And thus did the gentle streets of Bloomsbury, home to Virginia Woolf, Charles Dickens and William Butler Yeats, also inspire that darkest of eras - http://blogs.nature.com/london...
"And thus did the gentle streets of Bloomsbury, home to Virginia Woolf, Dorothy Sayers, Charles Dickens and William Butler Yeats, also inspire that darkest of eras"
- Chris Hill
from Bookmarklet
Does MG Siegler even understand how full RSS feeds work? In Google Reader, I can read the whole post, so I have very little reason to click through to the original TechCrunch article unless I want to read any comments. With Twitter, you can’t read the full article, so need to click through to read it. Isn’t that obvious?
- Tony Ruscoe
I don't know who MG Siegler, but given he's looking at site stats, perhaps he's marketing rather than a techy, and so doesn't really understand how it all works? Either way, yeah, you'd have thought it obvious.
- Chris Hill
"The photo either strengthens or weakens the case for raw food, depending on how you read it: If the men surrounding Gandhi are 112 years old, they look pretty good, and their shriveled paleness is understandable. If they are significantly younger, as one might suspect, then perhaps there is something missing"
- Chris Hill
from Bookmarklet
Makes me nervous watching you do this. Do they not do a 'clumsy test' before issuing punts to members of the public?
- nicktryg
Remarkably, I've been punting twice now and not fallen in. A few nervous moments though! On 17 May 2010, at 12:36, nicktryg wrote:
- Chris Hill
from email
Reading this article, I've come to the conclusion that David Cameron is literally retarded: "He said the cost of the scheme had not yet been worked out, but it would ultimately save money by cutting crime and anti-social behaviour." ?! If he wants to counter opposition claims that he's living in cloud cuckoo land, he's not doing a very good job!
- Chris Hill
from Bookmarklet