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Luke Pearson's maritime exploration of "the ship as a 'dry-docked' architecture" is reminiscent of Hans Haacke's piece which placed an aircraft carrier in a landscape. (Caravans/trailers are the usual exemplars of (im)movable architecture.)
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1. What have you done since the last scrum meeting? 2. What has [or will?] impeded your work? 3. What do you plan to do betw now and the next scrum meeting? (Conversation restricted to the team members answering these questions.)
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Pierre Cardin's residence by Antti Lovag is one part house, two parts hallucination. Lovingly cited by JGB in Super-Cannes. See also http://www.flickr.com/photos/moxette/91222674/
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small, multi-purpose, personal, always-on/connected, battery-powered, wireless [intermittent] connectivity
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A note handed to DM Thomas. "I still treasure the last writing of William Golding - his phone number."
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"Living off tuna for weeks or months sequestered in an East Side apartment, while the tumbrels go by with cries of “Bring out your dead,” à la Defoe, strikes me as a great premise for a surrealist novel, but not a national avian flu strategy."
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use of "asterisks or hyphens or underscores are substituted for certain letters in order to avoid violating lexical taboos". Eg: G-d.
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"The Schematron differs in basic concept from other schema languages in that it not based on grammars but on finding tree patterns in the parsed document."
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For services that can evolve with some grace: the "Consumer-Driven Contract" pattern draws on the assertion-based language of "just enough" validation strategies...
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Demand wanted certain parts of the photograph to lack definition. So he actually built "pixels" in cardboard, tiny squares that deceive the eye into thinking the photograph is unfocused, whereas it is in fact reproducing the "reality" of the sculpted grot
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On the making of the Grotto piece at the Serpentine etc.
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