17 private links
justinator 32 days ago [-]
I graduated from art school.
I didn't go to art school to pursue a career in art. The art school I went to basically said, "don't" - it's a lottery anyways. The people who can make a living as an artist are a few dozen worldwide.
I went to art school to think laterally and critically. I went to have my own ideas of what creativity is exhaustively challenged.
You can also go to art school to make those social connections to the larger art world - the art world is nothing but a huge web of social ties. I found that part of it pretty dark and disgusting, really. I just wasn't willing to stab so many people in the back to get ahead.
My curriculum was not centered around skills and technique - you were to learn that yourself. It was centered around your ideas - get your ideas out of your head and onto a stage basically. The school and my program were influenced by the Black Mountain school in N. Carolina where individuals like B. Fuller, Merce Cunningham, and John Cage taught. Interdisciplinary. It was all a living experiment, and all my higher level courses had, "Experimental" in their name.
I don't regret one second of art school. You get out what you get in. I still would never, ever pursue a career as an artist. I've done lots of creatively amazing projects, but it wasn't for the money - this country I live in (USA) at least really doesn't find monetary value in the arts.
Pourquoi ?
- Parce-que nous sommes une radio libre et indépendante
- Parce-que nous sommes contre toute forme de publicité
- Parce-que nous sommes la radio des sans voix
Un site malveillant a contraint des amis sincères de FPP à créer un "contre site"
Ce site apporte des informations qui se trouvent déjà sur notre site : rfpp.net
Insupportable Facebook
Facebook est omniprésent, omniscient, omnichiant. La présence de liens Facebook sur les stickers, flyers, jaquettes, forums, et même dans les mails est insupportable. Toutes ces mentions fonctionnent comme autant d’impacts publicitaires pour cette marque américaine, multinationale de la vente de données personnelles, source illimitée d’information pour toutes les polices du monde, et parasite social qui transforme les internautes en clientèle zombie du "like".
MySQLTuner is a script written in Perl that allows you to review a MySQL installation quickly and make adjustments to increase performance and stability. The current configuration variables and status data is retrieved and presented in a brief format along with some basic performance suggestions.
MySQLTuner supports in this last version ~250 indicators for MySQL/MariaDB/Percona Server.
MySQLTuner is maintained and indicator collect is increasing week after week supporting a lot of configurtion sush as:
The demo page for Pure CSS speech bubbles.
For a detailed explanation view the CSS file. It is heavily commented.
All examples use simple, semantic HTML. No empty elements, no unnecessary extra elements, no JavaScript, no images (apart from that Twitter logo). Have a look at the source code.
The lack of good ways to vertically center elements in CSS has been a dark blemish on its reputation for pretty much its entire existence.
What makes matters worse is the techniques that do work for vertical centering are obscure and unintuitive, while the obvious choices (like vertical-align:middle
) never seem to work when you need them.
The current landscape of vertical centering options ranges from negative margins to display:table-cell
to ridiculous hacks involving full-height pseudo-elements. Yet even though these techniques sometimes get the job done, they don’t work in every situation. What if the thing you want to center is of unknown dimensions and isn’t the only child of its parent? What if you could use the pseudo-element hack, but you need those pseudo-elements for something else?
With Flexbox, you can stop worrying. You can align anything (vertically or horizontally) quite painlessly with the align-items
, align-self
, and justify-content
properties.
Learn by example: cssreference.io is a free visual guide to CSS. It features the most popular properties, and explains them with illustrated and animated examples.
Modern computer science is dominated by men. But it hasn't always been this way.
A lot of computing pioneers — the people who programmed the first digital computers — were women. And for decades, the number of women studying computer science was growing faster than the number of men. But in 1984, something changed. The percentage of women in computer science flattened, and then plunged, even as the share of women in other technical and professional fields kept rising.
What happened?
We spent the past few weeks trying to answer this question, and there's no clear, single answer.
But here's a good starting place: The share of women in computer science started falling at roughly the same moment when personal computers started showing up in U.S. homes in significant numbers.
These early personal computers weren't much more than toys. You could play pong or simple shooting games, maybe do some word processing. And these toys were marketed almost entirely to men and boys.
Dreams do come true — even for canines.
This week, a 7-year-old dog named Duke was elected mayor of Cormorant, a small town in Minnesota. The 12 residents each paid one dollar to cast their vote, local outlets report.
A Twitter poll from Wikileaks (26th of july) giving a good idea of the results that will happen 4 months later and who will become POTUS
License information for images from Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons
If you're new to this website, these are probably ten things you may not know about images on Wikipedia. We hope this gives you a better idea of the whats and whys of illustrating the world's most popular encyclopedia. If you're more experienced with images on Wikipedia, you probably know most of these—but maybe you've never seen them written down, or you don't know where to point other people who want a quick and easy (sometimes complicated) explanation of a subject.
This page sets out the policies towards images—including format, content, and copyright issues—applicable on the English-language Wikipedia.
This page is a gallery of featured pictures that the community has chosen to be highlighted as some of the finest on Commons.
Commons respects the legal rights of the subjects of our photographs and has a moral obligation to behave ethically with regard to photographs of people. The legal rights of the subjects constitute non-copyright restrictions on use of images. Country-specific laws may affect what content we can host, how it may be published, and whether consent is required to re-use it.
Exhibitions from our founding in 1929 to the present are available online. These pages are updated continually.
ESLint is an open source project originally created by Nicholas C. Zakas in June 2013. Its goal is to provide a pluggable linting utility for JavaScript.