The Tower of Babel (François de Nomé, 1630)
Watercolour portrait of Ada King, Countess of Lovelace also known as Ada Lovelace, ca. 1840, possibly by Alfred Edward Chalon.
Ada Lovelace, is celebrated as the first computer programmer. In the early 19th century, she wrote detailed notes on Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine, a pioneering mechanical computer.
Among these notes was an algorithm designed to compute Bernoulli numbers, which is recognized as the first published computer program. At a time when computing was an uncharted territory, Lovelace envisioned the potential of machines to perform complex tasks beyond basic arithmetic.
Her foresight and contributions laid the groundwork for modern computer science.
She was also the daughter of the poet Lord Byron.
Tunisia | view of the Gafsa oasis
unknown photographer, 1920's
Original thread:
https://mobile.twitter.com/DianaMiller5/status/1522278413096132609?cxt=HHwWgoC53deJnKAqAAAA
Note, I am finding these threads on the twitter feeds of ICU nurses who are now dreading the horrors that Roe falling will bring to their hospitals. This, on top of the horrors that they’ve seen and continue to see because of the pandemic. They were already exhausted and hanging by a thread.
them not including Lilas studying of Naples and her whole arc with that city feels like a betrayal to her
The Death of Sappho (1876) by Gustave Moreau
lila and rino sibling dynamic in my brilliant friend book reminds me very much with dany and viserys. both of these girls suffered so much abuse from the brothers that supposed to protected them :(
i'm gonna make them so proud.
quote, @plumslices \\ i will, mitski \\ photo from pinterest \\ never grow up, taylor swift \\ photo from pinterest \\ quote, lalah delia \\ the best day, taylor swift \\ photo from pinterest \\ quote, @mounaks (could not find their acc) \\ both last photos from pinterest
vintage cocktails from a 1946 Esquire magazine article, "This Is the Way to Make Your Favorite Drinks"
wuthering heights by emily bronte // l'amica geniale by elena ferrante
In Weimar Germany, in 1930, before Hitler, you could get gender treatment as a trans woman. The laws against homosexuality were largely unenforced, and the earliest gender-affirming surgeries were being developed.
A few years later, those same people were all living inside Hitler's Germany. It was all gone.
In the US in 2024 you could get an M, F, or X gender marker on your passport. No questions asked, just circle the box you want.
It's gone now.
Each verse of history has the same refrain. Kill your generation's fascists and rebuild.