From my inbox to the tubes
Saturday, 27 September 2008
Thursday, 25 September 2008
Jump from Firefox to any other browser in a flash
Jump from Firefox to any other browser in a flash
By Mark O'Neill
Contributing Writer, [GAS]
I'm sure that most of you, like me, live and breathe Mozilla Firefox. However, there will be times when you may have to use another browser, such as when you're coding a webpage and need to see how it looks in all available browsers. Or you may come across a website that simply refuses to work in Firefox and demands that you use IE instead. Yes, there ARE still sites out there that refuse to obey the Fox.
The IE Tab extension is already well known, but did you know about some of the other ones out there? For example, here's OperaView if you want to jump to Opera from Firefox. There's even one for Safari (Windows and Mac).
And if you're a fan of the new Google Chrome browser, you can even have a right-click option to be able to jump to Chrome.
Via Firefox Facts
Tuesday, 23 September 2008
Fwd: [Fwd: The Winalot Diet]
Subject: The Winalot DietA real story by a Man who was standing in a queue in Tesco's.........
I have 2 dogs & I was buying a large bag of Winalot in Tesco and was
standing in the queue at the till.
A woman behind me asked if I had a dog.
On impulse, I told her that no, I was starting The Winalot Diet again,
although I probably shouldn't because
I'd ended up in the hospital last time, but that I'd lost 50 pounds
before I awakened in an intensive care ward
with tubes coming out of most of my orifices and IVs in both arms.
I told her that it was essentially a perfect diet and the way that it
works is to load your trouser pockets with
Winalot nuggets and simply eat one or two every time you feel hungry &
that the food is nutritionally complete
so I was going to try it again.
I have to mention here that practically everyone in the queue was by
now enthralled with my story, particularly
a guy who was behind her.
Horrified, she asked if I'd ended up in the hospital in that condition
because I had been poisoned. I told her no,
it was because I'd been sitting in the road licking my balls and a car
hit me.
I thought one guy was going to have a heart attack he was laughing so
hard as he staggered out the door.
Stupid cow..........why else would I buy dog food?
Try Facebook in Windows Live Messenger! Try it Now!No virus found in this incoming message.Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.comVersion: 8.0.169 / Virus Database: 270.7.1/1686 - Release Date: 23/09/2008 07:38
My Youngest Wreckporter
My Youngest Wreckporter
"Now let's kick it over to our newest Wrecks correspondent Violet, who is currently on location at her sister Ruby's third birthday party. Violet?"
"Jen, I'm sitting here in witness to the worst Wreck I've seen in my admittedly young life. Take a look at the disaster area left behind by what could only be called a Disney Princess Explosion."Wow, Violet, isn't that kind of harsh? I mean, the colors are pretty."
"Pretty? Pretty?!? Obviously you aren't seeing the matching Princess plates, napkins, cups, giftwrap... Do you see this hat I'm wearing, Jen?"

"I think it's Tinkerbell."
"No, it's a representation of the blatant over-commercialization that is running rampant in our society, that's what it is. Would you like to hear my dissertation on the breaking down of social conventions by the media barons?"
"Oh, look at the time! Sorry Violet, but we need to wrap this up."
"No problem; time for my nap anyway. Hey, Mom! Guess who needs a fresh diaper? Eh? Hey, what is that? Oh heck no, I am NOT wearing a Princess themed diaper! No, absolutely not! You're making a mockery of my beliefs, woman! Get that away from me!"
"That was Violet, my youngest Wreckporter, folks!"
Cassie F. (aka Mom), don't worry; she'll love that hat by the time she turns 3.
Miwa Anime Papercraft
Miwa Anime Papercraft
Cafetera has posted this beautiful anime papercraft named Miwa. The Miwa papercraft which can be downloaded here has five pages of parts. You'll need the latest version of pepakura to open the file.
Post Feed: Miwa Anime Papercraft - Gundam and Robot Anime
Monday, 22 September 2008
Gateway to the Americas
Gateway to the Americas
The Laredo International Bridge 1 is one of four road bridges that cross the Rio Grande to connect the cities of Laredo, USA and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico.
The 320 m long bridge is officially known as the Gateway to the Americas International Bridge (Wikipedia) and, as we can see from this satellite shot, the sheer volume of cars waiting to get into the states really help it to live up to its name - nearly a million cars cross this bridge each year, albeit slowly.
There's a webcam on the American side that shows a typical American street scene, while the webcam on the Mexican side seems to always show a scene very similar to what we can see in the satellite shot.
