Tasmania’s Premier visits the giant squid.
There’s something delightfully Jim Hacker about this image.
Jonathan Sanderson’s weblog, since 2001.
Tasmania’s Premier visits the giant squid.
There’s something delightfully Jim Hacker about this image.
I finally got my TiBook back from Frankfurt, where it had been for screen repair (yikes!). The thing that strikes me most about meeting it this second time?
Oddly, having been away from a Mac for almost a fortnight, it’s… the text in OmniWeb. It’s a joy to read webpages again. Simple as that.
My current employer has started selling greeting cards in the staff canteen. They read ‘Sorry you’re leaving.’
Nice.
Oh shit. Anybody started a countdown clock yet?
Media Guardian on the whole Big Brother/Jade thing. Right at the end, Germaine Greer’s take on the matter – and I quote – ‘Ah, bullshit. That fat slag deserves all she gets.’
Now, I don’t entirely agree, but suddenly I find myself liking Greer more than I have at any time in the last decade. [shrug]
This is, quite possibly, the best photo ever of John Prescott. The Guardian’s coverage of it is completely irreverent too, which is all for the better.
Bob Park’s latest What’s New column at the American Physical Society continues his ongoing rant against manned spaceflight in general, and the International Space Station in particular. Why? Because it’s sold as a research lab, but it’s not doing any research. Oh, and putting it in a position where it could conceivably do some research would cost a fortune (in science research terms).
Read the Bob. He talks sense.
Here we go again – time for another shake-up of GCSE science teaching.
While I’m sure GCSE science is deeply dull, and I’m hardly in the camp that chants ‘they have to learn to walk before they can run,’ something about this does worry me. For example, how can one discuss the MMR nightmare in an informed way, without having done any formal statistics? This is, of course, the basic problem with the MMR situation – what’s perfectly reasonable for individuals is a bit of a disaster for the population as a whole.
Besides, haven’t we heard all this before? Wasn’t the whole GCSE thing, back in 1988, supposed to be about relevance and practicality? These may be good intentions, but are they actually new?
I’m such a twit. I’ve gone and installed this blog system with blatant disregard for actually reading the docs. And now I can’t work out how to make it do half the things I want.
Whereas, if I’d just slung up a(nother) Geeklog system, we’d be ticking right along, if not looking quite so crisp and clean. [sigh]. Content management systems are well and good, but sometimes, I want a decent content metamanagement system.
From one of the mailing lists I frequent, yesterday:
Has anyone come across a supplier of snake models or reasonably realistic toy versions? I’m after a sidewinder snake that can be handled for a feely box exhibit.
Followed, barely an hour later, by:
Try Daisy and Toms Deansgate Manchester; I purchased some funky models there recently.
What’s scary is that last Monday we had a similar exchange about insects in resin. Any offers for next week?