|
Le brin de cachemire sur sa hanche glisse au creux du ventre de l'autre, elle diminue progressivement son rythme, déboutonne les dernières phrases et fait jouer la glissière. Fonctionnant sans relâche à l'envers, à l'endroit, la machine tricote.Cochon Pull / Pull Cochon Hazard Caroline, le 25/2/2009 à 08h36
|
Panoplie.org propose de confronter deux "cultures de l'écran" contemporaines en constituant une collection de vidéos autour du vocabulaire propre au monde des ordinateurs.
Nous avons choisi le Jargon Informatique, lexique officiel des "hackers", comme source d'inspiration, et la vidéo, sous toutes ses formes, comme mode de représentation et vecteur de réflexion.
Sous 2 semaines, l'équipe de panoplie.org vous informera de la décision de publication de votre soumission et de la date de sa publication.
2006-10-27 17:15:37
proposer une video sur ce thème
1.
vi. To process, usually in a
time-consuming or complicated way. Connotes an essentially trivial
operation that is nonetheless painful to perform. The pain may be due to
the triviality's being embedded in a loop from 1 to 1,000,000,000.
FORTRAN programs do mostly
number-crunching* . 2.
vt. To reduce the size of a
file by a complicated scheme that produces bit configurations completely
unrelated to the original data, such as by a Huffman code. (The file ends
up looking something like a paper document would if somebody crunched the
paper into a wad.) Since such compression usually takes more computations
than simpler methods such as run-length encoding, the term is doubly
appropriate. (This meaning is usually used in the construction file crunch(ing) to distinguish it from
number-crunching* .) See
compress* . 4.
vt. To squeeze program source
into a minimum-size representation that will still compile or execute. The
term came into being specifically for a famous program on the BBC micro
that crunched BASIC source in order to make it run more quickly (it was a
wholly interpretive BASIC, so the number of characters mattered).
Obfuscated C Contest* entries are often crunched; see
the first example under that entry. |