Words Mean Things

ayellowbirds:

ogress:

daddyslittleoreo666:

thegreenwolf:

gwengrimm:

tinsnip:

yiubum:

imbatman4280:

capricornian:

thesassylorax:

firsttimelady:

lessthangrace:

scientificperfection:

lord-kitschener:

Sorry for putting pictures of boobies on your dash.

I’m not

BOOBIES

sorry guys, i usually don’t post NSFW stuff..
but this is a great pair of boobies.

I love a bouncing pair of boobies.

I respond to this gifs of cute boobies with a pair of great tits. 

File:GreatTit002.jpg

omg guys. I’m sorry I usually don’t post stuff like this.

boobies are great

yeah, boobies are okay, but i know somebody out there is just dying for some cock.

This is what tumbler was made for

This post just isn’t complete without a picture of the world’s largest pecker.

I love this

that is one huge pecker you got there

All of this inevitably leads to a Shag on a rock:

This thread is full of win.

How Many Lines of Code?

One of this sprint’s projects is a review of the git commit history to see if anyone inadvertently commited any passwords, keys, or other potentially-sensitive data into the repository.

I wonder how many lines of code I’ll need to scan…

78,651,750

**blink, blink**

**searches hacker sites for “git password finders”**

Modern PNW Architecture

Amazing blog!!! I’d love to see a post about the Pacific Northwest regional architecture ’30s to ’60s! I’m a Seattle native and proud of some of my city’s architecture (like Koolhaas’s wonderful library) and utterly ashamed of some (Venturi’s art museum), but I’m so accustomed to the stereotypically “northwest” buildings that I often fail to truly appreciate the works that inspired this movement. Also, in your opinion, who is the greatest architectural photographer of all time?

archatlas:

There is one moment in time that defined mid-century in the Pacific Northwest: the 1962 World’s Fair in Seattle.

As planned, the exposition left behind a fairground and numerous public buildings and public works; some credit it with revitalizing Seattle’s economic and cultural life. The fair saw the construction of the Space Needle and Alweg monorail, as well as several sports venues (Washington State Coliseum, now KeyArena) and performing arts buildings (the Playhouse, now the Cornish Playhouse), most of which have since been replaced or heavily remodeled. [via]

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Pacific Science Center

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1962 World’s Fair Postcard

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KeyArena

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1962 World’s Fair Postcard

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Space Needle

PS About the best architectural photographer I think a dedicated post to that question is merited.