(ie) Raising my tumblarity so i’m in the to 50,000 US blogs.
Power lines crushed with the weight of four days accumulated frost in Boucherville, near Montreal, January 1998. Part of an oddly mesmerizing exhibit by Paul Virilio titled The Museum of accidents.
“Contemporary civilization differs in one particularly distinctive feature from those which preceded it: speed. This situation brings in its wake a second feature: the accident. The progressive spread of catastrophic events do not just affect current reality, but produce anxiety and anguish for coming generations. Daily life is becoming a kaleidoscope of incidents and accidents in which we are endlessly running up against the unexpected.”
OH.MI.GOD
Max do you still remember this? Or maybe you will Chimayo. I love that place.I remember Max, Julia, Claire, and I just sitting there in silence listening to the marvelous crackle of electricity. Literally energy in the air. I long for the slopes.
I do remember this. I think I dared one of us to touch it, just to see if we could short circuit something and destroy the mountain. Or maybe that was going through my head. Also I remember Alec, you getting out when we played “tag” on the mountain and you didn’t want to go near the electric poles.
Two-year-old with same IQ as Einstein
Oscar Wrigley, a two-year-old with the same IQ as Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking, has become the youngest boy in Britain to be accepted into Mensa. He has been ranked in the 99.99th percentile of the population and has been ranked off the scale as the Stanford-Binet test cannot measure higher than 160.
Oscar’s father Joe, 29, an IT specialist from Reading in Berkshire, said: “Oscar was recently telling my wife about the reproductive cycle of penguins. I’m fully expecting the day to come when he turns around and tells me I’m an idiot.”
Except IQ has very little to do with practical intelligence in the long run. You should all read Outliers.
I have read the Outliers, and I to agree with Alec. Intelligence is necessary but there is a point of smart enough. After that its all about initiative. But that boy seems to have initiative. I think I related this to my history project on World Religions last week, somehow…
(via whoru)
am I your friend? We can solve this with math. Friend=awesome max=awesome therefore max=friend yayyy!
Unfortunately logic isn’t that simple.
(P » Q) » (~Q » ~P)
IT DOES NOT RESULT IN Q » P !!!!!!
(via whoru)
am I your friend? We can solve this with math. Friend=awesome max=awesome therefore max=friend yayyy!
Unfortunately logic isn’t that simple.
(P » Q) » (~Q » ~P)
IT DOES NOT RESULT IN Q » P !!!!!!
Question
What is the solution to getting songs stuck in your head, to disappear?
Hypothesis
We believe that listening to the song will result in that the song getting stuck in your head to disappear.
Materials
Procedure
Results
For our test subject Chimayo (listening to Paparazzi by Lady Gaga at a Homecoming Dance), we found that the results are successful. But the caused a side reaction of reminding him of another song that is now in his head.

Conclusion
Replaying the song is a successful method of getting rid of songs. Using our one test subject was a truly reliable way of proving our hypothesis. The adverse reaction can be just as bad as the beginning one.
TeeHeeHeeHee.
Chimayo endorsed: Oct 11, 2009 Not endorsed: October 11, 2009
Note I do not disaprove of the other one just after you give the first three letters you know which month you are talking about.