and just think “oh fuck no I do not have time for this shit”

31 Aug 21:30

grampasimpson: y’all……. the simpsons predicted a donald trump...









grampasimpson:

y’all……. the simpsons predicted a donald trump presidency back in 1999

31 Aug 21:30

majestic-hysteria: ayelroyjetsonyo: Who the fuck is this...


cospobre la cosa


csopobre mistica


cospobre capitan america


cospobre groot


cospobre linterna verde


cospobre bella y bestia


cospobre goku


cospobre guille el se stree fighter


cospobre neo matrix y terminator

majestic-hysteria:

ayelroyjetsonyo:

Who the fuck is this kid

a genius

31 Aug 21:28

Dungeon Grind: Urge Support Dungeon Grind on Patreon!



Dungeon Grind: Urge
Support Dungeon Grind on Patreon!

31 Aug 21:28

tsukinofaerii:

31 Aug 21:26

ladyfabulous: tcfkag: allthingshyper: witchyroses: omjephilli...



ladyfabulous:

tcfkag:

allthingshyper:

witchyroses:

omjephillips:

witchyroses:

WHAT IS HAPPENING HERE?!??!??!

It’s quicksand. Quicksand is much thicker than water, which is why things sink so slowly. By that same logic, one can walk on its surface if you go fast enough and with little enough pressure, like skipping a stone on water.

THAT IS FANTASTIC

Non-Newtonian fluids, everyone.

As a child I believed that quicksand was going to be a much bigger problem in my life than it has turned out to be.  Little did I know I could defeat it by simply waddling like a penguin.

Same here! The 80s gave me unrealistic expectations on how much quicksand I would encounter in my life.

31 Aug 21:26

jackwhitevevo: once i was babysitting my neighbor’s 6 year old and she asked me why i was so ugly...

jackwhitevevo:

once i was babysitting my neighbor’s 6 year old and she asked me why i was so ugly and without thinking i said “i’m you from the future” and she cried for like 30 minutes

31 Aug 21:25

blvckery: vaporwave error grid leggingsS-XL$20





blvckery:

vaporwave error grid leggings
S-XL
$20

31 Aug 21:25

leaper182: kayla-bird: swanjolras: once upon a midnight drearyas i shuffled, coffee-blearyover to...

leaper182:

kayla-bird:

swanjolras:

once upon a midnight dreary
as i shuffled, coffee-bleary
over to a starbucks, which was open until four
while i studied, nearly napping
suddenly there came a snapping
as of someone gently rapping— rapping about cheaper stores
‘tis some kanye,’ i muttered, ‘rapping about this cheap store-
only kanye; nothing more.’

and yet still, his strength unsapping
he is rapping! he is rapping!
over coffeeshop intercoms from new york to jersey shore;
and his beats are so strange-seeming
that i think i must be dreaming
and i know that he is scheming to deliver raps galore.
and i ask him now: “who art thou, shopping thrifty, as if poor?”
quoth the rapper - ‘Macklemore!’

im crying

omg.

31 Aug 21:24

Shaniya |...



Shaniya | NY

http://rebelliousambition.tumblr.com/

Photographer’s IG: gordyy___

31 Aug 21:23

Churrch. (via qmcmca)



Churrch. (via qmcmca)

31 Aug 21:23

cheetofetus: I feel like this is a great example of racism in...





cheetofetus:

I feel like this is a great example of racism in the media. Both of these are reporting on the same event, but TMZ portrays Nicki as the “angry black woman”. First the choose the picture that makes Nicki look like she’s attacking, while Buzzfeed used a picture taken seconds before but portrays Nicki as much less aggressive. Then TMZ goes on to use buzzwords like “explodes” and then includes “You Bitch” in the headline, all to make Miley seem like the victim and to demonize Nicki. It’s the little things like this that change the story and leaves Nicki as the villain and lets Miley escape scandal unscathed. The same thing happened with Nicki and Taylor’s made-up “feud”.