In the webcams you might also spot one of the 4 million pedestrians who cross the bridge on foot each year.
Laredo International Bridge 2, or officially the Juárez-Lincoln International Bridge (Wikipedia), was built in 1976 to alleviate traffic on the first bridge, and is only open to buses and non-commercial traffic.
Slightly shorter at 307 m it has six lanes, four or which head north into the US. All four northbound lanes appear to be continually gridlocked, which is hardly surprising when you hear that over 4 million non-commercial vehicles cross here every year.
Google's Street View car never got close enough to see the bridge itself, but we can see the front of the border control building from a distance.
Next up is the Laredo International Bridge 3, or Colombia-Solidarity International Bridge (Wikipedia), which has eight lanes this time and of all the bridges so far carries the most commercial traffic - around 270,000 vehicles each year.
Our final road bridge is the Laredo International Bridge 4, or World Trade International Bridge (Wikipedia), which despite also having eight lanes, is only open to commercial vehicles - a LOT of them. In the past year this bridge has been crossed by nearly 1.2 million commercial vehicles.
It's not only road bridges that connect the two countries here either - there's also the Laredo International Railway Bridge, or Texas-Mexican Railway International Bridge (Wikipedia) which connects the Texas Mexican Railway in the US with Mexico's Kansas City Railway.
Ironically, unlike the road bridges, the Google Street View car got close enough to the railway bridge for a photo opportunity.
As if that wasn't enough bridges, plans are already underway for the construction of yet another road bridge and two more railway bridges.
For the full breakdown of statistical data about these bridges, see this traffic distribution chart at cityoflaredo.com.
Congratulations to Fraser, who finally got a suggestion published.
Locations: Mexico, Texas / Categories: Bridges, Other Vehicles, Street Views
You're reading an entry from Google Sightseeing, which is copyright © 2008 Alex Turnbull & James Turnbull and must not be reproduced without permission.
Sunday, 21 September 2008
Passionella: Queen Of The Bobbleheads
Passionella: Queen Of The Bobbleheads

I'm sure there's a perfectly reasonable explanation for this one. Move along now, nothing to see here.
Thanks to François! Original is here.
Guardian Angels Are Here, Say Most Americans
Guardian Angels Are Here, Say Most Americans
Saw this odd headline, and was rather surprised.
Full Article - Guardian Angels Are Here, Say Most Americans
"More than half of all Americans believe they have been helped by a guardian angel in the course of their lives, according to a new poll by the Baylor University Institute for Studies of Religion. In a poll of 1700 respondents, 55% answered affirmatively to the statement, "I was protected from harm by a guardian angel." The responses defied standard class and denominational assumptions about religious belief; the majority held up regardless of denomination, region or education—though the figure was a little lower (37%) among respondents earning more than $150,000 a year."
"The guardian angel encounter figures were "the big shocker" in the report, says Christopher Bader, director of the Baylor survey that covered a range of religious issues, parts of which are being released Thursday in a book titled What Americans Really Believe. In the case of angels, however, the question is a little stronger than just belief. Says Bader, "If you ask whether people believe in guardian angels, a lot of people will say, 'sure.' But this is different. It's experiential. It means that lots of Americans are having these lived supernatural experiences."
I haven't even heard much "angel talk" in recent years. Plenty of God and Jesus, but not angels. At first I wondered what their definition of "guardian angel" was. Were the respondents speaking of their kindly neighbor, or a best friend who helped them through hard times? But it seems pretty clear they were speaking of the supernatural.
Sunday Sweets: Cake Journal
Sunday Sweets: Cake Journal
Today's Sweets are brought to you by Louise over at Cake Journal, a blog out of Denmark. I've been a fan of her work for some time now, quite simply because she makes gorgeous cakes. Her designs are simple, graphic, and flawless. These two are my favorites:
The sprinkles! The cherry! I love everything about this cake, from the colors to the cartoony angles. (If you check out her site, this is the cake used for her logo, too.)
This cake won the audience vote for Best Novelty Cake at this year's Scandinavian Cake Show. It is absolute perfection; you should go to her site to see the close-ups.Louise, thanks for all the inspiration!
Saturday, 20 September 2008
A History of God
A History of God
Link of the day - Who Is Shawn Casey? Is He For Real?Based on Karen Armstrong's book, this film examines the concept of God in the three major monotheistic religions from the days of Abraham to modern times. Through analysis of historic and holy texts and incorporation of ancient art and artifacts, the program explores the deity written about in the Bible and the Quran. The evolution and intertwining of various Christian, Jewish and Islamic interpretations of God are also addressed.
