Anonymous ID: 974e9e Aug. 4, 2019, 4:50 p.m. No.7344542   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4740 >>4760 >>4852 >>4969 >>5022 >>5036 >>5159

Triangle Spaghetti factory

https://twitter.com/3liza

 

is linked to ElizaGauger.com – keeps timing out for me

 

Eliza Gauger was an author for wired. Had a kickstarter for this book a few years ago.

The first official art book for artist Eliza Gauger's Problem Glyphs. 100 Glyphs collected in a premium edition art book.

 

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/917819040/problem-glyphs-art-book-by-eliza-gauger/comments

Anonymous ID: 974e9e Aug. 4, 2019, 5:15 p.m. No.7344863   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Is this Connor Betts dad?

Married to Moira Cofer Betts

worked for General Dynamics

 

https://www.facebook.com/Zagrev2002?tn=%2CdK-R-R&

 

Steve Betts

Intro

Technical Lead at Altamira Technologies Corporation

Former Software Lackey at General Dynamics - Advnaced Information Systems

Former Founder (company) at Minethurn Technology, Inc.

Worked at MacAulay-Brown, Inc

Studied at The Ohio State University

Went to Fairmont West High School

Lives in Bellbrook, Ohio

From Kettering, Ohio

Married to Moira Cofer Betts

Anonymous ID: 974e9e Aug. 4, 2019, 5:41 p.m. No.7345165   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>7345131

Atomsk (novel)

Atomsk, first published in 1949, is a Cold War spy novel by "Carmichael Smith", one of several pseudonyms used by Paul Linebarger, who wrote fiction most prolifically as Cordwainer Smith. Written two years after Winston Churchill's Sinews of Peace address, Atomsk is the first espionage novel of the Cold War, inaugurating a genre exemplified by writers such as Ian Fleming and John Le Carré.[1][2]

 

Linebarger's third published novel, it has long been out of print. Paper copies regularly command figures in the hundreds of U.S. dollars in the second-hand market, even though it is also available as an inexpensive e-book.[3]

 

As well as drawing on Linebarger's own expertise in the field of psychological warfare, it is a study of the personality of an U.S. operative (Major Michael Dugan) who has little in common with James Bond except his extreme resourcefulness under cover and in danger. A man of many identities who sees himself to some extent as a blank sheet, he goes from calling himself "Comrade Nobody" to saying "I'm anybody". The novel also has an underlying, albeit devious and ambiguous, message of peace. As one character says, learning to like people is "the only way to win wars, or even better, to get out of them."

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomsk_(novel)