FIRE PRONOUNS?!
seen from Yemen
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Russia
seen from Netherlands
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Netherlands

seen from Sri Lanka

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
FIRE PRONOUNS?!
THE AMOUNT OF LOOVE I HAVE FOR THESE TWO
WAIT i just realized many in lost eden had lipstick before i just didn't notice wbwkdks but they gave some to guiltia!!! it's what i deserve!!!
NO BECAUSE WOULDNT IT BE COOL A SINGER WHO OUTSIDE OF STAGE ONLY USES AN ALTERNATIVE COMMUNICATION DEVICE
we got new genders today, good second day of pride
JUST REALIZED THEYRE ALL WHITE not for long 😏😏 /threat💪🏼
One of my all time favorite talks of AKay's, given in 2015.
What is the cost of not listening to Alan Kay?
Alessandro Warth, Yoshiki Ohshima, Ted Kaehler, and Alan Kay
Viewpoints Research Institute
The state of an imperative program—e.g., the values stored in global and local variables, arrays, and objects’ instance variables—changes as its state- ments are executed. These changes, or side effects, are visible globally: when one part of the program modifies an object, every other part that holds a reference to the same object (either directly or indirectly) is also affected. This paper intro- duces worlds, a language construct that reifies the notion of program state and enables programmers to control the scope of side effects. We investigate this idea by extending both JavaScript and Squeak Smalltalk with support for worlds, pro- vide examples of some of the interesting idioms this construct makes possible, and formalize the semantics of property/field lookup in the presence of worlds. We also describe an efficient implementation strategy (used in our Squeak-based prototype), and illustrate the practical benefits of worlds with two case studies.