God: The Failed Hypothesis. How Science Shows That God Does Not Exist
Irreligion: A Mathematician Explains Why the Arguments for God Just Don't Add Up
Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon
What kind of camera are you?
What kind of camera are you?
Are you Coke or Pepsi? PC or Mac? Oxford or Cambridge? Nikon or Canon? Stephen Fry reveals where his loyalty lies
Column "Dork Talk" published on Saturday 20th September 2008 in The Guardian "What kind of camera are you?" - The Guardian headline.
Every Coke has a Pepsi, every Visa a MasterCard. Who do you support in the Boat Race and why? Don't you dare tell me you couldn't give a fig either way: it's Oxford or Cambridge, at some point one must develop a preference, for whatever reason. It's Harvard or Yale, Harpic or Domestos, AA or RAC, PC or Mac. Binary tribalism: Gilbert and Sullivan wrote a song about it.

Canon EOS 1000D: All the convenience of a compact, but underneath lies the potential of a real grown-up SLR
In the world of serious SLR photography, the choice has always been between Nikon or Canon. The single lens reflex (SLR) camera is best defined as being the sort of camera where what you see is what you shoot. As the initials tell you, it is a single lensed entity, a lens that can be changed with a twist of its bayonet. A clever mirror ensures the viewfinder's image is more or less congruent to that of the lens. The SLR is the choice of photojournalists, paparazzi, sports photographers - anyone who needs fast, accurate shooting. The camera goes up to the eye and will be manufactured (with apologies to Pentax, Olympus, Leica and Minolta) by Nikon or Canon. A huge range of Nikkor F-mount lenses for the Nikon and EOS EF lenses for the Canon have built up over the years; they are forwardly and backwardly compatible with new DSLR and old SLR bodies, but not across the brands. An EOS won't fit a Nikon body nor a Nikkor a Canon. There are issues with older Canons and with some Nikon auto focus lenses, but generally speaking, this broad description is correct. A profitable war zone where two major powers continue to joust.
One of the most active battlefields within this world is that of the entry level DSLR. Many people with ordinary compact digitals decide, after a while, that they are ready for the Real Thing. Serious professional kit is wildly expensive, but there is the mid-priced range for the prosumer (yes, isn't that a lovely word?), and finally there is the "My First SLR" category, hotly contested because once a toe is dipped into either the Nikkor or EOS pool, it is unlikely the customer will change: too much will have been invested in the lenses.
Canon has had its reliable 400D and 450D and Nikon their excellent D40 and D60 models available as entry level DSLRs for some time, but I have been spending the past week in the company of Canon's new 1000D (aka the Rebel XS or Kiss F), which I will come straight out and say I adore. It does everything you could hope to welcome a newcomer to the field of SLR photography.
New DSLRs are exceptionally annoying: the outlay is far from insignificant and it is galling when, six months after you've taken the plunge, a new one comes along. I won't claim that Canon will never improve on the 1000D, but I can recommend the plunge being taken here and now. For about £400 you get one hell of a lovely camera. It is astoundingly light (some people will dislike that; I happen to love it), manageable and friendly. With four-stop image stabilisation, a 10.2 MP sensor, a customisable menu, an integrated anti-dust self-cleaning system, a large enough LCD display (albeit slightly smaller than other models), excellent Pro software, the Digic III processor used in higher-end models, SD and SDHC (but not Compact Flash) memory card compatibility and just about all the features you would expect on a prosumer model (no spot metering though, which some users will miss), it is superb value for money. It reacts quickly in Jpeg mode and, most importantly, takes fantastically high quality, low noise photographs using a gigantic permutation of manual and automatic settings. A true pro would wish for faster responses when shooting RAW, but for the rest of us, this is The One. All the convenience and ease of a compact is there, but underneath lies the potential of a real grown-up SLR. If you do buy one, give yourself time slowly to learn about real photography. Be warned: as in music and painting, no gadget can replace talent. For what it's worth, I have Mr Magoo's eye for a shot.
Initials of the week
DSLR Digital single lens reflex.
SDHC Secure digital high capacity memory cards.
RAW An uncompressed, unprocessed image file. These are much larger, but allow complete control over the image.
Religion Promotes Rationality
Religion Promotes Rationality
That's the conclusion of a Baylor University study released yesterday.
