Q&A: DoG!!!!!!!!!!?????????

Question by Laura R: DoG!!!!!!!!!!?????????

http://s303.photobucket.com/albums/nn126/lulugirl007/?action=view&current=l_2c0b1a06e12a9949a31e1

what kind of dog do you think this is?? we got her a couple of days a go at the humane society. she is about 1 year old and a female. she is really docile and very friendly. the human society said he might be a pit bull mix but they weren’t sure

what do you think???????

Best answer:

Answer by nova_queen_28
your link doesn’t work. Try again and I’ll check back later.

Add your own answer in the comments!


Distribution Religion

A few nice distribution images I found:

Distribution Religion
distribution

Image by AGoK
The Art Gallery of Knoxville
January 1-27, 2007

"Distribution Religion" was developed in 1973 by Chicago artists Dan Sandin and Phil Morton as a text to describe the schematic plans for Sandin’s Image Processor, an analog computer optimized for video processing. The "Distribution Religion" expressed a determined belief in the idea of free and open copying, which is a central aspect of the Chicago School and a notion that has begun to become important to many contemporary artists.

From January 1 – 27, The Art Gallery of Knoxville will examine situations of sharing and exchange provided by three contemporary Chicago groups: criticalartware, People Powered , and Temporary Services. Each of these artists have developed interests in distribution and it’s role as an important social / cultural concern.

criticalartware is a contemporary group led by artists jonCates, jon.satrom and bensyverson. A central part of their work involves the public distribution / presentation of interviews, video and text featuring the key players of early code or concept based Art. They are particularly interested in enabling "shared cultural resources connecting these conversations." In Knoxville, criticalartware will coordinate an electronic system for the sharing and exchange of this information – primarily through a custom computer interface.

People Powered is a Chicago group run by artist Kevin Kaempf. His work integrates itself socially, becoming a means for the distribution of physical tools. People Powered "adopts consumer culture’s aesthetic forms to distribute information about sustainable living practices such as community composting, recycling, and free public transportation." A recent People Powered exhibit at the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art highlighted prototypes for "Chicago Blue Bikes," in which junked bicycles are salvaged and rebuilt into a fleet of public bicycles. The Knoxville exhibition will become part of the project "Loop Limited: Recycled Paints" where unfinished cans of used paint are recycled/mixed together and redistributed into the community. Cans of paint will be available for free in the Gallery space.

The artists of Temporary Services are founders of the Chicago space "Mess Hall" and widely known for their public and social works. Often the group aims to "provide a network for the collection and distribution of artistic work going on looking at the line between art and ethics, power and art, and the role of the public." In Knoxville, the group’s Booklets, a large collection of self published material on a wide range of subjects, will be freely available. Alongside this substantial library, an example set of works given away at the Temporary Services event "Free For All" will be shown. "Free For All" was a public art project where multiples of many small objects were collected by the public within a cardboard box that acted as a portable, distributed exhibition.

Temporary Services: Free For All by Marc Fischer "Over 10,000 objects were given away! Over 50 artists, individuals and organizations contributed work that was distributed for free at this one-day-only event. Artists’ work was integrated with a wide range of material submerging the work in a broader context than it normally enjoys. Religious tracts, booklets, flyers, stickers, matchbooks, posters, audio tapes, and postcards were among the items given away. … 100 boxes (like the one pictured above) were provided for free. Visitors were invited to take anything they wanted making their own portable exhibitions to take with them."

"Free For All" is a self-replicating exhibit, one which is shared and exchanged in both the collecting and the viewing of it. Through "make-shift methods of distribution and display that are commonly found in flea markets, garage sales and craft shows" Temporary Services created an alternative, distributed exhibition that enabled a public to engage with cultural information on a level of personal ownership. The exhibition dealt not only with the free use of Art – but the creation of free and open systems as Art.

On the night of Friday, January 5, 2007 members of criticalartware will be involved in creating a free computer art and cultural event, (A) r4WB1t5 micro.Fest at the Pilot Light on January 5th. "(A) r4WB1t5 micro.Fest in Knoxville parallel processes The Art Gallery of Knoxville and the Pilot Light nightclub with intersections of New Media Art, realtime audio video processing, computer art geekery, digital punk rock, noise music, the Blues and freak folktronics!" Please join us to celebrate the Distribution Religion opening at both The Art Gallery of Knoxville and The Pilot Light.

Distribution Religion
distribution

Image by AGoK
The Art Gallery of Knoxville
January 1-27, 2007

"Distribution Religion" was developed in 1973 by Chicago artists Dan Sandin and Phil Morton as a text to describe the schematic plans for Sandin’s Image Processor, an analog computer optimized for video processing. The "Distribution Religion" expressed a determined belief in the idea of free and open copying, which is a central aspect of the Chicago School and a notion that has begun to become important to many contemporary artists.

From January 1 – 27, The Art Gallery of Knoxville will examine situations of sharing and exchange provided by three contemporary Chicago groups: criticalartware, People Powered , and Temporary Services. Each of these artists have developed interests in distribution and it’s role as an important social / cultural concern.

criticalartware is a contemporary group led by artists jonCates, jon.satrom and bensyverson. A central part of their work involves the public distribution / presentation of interviews, video and text featuring the key players of early code or concept based Art. They are particularly interested in enabling "shared cultural resources connecting these conversations." In Knoxville, criticalartware will coordinate an electronic system for the sharing and exchange of this information – primarily through a custom computer interface.

