Tabletop fountain from the June 5 opening video of Apple's 2017
Worldwide Developer Conference —
Kristen Stewart (Snow White in June 2012) as a personal shopper —
Personal shopping result —
Tabletop fountain from the June 5 opening video of Apple's 2017
Worldwide Developer Conference —
Kristen Stewart (Snow White in June 2012) as a personal shopper —
Personal shopping result —
For the title, see a post of Dec. 20, 2015.
See also "Damn Yankees."
Tabletop fountain from the opening video of Apple’s 2017
Worldwide Developer Conference —
Waterfall on the way to a Buddhist temple in “Listening” (2014 film) —
For some background, see Snow White Meets Apple (June 7, 2017)
and Enchanting (June 9, 2017).
See also Snow White in the previous post.
"Among the most enchanting aspects of the Alhambra is
the constant sound of flowing water emanating from its fountains."
— Bob Taylor, commdiginews.com, January 16, 2017
See also Snow White Meets Apple and the cover of
The New York Times Book Review from October 4, 2015 —
"Everything's coming up Snow White."
For Charlize:
"Snow, Glass, Apples," by Neil Gaiman
* See Saturday's post At the Still Point
Good’s Singularity
Irving John “I.J.” Good died Sunday, April 5, 2009.
The date of his death was also Palm Sunday and the day of the Academy of Country Music Awards.
Information from Wikipedia:
Good, 92, was a cryptanalyst at Bletchley Park during World War II.
“He was born as Isidore Jacob Gudak to a Jewish family in London. In his publications he was called I. J. Good. He studied mathematics at Jesus College, Cambridge, graduating in 1938. He did research work under G.H. Hardy and Besicovitch before moving to Bletchley Park in 1941 on completing his doctorate.
At Bletchley Park, he was initially in Hut 8 under the supervision of Alan Turing…”
[Related material: the death of Turing (a major fan of the Evil Queen in Snow White) and yesterday’s entry]
Wikipedia states that “I. J. Good’s vanity car license plate, hinting at his spylike wartime work, was ‘007 IJG’…. He played chess to county standard, and helped to popularise Go, an Asian boardgame, through a 1965 article in New Scientist (he had learned the rules from Turing). In 1965, he described a concept similar to today’s meaning of technological singularity, in that it included in it the advent of superhuman intelligence:
“Some say the symbol of Apple Computers, the apple with a bite out of it, is a nod to Alan Turing.”– from “Alan Turing and the Apple” at Flickr, uploaded on Epiphany 2006 by guano |
Above: Composite by “guano” at Flickr
Will: Do you like apples?
Clark: Yeah.
Will: Well, I got her number.
How do you like them apples?
Happy Spy Wednesday.
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