I was easy to locate because the term "Had" for the game "Tag" puts my childhood very precisely in Worthing, England, right by Brighton in this map. But it also knows I spent two years in Essex. The NYT's British-Irish dialect quiz is a sharp application of science. The U.S. version was published a while back.
Monday, 18 February 2019
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
You might not know this, but the editors of Wikipedia maintain an automated list of all the world's cookies. The have everything from ...
-
This ad forces me to question the value of Superb Owl advertising. Where will you be? I think Qualcomm is still around, but not Flo.Tv . ...
-
" The Bottle Imp " (1893) is a great horror story by Robert Louis Stevenson. (You might want to read it before continuing here, bu...
-
The coder and artist Brannon Dorsey ( previously ) wondered about the potential of "browser based botnets" -- running Javascript ...
-
This almost makes up for Peter Jackson's glaring omission of the great spirit Tom Bombadil from the Lord of the Rings films. Image...
-
https://vimeo.com/71952791 What happens if you allow a group of onlookers to do anything they want to you for six hours? Marina Abramovich ...
-
Last night, Dead & Company performed in Bethel Woods, New York at the site of the original 1969 Woodstock music festival. Their perf...
-
Grind coffee espresso-fine for less than $100. A switch flipped in my head last summer and I started drinking espresso again, after a seve...
-
I came across Roger-Pol Droit's Astonish Yourself at the Califonia Science Center museum shop about 10 years ago. I was attracted to i...
Powered by Blogger.


