Beware, it's in Flash (or Shockwave)
http://www.electrotank.com/lab/minigolf.html
Hole 17 is a bugger
c.
--
every day, computers are making people easier to use
http://www.unorthodoxstyles.com
on 5/6/01 10:31 am, Robin Szemeti wrote:
hmm .. we're trying to justify a move to 5gb a month .. at which point
Nildram sounds like a cheaper option. ... is Aylesbury nice?
No :)
But hopefully you wouldn't need to go there that often (just when the root
password expires ho hum).
I think
on 4/6/01 11:29 pm, Chris Benson wrote:
OTOH It makes Nildram's gbp2000 p.a. including 15mins of technician/day to
do whatever you need seem very good value.
I have one of those. Nildram couldn't be more helpful. I've even had to
visit my box on occasion (ok, so they're in Aylesbury, but it's
on 31/5/01 12:37 pm, Mark Fowler wrote:
I seem to remember downloading an .exe last week (which I no longer have
and no longer seems to be where it was on thier site.) Are they randomly
switching between MSI and .exe and haven't bothered to upload the
installer when they switched back.
I
on 25/5/01 10:17 am, Dave Hodgkinson wrote:
Is there any easier way of flogging stuff on line than using Amazon
Z-shops? They settle quickly, commission isn't horrendous and they do
some inventory management.
I think Yahoo do a similar deal.
Not necessarily much better tho'.
c.
--
(because people were talking about it)
http://just-drinks.com/news_detail.asp?art=12376dm=yes
ROME, May 21 (Reuters) - Canada has won the right to compete with Germany
and Austria in supplying Europeans with Icewine, a sugary dessert wine
made from grapes harested in freezing temperatures.
c.
on 22/5/01 4:02 pm, Simon Wistow wrote:
the Tory's want to repeal IR35, make RIPA less strict and speed up Local
Loop unbundling, whereas Labour want to introduce laws meaning that if
you pretend to be a teenager on the Net you can be jailed for 5 years
(bad luck bK).
It seems that every
on 22/5/01 4:19 pm, Robin Szemeti wrote:
thank goodness for
proportioanl representation, it should make the next parliament a lot
more representative of what people actually want, ratehr than a choice
between 2 (and a half ) evils.
Errr... no PR yet for general elections!
Slight aside, but
on 22/5/01 4:46 pm, Simon Wistow wrote:
Simon Cozens wrote:
I've yet to hear a Labour MP talk eloquently about anything at all. Anyone
ever talked - sorry, tried talking - to their MP about RIP?
Harriet Harman tried to tell me that I didn't really know about
computers or the Internet.
on 22/5/01 5:26 pm, Robin Szemeti wrote:
Errr... no PR yet for general elections!
really .. are you sure ? .. I'm certain this lot said they were going
to do something about that ... how odd.
It was part of the buttering-up in case of a need for a Lib-Lab pact. It's
certainly been pushed
on 14/5/01 9:24 pm, Robin Szemeti wrote:
What the hell happened to the youth that did amusing things with steam
engines, collected stamps and had a chemistry set? .. give a 16 year old
a chemistry set today and they'd try and inject it.
They seem to have taken anything remotely fun out of
on 11/5/01 4:35 pm, Paul Mison wrote:
This time, the constraint is the route; we'll be trying to walk around
the Circle line, either trying to follow it as closely as possible or
just walking between the stations. (We're deciding that on crisps, when
it works.)
Has anyone got a proper
on 25/4/01 9:02 am, Robert Shiels wrote:
I will
mainly be doing SAP work, but hope to get other IT work too, so don't want
SAP in the name.
I came up with Diatom Consulting for an ex of mine (mainly a SAP sysadmin).
Old chemistry and physics books are good starters, as are other languages.
on 25/4/01 5:25 pm, Paul Makepeace wrote:
If you read
the small print they threaten to disconnect service if whois info isn't
accurate. Pity you have to supply perfect info for spammers.
I think that's fair, like accepting mail to postmaster@, hostmaster@,
webmaster@ etc. It's not like email
On Thu, 19 Apr 2001 18:03:20 +0100 (BST), Mike Wyer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Nope. All very respectable, sadly. No bonobos at all, and all the other
apes and monkeys were very well behaved.
Last time I went, the prarie dogs had gone. I was not amused.
c.
--
every day, computers are
on 4/4/01 11:27 am, Simon Wilcox wrote:
Luckily it only did minor damage to the backstage area.
I bought a supply of various flashes and explosions, but did not have a
firing box.
Using the switch on a 4 way extension block (with a number of mains plugs to
croc clips) is probably not the
on 26/3/01 10:04 pm, Greg McCarroll wrote:
The problem of course with London (London.pm?) is that
every activity we can think of is drink related.
Well we do have a river here ya know ;)
Other ideas:
taking over a London Eye pod
hiring a room in the VA, Science Museum or Nat Hist Museum
DavidC:
According to the critics, it is 'acceptable if not great' but fuck it,
*I* liked it.
Remember a lot of wine suffers from the holiday effect, and doesn't seem
quite as nice on a wet blustery Thursday night.
Lachryma Christi del Vesuvio, in case anyone is interested.
Ah, I have heard
on 9/2/01 4:23 pm, David Cantrell wrote:
That's why I recommend Nildram... They're
expensive, but it's worth it.
Indeed. Real people to talk to. Real people to help out when things
inevitably go pear shaped. Real people to plug things in and unplug them.
c.
--
every day, computers are
on 4/1/01 11:03 am, David Hodgkinson wrote:
Anyone fancy dim sum shortly?
What, when McDonalds are doing 2-for-1? ;)
c.
--
every day, computers are making people easier to use
http://www.unorthodoxstyles.com
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