Reminds me a little of the bit in 'Bill and Ted' with so-crates. "All we are, are sand in the wind, dude! Sand... Wind... DUDE!".
Bravo, Encore, Marvellous, and all the other second rate TV stations available on your sky box.
Keep up the good work by the way.
Grrr...
By Roger Paul
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 11:07 GMT
If you have a loose licence why don't you tighten it?
[/pet peeve]
Great article!
Fantastic!
By Michael Sheils
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 11:40 GMT
A simple brilliant article, well done.
No wonder
By Rhys
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 11:41 GMT
Socrates drank poison if he hadto put up with that prattle.
Roger,
By Rob
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 12:38 GMT
I think that was the point. His grammar and spelling aren't that good. They're behaving like everyone on the internet...
Lorry T(r)ailer - thinking aloud
By Nano nano
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 14:33 GMT
Presumably the Artic Monkeys is some Eddie Stobart or Norbert Dentressangle -related music group ?
Never mind Facebook
By Andy Bright
Posted Thursday 19th July 2007 00:40 GMT
I always thought it was a shame they never met the bloke that writes the fortune cookie messages..
Outstanding
By Chris Morrison
Posted Thursday 19th July 2007 09:09 GMT
The use of "loose" was the icing on the cake; so true to life. Cracking!
ARGonauts on a Quest? A Simply Complex Rhetorical Question
By amanfromMars
Posted Thursday 19th July 2007 10:07 GMT
"He is the richest who is content with the least. Boom, boom."
Amen to that deep gem, Socrates.
And on A.N.Other Real Deep Note, is the Register AI Leader in Steganographic Stealth......... Add Ministering Truths in Universal Masteries?
Amen to that deep Node/Mother Lode/Heavy MetAI.
@the Reg team
By Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 13:39 GMT
Can you give amanfromMars his own column? Deciphering WTF he's on about is a little like the attempting to solve the Times' cryptic crossword. While drunk.
That way, there could be a collaborative effort from Reg readers to produce the solution to the puzzle.
Disabling comments?
By David Norfolk
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 13:47 GMT
In general, I don't censor comments. Amanfrommars does get rejected quite often, if he makes no sense at all, but I confess that I have a certain tolerance for the surreal...
Re: Disabling comments?
By Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 14:15 GMT
Don't misunderstand me - my post was intended as a positive endorsement :-)
Cryptic clues make far more sense after a wee dram...
Jock
Martha Jones's assets
By Paul Crawford
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 20:37 GMT
The real question, one that has not been properly explored, is why there are not more photos of Martha Jones's posterior? That is clearly a good point for her character roll, and one that has been sadly lacking in the erudite discussions so far...
Ignatius has joined the group
By Mary Branscombe
Posted Saturday 21st July 2007 09:42 GMT
Ignatius: I saw on Catullus' profile that you were discussing my famous dental health techniques. Of course health and beauty are key to true happiness, so I'll just tell you all a bit about the philosophy of my business..
All that's old is new again
By b shubin
Posted Tuesday 31st July 2007 01:13 GMT
brought a tear of nostalgia to my eye, it did.
modern social networking sites are like USENET in its days of decline, but with GUI and more bugs, on higher-end hardware.
as for the classical philosophers, good thing they had to write stuff down before they shared it. gave them time to edit it into something useful, unlike the insipid MST3K fragments we see here.
if {given a platform even an idiot can use}
and {most idiots can access}
then {too many idiots will abuse it, making the platform useful only to idiots}
else if {the platform includes methods to filter idiots}
or {the platform requires effort and intelligence to use}
then {the platform will be condemned as elitist - "sour grapes"}
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