We have a weiner!
5th of November has picked it Plagiarist of the Year. Congrats to the winner Peter Wright, editor of The Mail on Sunday.
Comments are off for this postA few things of mine…
First of all Marty has reviewed Tim’s new book on blogging the year 2005.
And the second of his Musical Meltdowns is available with reviews of material from Rob Zombie, Anthrax and rocker upstarts Reculver.
Comments are off for this postAnd up came a bubbling crude…
Oil that is…Respect must be very keen on the dinosaurs that gave their remains to feed the righteous cause of George Galloway socialists workers in the UK.
Round-up round-up
SNN is up for the week; as is the Britblogger round-up. This week’s is at a special guest host as Tim is off flogging his book. The Bestof this week features Susan Sontag.
The Witanagemot round-up is available for your attention. The New Libertarian is out for your reading pleasure.
The more vain have their carnival to peruse and those who do a bit of self-deprication have theirs.
Lest ye think that Daily Telegraph ain’t with it; they now have their own podcast.
Comments are off for this postThe Maze
thought id finally found the way
but im right back where i started
now im stuck inside the maze
I’ve long been fascinated by mazes and labyrinths, and used to draw quite elaborate ones with thousands of dead ends. This freeware program for Windows can create mazes with billions of twisty little passages. It also supports these creation types:
Standard, unicursal, no dead ends, circular, triangular, hexagonal, octagonal, random angles, true random, over-and-under, 3D, 4D, 5D, spirals, arrows, biased passages, long passages, diagonal passages, symmetric, nested fractal, recursive fractal, cubes, word, hypermaze.
The program also features recreations of some famous real mazes, such as the Glacier Maze in Montana, above and at left.
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