Magic railroad scene remake the sheds
Here is my first attempt at a scene remake from the movie.
By: Milan Joshi
Continued here:
Magic railroad scene remake the sheds - Video
Magic railroad scene remake the sheds
Here is my first attempt at a scene remake from the movie.
By: Milan Joshi
Continued here:
Magic railroad scene remake the sheds - Video
12x20 Barn(Gambrel) Shed 2 - Shed Plans - Stout Sheds LLC
12x20 Barn(Gambrel) Shed with Metal Roof, 8 #39; Double Barn Style Doors, Windows, 8 #39; Treated Ramp and loft. http://www.stoutsheds.com/shedplans http://www.stout...
By: Stout Sheds LLC
Go here to read the rest:
12x20 Barn(Gambrel) Shed 2 - Shed Plans - Stout Sheds LLC - Video
Top Garden Wooden Sheds
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MStjRkw6cgY Top Garden Wooden Sheds Cheap Garden Sheds http://www.cheapgardensheds.org.uk have a fantastic range of garden she...
By: Cheap Garden Sheds
Read the original:
Top Garden Wooden Sheds - Video
Hiking looking for Idaho antler sheds. No sheds found in sh
By: Kellie Nightlinger
Link:
Hiking looking for Idaho antler sheds. No sheds found in sh - Video
Thomas Friends: James And The Fish At Tidmouth Sheds
James spent all night pulling the Flying Kipper. In the morning, all the engines laugh at James for smelling like fish! Sir Topham Hatt rewards James #39; hard w...
By: Thomas Friends
See original here:
Thomas & Friends: James And The Fish At Tidmouth Sheds - Video
Outdoor Sheds and Woodworking projects
In The Next 5 Minutes, You #39;ll Learn To Start Building Amazing Outdoor Sheds and Woodwork Designs The Faster and Easier Way ...With My *Step-By-Step Quality Sheds Plans Woodworking Course.
By: Millyat
PLoS ONE : Scorpion Sheds Tail to Escape: Consequences and Implications of Autotomy...
Scorpion Sheds #39;Tail #39; to Escape: Consequences and Implications of Autotomy in Scorpions (Buthidae: Ananteris). Camilo I. Mattoni et al (2015), PLoS ONE, http...
By: KeSimpulan
View original post here:
PLoS ONE : Scorpion Sheds Tail to Escape: Consequences and Implications of Autotomy... - Video
Mideast skull find sheds light on human ancestors #39; trek
A 55000-year-old partial skull found in the Middle East gives clues to when our ancestors left their African homeland, and strengthens theories that they co-habited with Neanderthals. Duration: 00:54.
By: AFP news agency
Continue reading here:
Mideast skull find sheds light on human ancestors' trek - Video
If you walk through the heart of Facebooks headquarters in Menlo Park, California, youll find a rather imposing two-story mural painted by artist Brian Barnecio. It looks like a massive totem pole filled with abstract shapes that resemble lips and eyeballs and boxes of ping-pong balls, and in the middle of it all, theres a single word: hack.
In the late 80s and on into the 90s and early 2000s, hack was a dirty word. It evoked danger and criminal activity. It was all about breaking into computer systems, telephone networks, and other vulnerable technology. People who knew their computer history disagreed, but the negative connotation took hold in the mainstream. But over the past decade, hacker has been rehabilitated. Today, it seems, everyone wants to be a hacker. Facebook has gone a long way towards renovating the word, building its massive successful company around the idea that hacking is a good thing, a way of transforming technologies into something better.
Hacking litters the Facebook campus. It was the subject of Mark Zuckerbergs pre-IPO manifesto, entitled The Hacker Way. And every year, the company runs a campus-wide competition called Hacktober, where employees break into each others systems with an eye towards making them stronger, not weaker.
Thanks to Zuckerberg, Facebook, and so many other ambitious software developers across Silicon Valley, hack is today a word with two meanings. We have white-hat hackers who build cool new apps and creatively blaze new paths, and we have black-hat hackers who brazenly compromise Sonys email systems.
Whats the true meaning of the word? Was that it originally positive or negative? The question is more complicated than you might think. We cant give you a definitive answer, but we have turned up a new piece of the puzzle. Before it entered the world of technology, the word carried a special meaning in the world of 19th century cock fighting. And for what its worth, it was a kind of attack, not a means of creation.
Hack dates back to at least the Middle English period (sometime between 1150 and 1500), and even in modern times, its evolution is rather byzantine. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, it arrived several hundred years ago, carrying another of its current meanings, namely to cut with heavy blows in an irregular or random fashion.
But the sense that that gets thrown around Silicon Valley is, as you might expect, distinctly modern. You can trace its roots to the M.I.T. Tech Model Railroad Club, which in 1955 added this note to its minutes:
Mr. Eccles requests that anyone working or hacking on the electrical system turn the power off to avoid fuse blowing.
If you browse through back issues of The Tech, MITs student newspaper, you can see it evolve, always maintaining the more playful meaning. A 1959 announcement for an upcoming Sigma Phi Epsilon circus party has one fraternity member promising to hack around in a gorilla suit. And today at the university, hacks are what they call great pranks, preferably displaying awesome technical virtuosity.
For those in the black-hat camp, however, the clincher comes in November 1963. Thats the first known reference to computer hacking, and in that case, it clearly describes a criminal trespass, with hackers connecting a PDP-1 computer to the MIT telephone system and launching whats known as a brute-force attack. The Techs headline: Telephone Hackers Active.
Read the original post:
This 125-Year-old Letter That Sheds New Light On the Word Hack
Jan. 31, 2015, 4 a.m.
CRAMMED in sheds, lovingly restored and eagerly tended are hidden treasures that tell the story of our regions dairying past.
CRAMMED in sheds, lovingly restored and eagerly tended are hidden treasures that tell the story of our regions dairying past.
Cobden Pioneer Dairy Park project manager Dennis Walsh believes expansion plans will create a major new tourist attraction while preserving the regions dairy heritage. 150129RG03 Picture: ROB GUNSTONE
Since 1998 the Cobden Pioneer Dairy Park has taken a leading role in preserving the areas rich history.
Spread across eight sheds on almost a hectare of land are countless agricultural relics restored tractors, an old bailer, herd testing equipment, mowers and a dairy dating from the 1880s are just some of the gems to be found.
The park opens every third Sunday and attracts bus tours and school groups, but a hard-working band of volunteers has a much bigger future in sight.
A $100,000 redevelopment is planned to put the pioneer park on the map.
Dairy park project manager Dennis Walsh said the revamp would include a new building to provide a grand entrance to the park, a caf, a museum display area and carparking.
We have so much here and we need more room to display it better, he said.
Follow this link:
Best yet to come for Cobden Pioneer Dairy park