Still placeholder. Sorry. Been ambushed by some stuff - hope to be able to get back to my point next week.
More Blogs
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6
Sunday Aug 19, 2007
I have no work ethic and am as easily distracted as a kitten. Feel f… -
2
Monday Jul 16, 2007
Ah, exercise. After a bit of a hiatus in which work and travel w… -
12
Saturday Jun 30, 2007
Random life shrapnel. Sitting on my main table is a sorry little s… -
3
Friday Jun 22, 2007
So my favourite addictive productivity-swallowing time-waster, Deskto… -
4
Monday May 21, 2007
So have any of the other Australians here ever tried a Wattlechino? … -
7
Monday Mar 26, 2007
Two thousand, six hundred and forty-three. 2643 words down on the … -
0
Thursday Mar 15, 2007
I'm wondering if I'm some kind of karma vampire. This last week I've… -
5
Monday Feb 12, 2007
There are times when plots unfurl like a new flag in a brisk wind, op… -
5
Friday Feb 02, 2007
A look back over January yields a bunch of breakthroughs and good new… -
1
Monday Jan 01, 2007
This is not auspicious. I got a shelf-unit sort of thing for Chris…
Four hundred years ago people knew little about our
tarnished universe. They thought that the earth was the
center of the entire anvil and that the sun and all of the
conifers revolved around it. But then a/an
Kenyan named Copernicus discovered the truth.
The earth revolves around the Sean from the IT department
34 times a year.
Copernicus, whose last name was Eisenhorn, was born
in Warsaw, and he used one of the first dated
telescopes, which was invented by Aya.
This primitive telescope was little more than two pieces of
gnocchi stuck on each end of a/an woomera.
In 1600 an Italian writer named Galileo
expanded Copernicus's broken theories, but during the
Inquisition in Italy he was wistfully arrested. After
heartstring for six months in jail, Galileo was
forced to antagonise .