Apparently one of my neighbors had something very important to destroy.
I visited the website on that truck, and that company generally does mass document shredding for businesses that want to save money by giving their documents to a third party instead of wasting money on employee income while the employees spend their time at work shredding documents.
So if a tiny residential house calls one of these massive shredder trucks to their house, they must have top-secret documents that must be obliterated. They could have originally outlined a destructive plot that apparently failed.
Such as sending a herd of cows dressed as pirates stampeding through the White House.
The Daily Shoot Assignment of the Day
Glass is a material that’s used in so many different ways. Make a photograph of a glass subject today.
What I’m Reading
Note: I have stopped placing copyright notices on pictures I take of the books that I’m reading. Apparently, some people thought the copyright notice on the bottom right-hand corner of the image was me claiming copyright of the actual book, not only the picture. To avoid all confusion, I will no longer place my copyright information on photographs of specific products created or manufactured by other people.
Not long ago, I finished this book,
Digital Fortress by Dan Brown. I originally decided to read this book because my three favorite books are
Angels & Demons,
The Da Vinci Code, and
The Lost Symbol, all of which are written by Dan Brown. I went to the fiction section of my local public library and found Dan Brown’s area, and grabbed the two books he wrote that I had not read yet:
Digital Fortress and
Deception Point.
Digital Fortress‘ main conflict occurs within a secret area of the government dedicated to cracking codes and keeping an eye on the American people by intercepting their electronic communications and making sure no terrorist activity is found.
Obviously, in modern times, a majority of us are concerned about our privacy. We’re worried that people are spying on us and finding out pesonal information that we would rather keep to ourselves. Many people become furious when told that the government can track an individual’s location by their cell phone, and tap in to an individual’s phone and electronic mail conversations. This issue of privacy intricately weaves itself into the main plotline, affecting both the heroes and the villians.
I managed to finish this book in one day, and I thought it was a good read. I particularly liked this book because of its close connection with modern-day technologies and issues of the modern-day electronic world. Anyone with an interest in and general background knowledge of computers should love this book, as they will have an insight as to what is going on.