People Powered is a Chicago group run by artist Kevin Kaempf. His work integrates itself socially, becoming a means for the distribution of physical tools. People Powered "adopts consumer culture’s aesthetic forms to distribute information about sustainable living practices such as community composting, recycling, and free public transportation." A recent People Powered exhibit at the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art highlighted prototypes for "Chicago Blue Bikes," in which junked bicycles are salvaged and rebuilt into a fleet of public bicycles. The Knoxville exhibition will become part of the project "Loop Limited: Recycled Paints" where unfinished cans of used paint are recycled/mixed together and redistributed into the community. Cans of paint will be available for free in the Gallery space.

The artists of Temporary Services are founders of the Chicago space "Mess Hall" and widely known for their public and social works. Often the group aims to "provide a network for the collection and distribution of artistic work going on looking at the line between art and ethics, power and art, and the role of the public." In Knoxville, the group’s Booklets, a large collection of self published material on a wide range of subjects, will be freely available. Alongside this substantial library, an example set of works given away at the Temporary Services event "Free For All" will be shown. "Free For All" was a public art project where multiples of many small objects were collected by the public within a cardboard box that acted as a portable, distributed exhibition.

Temporary Services: Free For All by Marc Fischer "Over 10,000 objects were given away! Over 50 artists, individuals and organizations contributed work that was distributed for free at this one-day-only event. Artists’ work was integrated with a wide range of material submerging the work in a broader context than it normally enjoys. Religious tracts, booklets, flyers, stickers, matchbooks, posters, audio tapes, and postcards were among the items given away. … 100 boxes (like the one pictured above) were provided for free. Visitors were invited to take anything they wanted making their own portable exhibitions to take with them."

"Free For All" is a self-replicating exhibit, one which is shared and exchanged in both the collecting and the viewing of it. Through "make-shift methods of distribution and display that are commonly found in flea markets, garage sales and craft shows" Temporary Services created an alternative, distributed exhibition that enabled a public to engage with cultural information on a level of personal ownership. The exhibition dealt not only with the free use of Art – but the creation of free and open systems as Art.

On the night of Friday, January 5, 2007 members of criticalartware will be involved in creating a free computer art and cultural event, (A) r4WB1t5 micro.Fest at the Pilot Light on January 5th. "(A) r4WB1t5 micro.Fest in Knoxville parallel processes The Art Gallery of Knoxville and the Pilot Light nightclub with intersections of New Media Art, realtime audio video processing, computer art geekery, digital punk rock, noise music, the Blues and freak folktronics!" Please join us to celebrate the Distribution Religion opening at both The Art Gallery of Knoxville and The Pilot Light.


Cool Disease images

Check out these disease images:

UK – London – Bloomsbury: British Museum – Disease, War, Famine and Death
disease

Image by wallyg
Disease, War, Famine and Death
From The Atomic Apolaypse by the Linares family
Mexico City, Mexico, 1983
The Mexican Day of the Dead

These figures depict the four horseman of the Apocalypse–Disease, War, Famine and Death–described in the passages of the Bible that predict the end of the world. These are great troubles that all nations suffer. This exhibition discusses some of the ways in which people around the world manage their lives, and the lives of their communities, to prevent and cope with large- and small-scale misfortunes.

The figures were made by the Linares family, working in the Mexican Day of the Dead tradition. This celebrtation of All Saints’ and All Souls’Days at the beginning of November commemorates the dead in an elaborate festival. Printed images, paper stencils, and papier-mache figures are all used to depict death during the festival.

***
This sculpture is part of the the Living and Dying exhibit in the The Wellcome Trust Gallery of the British Museum. The Wellcome Trust Gallery offers a fresh perspective on the collections of the British Museum. It houses a series of long term exhibitions each with a focus on life’s challenges as they the human race – from any cultural background. Living and dying is the first of these. It looks at how people around the world deal with the tough realities of life, averting or confronting trouble, sorrow, need and sickness. What we find is not an unremittingly solemn response, still less a single strategy for dealing with such realities. The understanding of causes and symptoms, the ways we find of coping, and the objects we make in the process, are creative and inspiring.

Diseased Door
disease

Image by judsond
This is the door decorated by infectious diseases


distribution of urine splashes

Some cool distribution images:

distribution of urine splashes
distribution

Image by woodleywonderworks
Distribution paint discoloration and dust due to urine splashes in bathroom. Lots of variables here – human height, accuracy, shape of the nozzle, etc.

distribution
distribution

Image by stumayhew
Not quite a Andreas Gursky , but i spent saturday working at Waitrose’s distribution center which consists of many of these giant warehouse’s.
Huge lorries back-up to the doors on the right , are loaded and the whole process is repeated endlessly 365 days a year

Shepherd Distribution Services – Magnetic Crane In Use
distribution

Image by Shepherd Distribution Services
An operator uses a magnetic crane to load an ingot onto a flatbed.

For more information about Shepherd Distribution Services, visit:
www.shepherd-distribution.co.uk


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distribution?

Question by kukur_diamond: distribution?
Show a sequence of random vectors Xn=(Yn,1…………Yn,k) convergence in iff for every real vector T=(t1, …………….tk) , T”Xn convergence in distribution

Best answer:

Answer by Thia Q
You and bhowmick_sunil_bir should get together, for you asked identical questions.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!


Q&A: How can I overcome the feeling of disgust when I’m cooking meat?

Question by Lily: How can I overcome the feeling of disgust when I’m cooking meat?
Umm, so I just started cooking, and I’ve been really grossed out whenever I had to rinse a chicken with its head cut off, slice off its legs and cut it into pieces. It just makes me really uncomfortable and almost want to throw up. Is this feeling normal for new cooks? And how do I overcome the feeling of disgust?

Best answer:

Answer by whiskwattlebagjam
I think that the more you do it the more you’ll get used to it but I don’t think you’ll ever find it a joyous experience.

Soldier on!

Give your answer to this question below!


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