A selfie set in stone: hidden portrait by mason found in Spain 900 years on(theguardian.com)
theguardian.com
A selfie set in stone: hidden portrait by mason found in Spain 900 years on
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2020/nov/01/a-selfie-set-in-stone-hidden-portrait-by-cheeky-mason-found-in-spain-900-years-on
20 comments
Artists including themselves in their art was also common during the renaissance. Da Vinci apparently included himself in his painting Adoration of the Magi (https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/adoration-of-the-mag..., see figure on the bottom right).
Another example is Velazquez in Las Meninas
https://www.museodelprado.es/en/the-collection/art-work/las-...
https://www.museodelprado.es/en/the-collection/art-work/las-...
And Tintoretto is thought to be one of the bearers of the golden calf in a painting displayed in his parish church in Venice.
I’d characterize this as an Easter Egg not a selfie.
Which software will we still be using in 900 years?
I don't know, but it'll be running on a VM with the clock set back so it believes 2038 hasn't happened yet.
2038 is just 19 to 20 years away ( depending upon your IT and business activity cycles).
We’re close to 2038 than to 2000 ( Y2K ).
We’re close to 2038 than to 2000 ( Y2K ).
If -- as you state explicitly -- 2038 might be 20 years away, how could it be closer than 2000? 20 is more than half of 38.
I only know that it will be written in COBOL. Wait, trike that. Not "will be written"; it's already written. it will only get maintained.
Yes, and it will mostly likely be handling debits and credits.
It's pretty impossible to say isn't it? Not everything doesn't last/changes fundamentally.
I would think there's a version of 2920 in which nothing changed so much in how computers work (e.g. we're not using personal quantum computers) that we're not still using Linux (v87.9.2 or something).
But there's equally another version in which we don't need to sit down and compute because things just happen and even those things aren't run from Linux robots because the robots we built 500 years from now decided a microkernel approach would be better and rewrote everything. Another in which we live on Mars and Linux doesn't work there for some reason discovered 320 years from now.
I just think it's not obvious the answer's 'none' which is at least how I read (what I took to be) your rhetorical question.
I would think there's a version of 2920 in which nothing changed so much in how computers work (e.g. we're not using personal quantum computers) that we're not still using Linux (v87.9.2 or something).
But there's equally another version in which we don't need to sit down and compute because things just happen and even those things aren't run from Linux robots because the robots we built 500 years from now decided a microkernel approach would be better and rewrote everything. Another in which we live on Mars and Linux doesn't work there for some reason discovered 320 years from now.
I just think it's not obvious the answer's 'none' which is at least how I read (what I took to be) your rhetorical question.
Unlicensed copy of WinRAR
vi's successor. vii
DB/2
lisp