It's interesting to me how porn a
Nd erotica always advertise with women's bodies with their faces cut off
American apparel digs this etc
Lots of art theory discusses this
I would love for any Sudo room event to break the mold and show men's bodies in any erotic theme as well ... Also would love to see the male body as the focus of any erotic film or dance to balance out the Imbalance and unnatural obsession with t and a we see on the porn industry
Sent from my iPad
Hi All,
I've been reading/following the whole evolution of bitcoins as currency and
I'm still a bitcoin skeptic (I prefer potential rather than spent
processing power :) ).
So I was curious, has anyone in the past tried to create a virtual currency
based on a resource value, like future usage of CPU time (i.e. $1 would
equal an equivalent amount of electricity and hardware wear and tear for x
number of CPU cycles, which could be exchanged either for the cycles, at a
super computer bank or for other currencies)?
To me it seems that bit coin is like a spent CPU resource rather than a
future resource and by flipping the equation to future rather than past
value a currency based on this type of commodity would be useful... any
thoughts?
R
--
Ryan Bethencourt
Tel: (415) 794 6463
ryan.bethencourt(a)gmail.com
www.bamh1.comwww.linkedin.com/in/bethencourtwww.logos-press.com/books/biotechnology_business_development.php
Hi Folks,
Going to change things up a little bit for tomorrow's microcontroller night. I've finished for now with my active microcontroller projects (can it be???) so I'll be doing a few newbie-level projects/experiments myself.
On the menu for tomorrow night:
-DIY alarm clock w/ RGB LED output.
-DIY motion detector w/light and maaaaybe camera
-anything you want to bring and work on
Of course for total newbies, we will begin with blinking an LED and move rapidly from there - it's easy with a little help!
link to the face book:
https://www.facebook.com/events/384770284968953/
Also[0] I will be skipping town for a few weeks. Would anyone like to take over hosting this event for the next three sessions? Only involves sending an email, creating a FB event and sending out a few seed invites to FB-enabled sudoers and whoever else you want, and of course welcoming people who arrive. The latter bit is of course the most involved, but if you are friendly and able to direct people to the soldering iron, wire pile, ac adapter bin etc it's a snap. Dates are May 21, June 4, and June 18. You can continue hosting if you get into the swing of it, or anyone can really. I just want it to exist at sudo room.
Also[1] A few medium term group projects have been identified in and around the discussion at the last event. If you might like to get involved in these but cannot attend tomorrow night, I'll post some details to controllers(a)lists.sudoroom.org afterward. Hasn't been much traffic there yet, but stay tuned for project info.
Hope to see y'all there!
Hol
my dear brothers and sisters, my sudoroom comrades.
i have reinterpreted the genius codex of our forerunner jae
they are now in an accessible comic book form on the wiki...
let us now spread the good word of 3D Printing throughout this fair land...
https://sudoroom.org/wiki/page/3DPrinting#New_Interpretation_Comics_of_Jay_…
[image: Inline image 1]
Just a reminder that the archives of this list are indexed by Google.
(For this reason I'm keeping pretty quiet here. Would anyone else like to
have a list which is not indexed? How about "sudo-ephemeral"?)
-Rabbit
Cleaning is life. But even if each of us tried our best to clean up after ourselves, there will be aggregated filth, incrementally built, plus the cost of natural shuffling, displacement--such is the burden of use and optimization! I think we should:
Communicate more clearly the necessary standards for common space.
Provide all event holders with a checklist for set up and break down
Clean up after ourselves and each other collaboratively
Recognize that some additional amount of cleaning is required and therefore create good systems for cleaning natural, aggregate mess.*
* my personal politics hope we can do this specific type of work without direct financial incentive.
// Matt
----- Reply message -----
From: "Gregg Horton" <greggahorton(a)gmail.com>
To: "Romy Ilano" <romy(a)snowyla.com>
Cc: "sudo-discuss" <sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org>
Subject: [sudo-discuss] should we hire someone to clean up after events?
Date: Sun, May 5, 2013 9:48 AM
I think we should hire a fellow sudoer and use the cash as incentive. Whoever wishes to do it that month can.
Or people can learn how to pick up after themselves.
On Sun, May 5, 2013 at 8:44 AM, Romy Ilano <romy(a)snowyla.com> wrote:
SudoRoom is a hackerspace. Our skillset is not cleaning, especially cleaning the big main room.
- Should we put aside $30-60 every time a group holds an event in our space so that we can pay someone to clean up the common room?
- Should we pay someone $30-60 once month to clean the common room for us?
I brought this up because we are realistically not going to get a lot of members to clean the space. we are hackers. it is not our skillset. There is not going to be a magical day when a hackerspace finds that all of its members find cleaning to be a pleasurable act.
We are good at starting projects, drinking beer, looking for new spaces, but we are definitely not great at cleaning.
Our landlord G is also receptive to the idea of us hiring someone to clean up the common room after big events.
I personally suck at cleaning, I'm into doing it, but I would rather spend my time hacking and working on projects. I spent a bit of time cleaning up the space Saturday morning, wiping down the tables int he main room and vacuuming to prepare the space for the today I learned.
_______________________________________________
sudo-discuss mailing list
sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss
Hi All,
I thought I'd send over a little nerd love to all (in the quote below) and
wish you a Happy CInco de Mayo!
"Star Trek was an attempt to say that humanity will reach maturity and
wisdom on the day that it begins not just to tolerate, but take a special
delight in differences in ideas and differences in life forms. [...] If we
cannot learn to actually enjoy those small differences, to take a positive
delight in those small differences between our own kind, here on this
planet, then we do not deserve to go out into space and meet the diversity
that is almost certainly out there."
-- Gene Roddenberry<http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/43942.Gene_Roddenberry>
Live long and Prosper!
Ryan
--
Ryan Bethencourt
Tel: (415) 794 6463
ryan.bethencourt(a)gmail.com
www.bamh1.comwww.linkedin.com/in/bethencourtwww.logos-press.com/books/biotechnology_business_development.php
Hi is anyone in the front? I'm here for the kopimism service at 1! The elevator is off and the stairs are locked
---
Romy Ilano
Founder of Snowyla
http://www.snowyla.com
romy(a)snowyla.com
SudoRoom is a hackerspace. Our skillset is not cleaning, especially
cleaning the big main room.
*- Should we put aside $30-60 every time a group holds an event in our
space so that we can pay someone to clean up the common room?*
*- Should we pay someone $30-60 once month to clean the common room for us?
*
I brought this up because we are realistically not going to get a lot of
members to clean the space. we are hackers. it is not our skillset. There
is not going to be a magical day when a hackerspace finds that all of its
members find cleaning to be a pleasurable act.
We are good at starting projects, drinking beer, looking for new spaces,
but we are definitely not great at cleaning.
Our landlord G is also receptive to the idea of us hiring someone to clean
up the common room after big events.
I personally suck at cleaning, I'm into doing it, but I would rather spend
my time hacking and working on projects. I spent a bit of time cleaning up
the space Saturday morning, wiping down the tables int he main room and
vacuuming to prepare the space for the today I learned.