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Who watches the watchmen?
Carl Størmer (1872-1957) enjoyed a hobby that was very, very unusual at the time. He walked around Oslo, Norway in the 1890s with his spy camera and secretly took everyday pictures of people. The subjects in Størmer's pictures appear in their natural state. These street photography shots extremely differ from the grave and strict posing trends that dominated photography during those years.
This is funny, someone made an O'Reilly book generator with the familiar animals from the books series (O'Reilly is the publisher of MAKE)
As it emerges that Britain was behind a James Bond-style plot to spy on Russians with a device hidden in a fake rock, Mirror.
NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro talks to New York Times reporter Matthew Rosenberg about his story on the U.S. government's bungled attempt to reclaim stolen cybersecurity weapons from Russian operatives.
Fredrik Carl Mülertz Størmer is known mostly as an accomplished mathematician and physicist from Norway, but as a side hobby he was also an amateur photographer, taking to the streets of Oslo with a bulky camera secreted in his clothing to capture candid moments of unsuspecting passersby. Most of his photos were taken in the 1890s while Størmer was a 19-year-old student at the Royal Frederick University using a Stirn Concealed Vest Spy Camera, a secretive camera with a narrow lens designed to poke through a vest pocket’s buttonhole. More
A list compiled by spymaster Robert Cecil gives an insight into the beginnings of the secret service, says historian
"I Spy Fantasy" artworks by Walter Wick
Big game hunter, legendary French Riviera partier, and a quintessential WASP—Gertrude Sanford was also a vital U.S. spy who managed to outmaneuver the Nazis after being captured.
The S&P 500 is one of the primary U.S. stock market indexes and is a favored investment by both retail investors and financial advisors alike. In fact, no...
Fredrik Carl Mülertz Størmer is known mostly as an accomplished mathematician and physicist from Norway, but as a side hobby he was also an amateur photographer, taking to the streets of Oslo with a bulky camera secreted in his clothing to capture candid moments of unsuspecting passersby. Most of his photos were taken in the 1890s while Størmer was a 19-year-old student at the Royal Frederick University using a Stirn Concealed Vest Spy Camera, a secretive camera with a narrow lens designed to poke through a vest pocket’s buttonhole. More
Carl Størmer was a Norwegian mathematician and physicist who's best known for number theory and studying auroras. Aside from his intellectual pursuits,
Be Mum - Spies Are Everywhere! Silence is Golden in America today. Treacherous spies are shadowing you. They would like to know what you know, so your sons can be sent to a watery grave. Say Nothing! Buy War Bonds
It’s no secret anymore that governmental agencies in the U.S. and other countries have access to sophisticated tools that allow them to track and collect …
Rhyming verses ask readers to find objects in the photographs. You can also read a copy of 'I Spy' by going to the International Children's Digital Library,...
So on to the Spy Gear kit we were sent. The biggest hits were the Stealth com walkie talkies as they didn't need to use their hands. They loved these a ...
Patience, victim Suspected cultists who kidnapped a young girl in Bauchi State have revealed that all they needed from her
As a young student, mathematician Carl Størmer used a small hidden camera to photograph life on the streets of Oslo in the 1890s. The spy camera images are some of the earliest examples we have of street photography.
The S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: SPY) is down (-17.67%) for 2022 as we head into the year-end rebalancing. Technically, the SPY is back in correction territory
Carl Størmer (1872-1957) enjoyed a hobby that was very, very unusual at the time. He walked around Oslo, Norway in the 1890s with his spy camera and secretly took everyday pictures of people. The subjects in Størmer's pictures appear in their natural state. These street photography shots extremely differ from the grave and strict posing trends that dominated photography during those years.
The vigenere cipher which is actually French and sounds a bit like visionair is a very old way of coding that s designed to mask character frequency checking character frequency in a piece...
The head of Canada’s spy agency said today Canadian companies in almost all sectors of the economy have been targeted by hostile foreign actors — and named Russia and China as two of his main sources of concern.
An English nurse worked to help both British and French soldiers escape from occupied Belgium during World War I. Her story was shamelessly propagandized by the British.
The claims were made in a report called 'A Psychological Analysis of Adolph Hitler: His Life and Legend' which was compiled by the U.S. intelligence agency to find out what made him tick.
Noor Inayat Khan was the daughter of an Indian Sufi mystic and is the subject of a new film, A Call To Spy
The oracle of Omaha says prices will be "a lot higher" 10 to 20 years from now.
Une invitation pour un anniversaire détective ? Facile à faire, super amusante à réaliser et bluffante pour ceux qui la recevront ! DIY parfait non ?
It looks a little different!
It may come as a surprise, but knitting and war have a lot more in common than one may think. In many countries, including the United States, wartime has almost always involved knitters. Back in the day, women were encouraged to support troops from home by knitting socks and hats for them.
A list compiled by spymaster Robert Cecil gives an insight into the beginnings of the secret service, says historian
Fredrik Carl Mülertz Størmer (3 September 1874 – 13 August 1957), a renowned mathematician and physicist from Norway, was an enthusiastic photographer. As a 19-year-old student at the Royal Frederick University (now University of Oslo), Størmer recorded life in Oslo with a Stirn Concealed Vest Spy Camera. The camera lens peered through a buttonhole in a vest … Continue reading "A Teenager’s Secret Street Photography From 19th Century Oslo"