The reality is that the New Atheist campaign, by discouraging religion, won't create a new group of intelligent, skeptical, enlightened beings. Far from it: It might actually encourage new levels of mass superstition. And that's not a conclusion to take on faith -- it's what the empirical data tell us.
"What Americans Really Believe," a comprehensive new study released by Baylor University yesterday, shows that traditional Christian religion greatly decreases belief in everything from the efficacy of palm readers to the usefulness of astrology. It also shows that the irreligious and the members of more liberal Protestant denominations, far from being resistant to superstition, tend to be much more likely to believe in the paranormal and in pseudoscience than evangelical Christians.
As someone once wisely observed, the best defense against bad philosophy and religion is good philosophy and religion.
Friday, 19 September 2008
Derren Brown dowses
Derren Brown dowses
I'd say he debunks dowsing here, but he doesn't quite do that. If you read between the lines then you'll get that conclusion, but it's amazing what he does through suggestion (which is really all dowsing is anyway):
By the way, Derren Brown's book, Tricks of the Mind, is excellent. (And so is his TV series Trick of the Mind.) I found his memory tips very helpful — and the last 1/3 of the book is on skepticism and atheism. Plus you'll learn a couple card tricks. It's a bit hard to find in the US, but you can sometimes find it from sellers on Amazon.

Turkey Bans Dawkins RDF Site
Turkey Bans Dawkins RDF Site
This would be funny if it weren't quite so pathetic ... even if it's for pure libel grounds the guy is a convicted felon with an obvious interest in this.
RDF: Turkey bans RichardDawkins.net
Ankara - Turkish internet users have been blocked via a court order from accessing the site of prominent British biologist Richard Dawkins after complaints from lawyers for Islamic creationist author Adnan Oktar, the website of Turkish television station NTV reported on Wednesday.
A court in Istanbul ordered that Turk Telekom block access to the site and since the weekend Turkish internet users seeking the site have been redirected to a page that says in Turkish 'access to this site has been suspended in accordance with a court decision'.
NTV reported that Oktar complained he and his creationist book 'Atlas of Creation' had been defamed by comments made by Dawkins on the site.
'I am at a loss to reconcile the expensive and glossy production values of this book with the breathtaking inanity of the content,' Dawkins, a distinguished advocate of the theory of evolution, wrote on his website in July referring to the Atlas of Creation.
The book has caused controversy not just through its advocation of creationism but also through how thousands of copies of book were distributed to schools in a number of European countries.
Kyu
Hakim: Sarah Palin Lovechild Uncovered
Hakim: Sarah Palin Lovechild Uncovered

When the good people at Hakim Optical decided, on that fateful day, to transplant a smiling - albeit female - grin onto the sullen longhaired boy, little did they know that they were creating an image so terrible - so dramatically repugnant to the senses - that soon few would believe they were a real business, rather than some fictitious thread of awfulness and legend.
Thanks to Matt!
Thursday, 18 September 2008
Wrecks Takes a Field Trip
Wrecks Takes a Field Trip
Today, class, we're going to see an example of how other sugary foods can become Wrecks.Here we have what looks at first glance to be a perfectly normal hamburger:

But check out the description sent to me by the "architectural foodsmiths" over at Bompas & Parr:
"The burger, known as the Monnow Valley Burger, is comprised of a hamburger patty with two slices of melted cheese, tomatoes, secret sauce and onions sandwiched inside a Krispy Kreme Original Glazed donut and garnished with a slice of gherkin. The Monnow Valley Burger contains up to 1000 calories and 45 grams of fat."
Daaaang.
This is nuts! I mean, c'mon, "architectural foodsmiths"? They stick a Whopper in a Krispy Kreme, and they get to call themselves "architectural foodsmiths"? Really?
I guess in their defense, they also created this snazzy little number:
That's pork and tomatoes under that sugary-sprinkled donut shell, my friends. Awww yeeeah.Now that I've whet your appetites, I'm sure you're demanding to know just where you can procure one of these culinary delights. Well, if you live across the pond you're in luck: they debut this Saturday, September 20th, at the Abergavenny Food Festival in Britain.
And here's the kicker: Bompas & Parr are billing the Monnow Valley Drive-Thru where the burgers are served as "the ultimate American eating and entertainment experience". So going by their press release, the "ultimate American experience" equals hotdog-eating-contests, theater performances in which the actors are dressed as "a flock of burgers", screenings of the movie Pulp Fiction, and of course thousand-calorie-donut-burgers.
