vendredi 25 juillet 2008

Pourquoi les pères oublient leurs enfants dans leur voiture?

mercredi 23 juillet 2008

Begging

Begging: Asking for as a charity


Découvrez Madcon!

 


Put your lovin' hand out, baby
I'm beggin'
Beggin', put your lovin' hand out, baby
Beggin' you, put your lovin' hand out, baby

Ridin' high when I was king
Played it hard and fast cause I had everything
Walked away, wonderin' then
But easy come and easy go and it would end

I'm beggin' you, won't you give your hand out, baby
Beggin', put your lovin' hand out, baby

I need you to understand
That I tried so hard to be a man
The kind of man you'd want in the end
Only then can I begin to live again

An empty shell I used to be
Shadow of my life is hangin' over me
Broken man that I don't know
Will leave it standing, devil's dancing with my soul

Beggin' you, won't you give your hand out, baby
Beggin', put your lovin' hand out, baby

I'm fightin' hard to hold my own
No, I just can't make it all alone
I'm holdin' on, I can't fall back
Now that big brass ring is a shade of black

I'm beggin' you, give your hand out, baby
Beggin', won't you put your lovin' hand out, baby


Découvrez The Four Seasons!

 

samedi 19 juillet 2008

3:36




From here to here, then here and finally here.

On May Day, just after leaving her fiancé, 23-year-old Evelyn McHale wrote a note. 'He is much better off without me ... I wouldn't make a good wife for anybody,' ... Then she crossed it out. She went to the observation platform of the Empire State Building. Through the mist she gazed at the street, 86 floors below. Then she jumped. In her desperate determination she leaped clear of the setbacks and hit a United Nations limousine parked at the curb. Across the street photography student Robert Wiles heard an explosive crash. Just four minutes after Evelyn McHale's death Wiles got this picture of death's violence and its composure.

Pour lire la suite çà se passe ici (The most beautiful suicide)

Le réveil - Mess in My Head by Morphey

lundi 14 juillet 2008

Estelle


Découvrez Pierre Perret!

samedi 12 juillet 2008

Très cher pétrole

Lu sur le forum du site 60 millions de consommateurs:
Et là, très chers consommateurs
On se pose la question suivante:
Si le Baril est moins cher pour nous en Europe qu'en 2000
Pourquoi l'essence est elle 25% plus chère qu'en 2000 ?
Il y en a qui doivent se remplir les poches !!!!!


Regarder le calcul, c'est intéressant, mais çà demande à être vérifié!

vendredi 11 juillet 2008

All the times I cried


Découvrez Sharleen Spiteri!

 



Découvrez Ladyhawke!

 



Découvrez Michael Andrews!

la commande find - petit tutoriel

I have blogged before that knowledge of command-line tools is essential to take the next step in programming productivity. I think it would be useful to provide simple tutorials for these powerful tools, starting with find. I hope you agree, and would appreciate your feedback via the contact page or in the comments.
Tutorial

If you’re on Windows, I would recommend installing Cygwin to bring the power of a real shell to your OS. Let us start with a simple example and build upon it:
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1.
find . -name "*.css"

find . -name "*.css"

This will list all CSS files (and directories ending with ".css") under the current directory (represented by "."). We only want to match files so we’ll go ahead and change it to this:
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1.
find . -type f -name "*.css"

find . -type f -name "*.css"

Now we will only match CSS files. Nothing special? Fine, I see how it is. Let’s find all CSS files that do something with your HTML ID #content next:
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1.
find . -name "*.css" -exec grep -l "#content" {} \;

find . -name "*.css" -exec grep -l "#content" {} \;

Here we combine find with grep (covered in detail later) using the
We’re starting to get productive now, so let’s keep going. Suppose now we want to change every reference to the color #FF0000 (red) to #00FF00 (green). Normally you would have to have your editor search and replace them, if it even has that capability. Even then it’s slow, this statement is fast:
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1.
find . -name "*.css" -exec sed -ier 's/#(FF0000|F00)\b/#0F0/' {} \;

find . -name "*.css" -exec sed -ier 's/#(FF0000|F00)\b/#0F0/' {} \;

Gasp! Wait a minute, I just searched for both ways to specify red and replaced it with green in my CSS!! How long would that have taken otherwise? Do you see now how you can code faster by automating it and combining powerful tools? Let’s look at some other cool search options find has to offer:
Other Examples
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1.
# find files changed in the last 1 day
2.
find . -ctime -1 -type f
3.

4.
#find files larger than 1 Mb in /tmp
5.
find /tmp -size 1M -type f
6.

7.
#find files newer than main.css in ~/src
8.
find ~/src -newer main.css

# find files changed in the last 1 day
find . -ctime -1 -type f

#find files larger than 1 Mb in /tmp
find /tmp -size 1M -type f

#find files newer than main.css in ~/src
find ~/src -newer main.css

Conclusion

By itself, find is only as good as say… Google Desktop. The real power, as with other shell tools, is the ability to combine with other tools seamlessly. Effective use of tools like find very often make the difference between an average programmer and one that is 10x more effective (actual multiples up for debate).

These are just some of the basic features of find. Take advice from Chris Coyier and use your new power responsibly. Find is a beautiful tool.

mercredi 9 juillet 2008

C'est les vacances

http://www.deezer.com/track/536481