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MethrenRaf

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« le: Décembre 30, 2024, 08:06:16 am »
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 Three women who disappeared in Cleveland a decade ago were found safe Monday, and police arrested three brothers accused of holding the victims against their will. A timeline of key events in the case: Aug. 23, 2002: Michelle Knight, 20, vanishes. She was last  stanley cup seen at a cousin s house near Lorain Avenue and West 106th Street.                                                                                                                          Kidnap victims freed in Cleveland                      29 photos                                                                                           April 21, 2003: Amanda Berry, 16, disappears after leaving her job at a Burger King at the corner of Lorain Avenue and West 110th Street, a few blocks from her home. It was one day before her 17th birthday and co-worker and friend Jennifer Picar stanley quencher t said she had been headed home for  stanley quencher a party. January 2004: Police go to Ariel Castro s home at 2207 Seymour Ave., about 3 miles from where Knight and Berry were last seen. No one answers the door. Child welfare officials had alerted police that Castro, a school bus driver, apparently left a child unattended on a bus. Police later spoke to Castro and determined there was no criminal intent.  April 2, 2004: Georgina  Gina  DeJesus, 14, disappears while walking home from school. She was last seen at a telephone booth at the corner of Lorain Avenue and 105th Street.         June 2004: Ariel Castro s son, Ariel  Anthony  Castro, writes about DeJesu Qgxf Discrimination Complaints Increase
 Most cities evolved based on centuries of complex economic and cultural forces. But what would it look like if that process were reversed  That   the  stanley cup becher concept behind Generating Utopia, a program that turns a user   location-based data into a sprawling, Rio de Janeiro-style cityscape.     German interaction designer Stefan Wagner wrote the script, which he describes as a way to show what cities would look like if they were based on the behavior of their residents. In other words, he   reverse engineering the urban planning process. Here   how it works: After pulling your check-in data from Foursquare   API, the custom-built Processing script applies those data points to an OpenStreetMap model of the city where you live. It extrudes the flat surface based on the number and frequency of check-ins, creating an animation of a city that mimics your actual movements through t stanley quencher he city. As Wagner points out, check-in data is inherently self-selected based on the true layout of your city. So what we ;re seeing here is really stanley taza  a topographic map of the way you already move about an urban cityscape, rather than a coherent alternative map. From this, one can see in what different ways persons are using their city, says Wagner. Respectively what they want their social environment to think they do. Right now, the script is just a one-off project of Wagner  , but let   hope he makes it public. You ;d be surprised how