Wow. So much to be offended by, so little time.
Actually, I'm kind of torn: this could in fact be brilliant satire, considering our American love-affair with gut-busting fast food and general idiocy. I mean, the show "Flavor of Love" alone should by all rights get us kicked back into the Stone Age, so if donut-burgers and hotdog-eating-contests are the Brits' way of poking fun, huzzah and well played. If, on the other hand, they honestly think Pulp Fiction and prancing flocks of burgers epitomizes US culture, then let me be the first to remind Bompas & Parr that we Americans may be fat, and have questionable taste in entertainment, but we can occasionally tell when we're being insulted. And furthermore, we don't like it very much. (Being insulted, I mean; not the other stuff.)
So there.
Many thanks to Bompas & Parr for the photos and info. Guys, I don't know if I should shake your hands or slap your faces. Maybe you should send me some of those donut burgers so I can make an informed decision.
And as for the rest of you: field trip over! We continue with our regularly scheduled Cake Wrecks tomorrow.
Ezekiel bread
Ezekiel bread
My family buys Ezekiel bread quite often. It is a product inspired by Ezekiel 4:9:
Take also unto thee Wheat, and Barley, and beans, and lentils, and millet, and Spelt, and put them in one vessel, and make bread of it…
The hilarious thing is they didn't seem to read the rest of the chapter, because a few verses later God says:
And you shall eat it as a barley cake, baking it in their sight on human dung.
Ezekiel whines to God about this, so God, in his infinite kindness, says it's okay to use cow dung instead of human dung.
Now who wants some scrumptious Ezekiel bread?

The View From The End Of The World
The View From The End Of The World
Link of the day - Who Is Shawn Casey? Is He For Real?Sam Harris cranks out blunt, hard-hitting chapters to make his case for why faith itself is the most dangerous element of modern life. And if the devil's in the details, then you'll find Satan waiting at the back of the book in the very substantial notes section where Harris saves his more esoteric discussions to avoid sidetracking the urgency of his message.
Interestingly, Harris is not just focused on debunking religious faith, though he makes his compelling arguments with verve and intellectual clarity. The End of Faith is also a bit of a philosophical Swiss Army knife. Once he has presented his arguments on why, in an age of Weapons of Mass Destruction, belief is now a hazard of great proportions, he focuses on proposing alternate approaches to the mysteries of life. Harris recognizes the truth of the human condition, that we fear death, and we often crave "something more" we cannot easily define, and which is not met by accumulating more material possessions. But by attempting to provide the cure for the ills it defines, the book bites off a bit more than it can comfortably chew in its modest page count (however the rich Bibliography provides more than enough background for an intrigued reader to follow up for months on any particular strand of the author' musings.)
Harris' heart is not as much in the latter chapters, though, but in presenting his main premise. Simply stated, any belief system that speaks with assurance about the hereafter has the potential to place far less value on the here and now. And thus the corollary -- when death is simply a door translating us from one existence to another, it loses its sting and finality. Harris pointedly asks us to consider that those who do not fear death for themselves, and who also revere ancient scriptures instructing them to mete it out generously to others, may soon have these weapons in their own hands. If thoughts along the same line haunt you, this is your book.
God: The Failed Hypothesis. How Science Shows That God Does Not Exist
Irreligion: A Mathematician Explains Why the Arguments for God Just Don't Add Up
Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon
twinkle twinkle little star
twinkle twinkle little star
IMG_1656, originally uploaded by Sequoia Redd.Coming soon - faster, better Hotmail
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Message-Id: <20080917184048.1384.14728219-17449@microsoft.windowslive.com>
Win a copy of the Google Sightseeing book!
Win a copy of the Google Sightseeing book!
Our friends over at Virtual Globetrotting are currently running a Street View scavenger hunt to find interesting words in the imagery.
Prizes for the top 5 competitors in the scavenger hunt is a copy of the 5 star rated classic Off the Map, the US edition of the Google Sightseeing Book.
Rules of the Scavenger Hunt are available on Virtual Globetrotting or, if your not so good at hunting, the book is still available for purchase on Amazon UK and US.
Categories: Site News
You're reading an entry from Google Sightseeing, which is copyright © 2008 Alex Turnbull & James Turnbull and must not be reproduced without permission.
Wednesday, 17 September 2008
Is Morality Natural?
Is Morality Natural?
Of course, the Newsweek article concludes it is. But there's no evidence that it is, other than that many of the moral choices we make are fairly universal.
