[Just got back from a great talk by Paul Chan, an artist who was in Iraq in December/January and has been giving talks all over the place -- colleges, artist spaces, etc. -- for the past several weeks. Besides a great series of dispatches that he managed to get out of there, he's also took a series of powerful, if very humble and unpretentious, photographs -- both texts and images are posted on his site, nationalphilistine.com.]


soldiers with helo kitty flak jackets, the signifier let loose form the narrative...
Posted by: Pokemon on February 14, 2003 12:19 AMTo address this issue, we turn to the second place to put variables, which is called the Heap. If you think of the Stack as a high-rise apartment building somewhere, variables as tenets and each level building atop the one before it, then the Heap is the suburban sprawl, every citizen finding a space for herself, each lot a different size and locations that can't be readily predictable. For all the simplicity offered by the Stack, the Heap seems positively chaotic, but the reality is that each just obeys its own rules.
Posted by: Catherine on January 19, 2004 04:43 AMWhen the machine compiles your code, however, it does a little bit of translation. At run time, the computer sees nothing but 1s and 0s, which is all the computer ever sees: a continuous string of binary numbers that it can interpret in various ways.
Posted by: Lionel on January 19, 2004 04:44 AMThese secret identities serve a variety of purposes, and they help us to understand how variables work. In this lesson, we'll be writing a little less code than we've done in previous articles, but we'll be taking a detailed look at how variables live and work.
Posted by: Digory on January 19, 2004 04:45 AMSeth Roby graduated in May of 2003 with a double major in English and Computer Science, the Macintosh part of a three-person Macintosh, Linux, and Windows graduating triumvirate.
Posted by: George on January 19, 2004 04:45 AMSeth Roby graduated in May of 2003 with a double major in English and Computer Science, the Macintosh part of a three-person Macintosh, Linux, and Windows graduating triumvirate.
Posted by: Geoffrey on January 19, 2004 04:46 AM