계범주 - 왜이래 (Why) (”Don’t Know Why”)
Lyrics: 계범주 Composed: 계범주 Arranged: 계범주
Album: Good Life Year: 07.30.2015
**why = why are you like this?

#dc comics#batman#dc#bruce wayne#tim drake#dick grayson#batfam#dc fanart#batfamily



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계범주 - 왜이래 (Why) (”Don’t Know Why”)
Lyrics: 계범주 Composed: 계범주 Arranged: 계범주
Album: Good Life Year: 07.30.2015
**why = why are you like this?
08.01.2015
계범주 - 왜이래 (Why?)
@ PJR THE LIVE
CLOSURE, by _why the lucky stiff
why the lucky stiff
why the lucky stiff (or _why) was a Ruby programmer who made a name for himself through a number of artistic creations with and for Ruby. It really is a fascinating story, but it is also a story of somebody who wanted privacy. When people found out his real name, many personal details were leaked to the Internet. One day, _why deactivated all of his online presence; he just disappeared.
After starting wrap my head around what he has done, it is a real loss that _why is no longer contributing to the Ruby community. His greatest contribution, in my mind at least, is Hackety Hack. _why wanted to make programming more accessible, so he developed a single download that would install Ruby onto your computer. This is no small feat, especially if you run Windows. Better still, _why distilled everything that a novice would need into a dead simple program. Documentation is to the right of the interpreter. You do not have to navigate the file system to open or save programs. You do not even have to add the ".rb" file extension when saving. Hackety Hack just handled all of that stuff for you. _why understood the need for collaboration, so he made it possible to share code to other Hackety Hack users. He reimplemented Papert's turtle art so that kids were not just writing to the console or sending popups to the screen. incredibly, _why wrote his own GUI library called Shoes. In this way, kids could create something "tangible."
_why may have been a teacher, or maybe he just was a programmer at some nondescript company. Regardless, he showed remarkable insight to understanding how to make something for kids. Each December, my Twitter timeline is filled with education technology people excited for Hour of Code. In place of all of promotion from tech companies and celebrities, I wish everybody would watch _why's 2009 talk at the ART && CODE Symposium. Pay particular attention to the video clip of a kid reviewing how to get started with C++. _why understood the problem at hand; tools for adults can be just as compelling when in the hands of kids, but these tools need not be so complex as to be only understood by adults. _why had the right idea, give kids something powerful (Ruby), and give it to them in a way such that learning and creating are rewarding and fun.
I hope that, wherever he is, _why is still searching for new ways to make coding fun and accessible for kids.
Two Cartoon Foxes: Remembering Why The Lucky Stiff (the documentary)
In 2005, Why The Lucky Stiff released Why's Poignant Guide to Ruby. At the time, he was already known for his web blog Red Hand where he published tidbits about the relatively-unknown-in-the-west Ruby programming language. When it was released, his guide was hailed a masterpiece and his Ruby libraries were quickly integrated into commercial applications.
But his fame and legend as an anonymous artist was growing to the point that people were trying to find out who this guy was. He committed infosuicide in 2009, taking all of his art and code with him, after an anonymous webblog released personal information on him, his wife, and their Utah residence. No one in the Ruby community knew what happened and were worried about him. Years later, a journalist managed to track him down and discover that he was alive and well, he just didn't want to talk about Why The Lucky Stiff.
This documentary is a random travelogue through people's remembrance of an enigmatic artist who left a legacy of software, writings, drawings, and music in his wake. It's a work-in-progress film. Eventually, I want to create a version that's accessible for non-programmers, by adding an introductory section that explains the evolution of computing and software (to set up why Ruby was so beloved by _why) and include information about _why's CLOSURE that he released in 2013.
Please distribute the link far and wide, this is my contribution to the Ruby community, something I created, and it was fun.
vimeo.com/user1151637/why-the-lucky-stiff
And here's the trailer for the documentary:
vimeo.com/user1151637/why-the-lucky-stiff-trailer
With special thanks to Geoffrey Grosenbach at PeepCode for additional interviews in the Seattle area. Smotchkkiss y'all.
I didn't realize this at first, but there is an enormous temptation (when you're completely disenfranchised from society) to write a manifesto, a scathing one, that shreds apart all the fixations of that society (both real and imagined) and attempts to predict that society's demise or to deliver up a host of cryptic and/or seemingly lucid stuff as a challenge for that society to live the way I do.
_why, "Closure"
I started looking into _why and what he was actually about. What I found was amazing
_why's story has been quite an enjoyable ride.