1. Can’t get there from here | Social Signal

    Can’t get there from here | Social Signal

  2. VintageSeattle.org

    VintageSeattle.org

  3. Look closely.
Emma Hack : : Body Artist

    Look closely.

    Emma Hack : : Body Artist

  4. My much less exciting desktop, annotated.
Edited to fix the name of one of my menu apps. Because I’m a little OCD like that.

    My much less exciting desktop, annotated.

    Edited to fix the name of one of my menu apps. Because I’m a little OCD like that.

  5. Well, they made an awesome promotional pack, but didn’t include any 1920x1200 for us widescreeners. So I did, and you can download them here.
SuicideGirls Promo Pack

    Well, they made an awesome promotional pack, but didn’t include any 1920x1200 for us widescreeners. So I did, and you can download them here.

    SuicideGirls Promo Pack

  6. UK Government Apologizes for Appalling Treatment of Turing →

    “On behalf of the British government, and all those who live freely thanks to Alan’s work I am very proud to say: we’re sorry, you deserved so much better.”

    Almost 60 years after his death, the UK Government has apologized for how Alan Turing was treated after World War II.

    Turing is widely considered to be the father of modern computing. He was the first person to propose the notion of a “Universal Turing Machine”; a single device that could perform the tasks of many others. We now refer to it as machine that is programmable — Turing invented the concept of software and many of us owe our livelihoods to his foresight. He was also responsible for the Turing test; an assessment of a machine’s ability to demonstrate intelligence that is still referenced by AI researchers today.

    However, Turing was best known for his cryptanalysis work at Bletchly Park in the UK. He contributed several ideas that helped the British Government translate Enigma machine messages sent by German naval intelligence. His work with Tommy Flowers resulted in Colossus, the world’s first programmable electronic computer.

    Bletchly Park projects probably shortened the war by several years, but Turing’s work remained secret until the 1970s. Although he was awarded the OBE for his services during the war, the UK Government ordered the destruction of all computing equipment and research notes.

    Turing was homosexual and lived at a time when it was illegal and considered to be a mental illness. In 1952, he was convicted of “gross indecency” and sentenced to a choice of jail or chemical castration. He chose the latter and, two years later, died of cyanide poisoning.

  7. 4th & Westlake. This entire blog is like a love letter to Seattle, and it makes me fall for this city all over again.
VintageSeattle.org

    4th & Westlake. This entire blog is like a love letter to Seattle, and it makes me fall for this city all over again.

    VintageSeattle.org

  8. Lit Map of Frisco

    Lit Map of Frisco

  9. My daughter was exposed to swine flu at her father’s house all last week. Every time she comes near me I check her forehead for a fever. One of my greatest fears is losing her to some strange and preventable sickness, because of our own slipshod parenting.
PostSecret

    My daughter was exposed to swine flu at her father’s house all last week. Every time she comes near me I check her forehead for a fever. One of my greatest fears is losing her to some strange and preventable sickness, because of our own slipshod parenting.

    PostSecret

  10. The Grownup’s Guide to Indie Rock →

    Suitable for those 23 and older.

  11. Today I was fired from Barnes and Noble because a customer complained that I had stocked Christian Bibles in the fiction section.

    — One Sentence archive - story #3286

  12. Entitled “Put On a Happy Box”.
Michael Sieben : Burstoid

    Entitled “Put On a Happy Box”.

    Michael Sieben : Burstoid

  13. Bookmark : Burstoid

    Bookmark : Burstoid

  14. Robin Williams via Burstoid

    Robin Williams via Burstoid

  15. Shackle, an 11-year-old African lioness rode out the hurricane in the First Baptist Church of Crystal Beach, in Cyrstal Beach, Texas on Sept. 16, 2008. 
One year after Hurricane Ike - The Big Picture

    Shackle, an 11-year-old African lioness rode out the hurricane in the First Baptist Church of Crystal Beach, in Cyrstal Beach, Texas on Sept. 16, 2008.

    One year after Hurricane Ike - The Big Picture