These studies suggest that nature handed us a moral grammar that fuels our intuitive judgments of right and wrong.
But this observation of universality is at home in a theist worldview. The observation doesn't explain morality's origin. You have to fall back on the resources of the worldviews to do that.
It's amazing how easily these trivial observations end up in major newsweeklies.
Join my new Facebook group!
Join my new Facebook group!
Public college president brings up God @ graduation, hopes no one important will notice
Good Morning! This web site is designed to spread the vicious truth about the Bible
The Worldâ™s Tallest Structures Revisited
The Worldâ™s Tallest Structures Revisited
Earlier this month the still-incomplete Burj Dubai building in Dubai officially surpassed the height of all other buildings, towers and masts worldwide, making it the tallest man-made structure on the planet.
Currently standing at a staggering 688 m, construction of Burj Dubai is set to continue for another year, and the final height will not be announced until the building opens in September 2009.
As you can see, the Google Earth image was taken while the building was still just a toddler, but you can get an idea of how it might look with a 3D model.
Before the Burj Dubai came along the process for deciding on the world's tallest building was strangely complex - there's actually 4 possible categories to consider - and there were separate records for supported masts.
Burj Dubai simplified the debate by taking the top spot in all possible categories, but it gives us an opportunity to revisit all the previous record holders, many of which have been updated since we previously looked at tall buildings and the world's tallest towers.
Taipei 101 in Taiwan once held the "tallest building" record in 3 of the 4 possible categories with its architectural height of 508 m, highest occupied floor of 438 m and roof height of 448 m.
For the moment at least, Taipei 101 retains the title of largest completed building, but after the completion of Burj Dubai it will have to settle for being the location of the worldâ™s fastest ascending elevator, which can get you up to the 101st floor at a gut-wrenching 37.7 mph!
Chicago's Sears Tower was once the holder of all tall building records. Taipei 101 failed to conquer its record of "height with antenna", at 529 m, but Burj Dubai has easily cleared that without the need of extra-reaching aerials.
Lastly, the rope-supported KVLY-TV mast in Blanchard, North Dakota, was officially the tallest man-made structure on the planet at a height of 629 m. The fact that Burj Dubai already tops this height without any external supports is testament to just how amazing an engineering feat it really is.
Further reading at the Wikipedia pages for Burj Dubai, Taipei 101, Sears tower and KVLY-TV mast.
Locations: Illinois, North Dakota, Taiwan, United Arab Emirates / Categories: Buildings, Towers
You're reading an entry from Google Sightseeing, which is copyright © 2008 Alex Turnbull & James Turnbull and must not be reproduced without permission.
Fwd: Discussion between Richard Dawkins and Clive James (Audio)
Date: 17 September 2008 07:14:32 BSTSubject: Discussion between Richard Dawkins and Clive James (Audio)Reply-To: David <noreply@blogger.com>Source: Atheist Media BlogAuthor: David <noreply@blogger.com>Link | Download MP3 August 11 2008 Duration: 55 min The author of the hugely popular and controversial 'The God Delusion' rolled into Edinburgh Book Festival today for an hour long discussion about...
Fwd: Seen On The Streets Of New York
Date: 17 September 2008 14:38:43 BSTSubject: Seen On The Streets Of New YorkSource: Wooster Collective
Tuesday, 16 September 2008
Fwd: Fresh Stuff From DAN in Bristol UK
Date: 15 September 2008 14:18:54 BSTSubject: Fresh Stuff From DAN in Bristol UKSource: Wooster Collective
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- Lucy Kibble's mouse!
- Jump from Firefox to any other browser in a flash
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- FW: Some colourful crap to brighten up your day!
- Miwa Anime Papercraft
- FW: Call Girl.....Somewhere in Afghanistan
- Betty Page - Private Peeks Volume 4
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- Gateway to the Americas
- Family Guy: The Passion Of The Christ 2
- Passionella: Queen Of The Bobbleheads
- Guardian Angels Are Here, Say Most Americans
- Sunday Sweets: Cake Journal
- A History of God
- What kind of camera are you?
- Religion Promotes Rationality
- Derren Brown dowses
- Turkey Bans Dawkins RDF Site
- JR Goes BIG in New York
- Hakim: Sarah Palin Lovechild Uncovered
- Wrecks Takes a Field Trip
- Ezekiel bread
- The View From The End Of The World
- twinkle twinkle little star
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- Coming soon - faster, better Hotmail
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