About six years ago, the Royal Shakespeare Company presented a performance of Edward III and attributed it to Shakespeare.
It's accepted that Shakespeare didn't write every word of every plays in his canon (for example, he didn't write most of Pericles and Henry VIII) but there was obviously enough evidence for most Shakespeare scholars to accept that he wrote a substantial part of it. This latest piece of research is just a further piece of evidence, but it's nothing radically new.
It's not true to say that every area covered by cable is also covered by DSL - at least not in the UK it's not.
I have a cable connection to my house but DSL is not an option as I'm too far from the exchange (about 70m according to BT).
And yes, I do have a cap on my broadband but as I never some near to reaching it, I'm not bothered.
I am far more bothered by the lack of competiton though, there's now only one cable operator in the UK and if Virgin decides to hike its prices, I have little choice when it comes to broadband
About 27m voted in the last general election, I believe that at its peak, Big Brother only attracted 7m viewers. So even if everyone who watched Big Brother voted, there were still four times as many people who voted in the election; guess it's down to the loonies voting repeatedly. Still, it could catch on in elections - perhaps Blair will suggest that the richer you are, the more votes you have.
There's no correlation between the two figures. 70% of the oceans could indeed by shark-free but you could well find 100% of sharks in the 30% that aren't.
Or perhaps that should be 100% minus the percentage that aren't working as patent lawyers.
The delicious irony of this is that the original Boston Tea Party was to protest against imported cheap tea and supported the right of American tea companies to charge higher prices.
Now, which side would an 18th century Microsoft have been on?
One thing that we born and raised Brightonians do hate hearing is that Brighton is some suburb of London or, even worse, London-by-the-sea. It has a culture all of its own.
A Wi-Fi service sounds good in principle but as I, and 100s of others, frequently stand on the London-Brighton trains, I think there's limited opportunity to do any work.
Sorry to be a pedant but Murdoch is a US citizen. He renounced his Australian citizenship to get around restrictions on media ownership. That, I think, tells you all you need to know about Murdoch's priorities.
Fox News is a disgrace however - whatever the nationality of the owner.
About six years ago, the Royal Shakespeare Company presented a performance of Edward III and attributed it to Shakespeare. It's accepted that Shakespeare didn't write every word of every plays in his canon (for example, he didn't write most of Pericles and Henry VIII) but there was obviously enough evidence for most Shakespeare scholars to accept that he wrote a substantial part of it. This latest piece of research is just a further piece of evidence, but it's nothing radically new.
It's not true to say that every area covered by cable is also covered by DSL - at least not in the UK it's not. I have a cable connection to my house but DSL is not an option as I'm too far from the exchange (about 70m according to BT). And yes, I do have a cap on my broadband but as I never some near to reaching it, I'm not bothered. I am far more bothered by the lack of competiton though, there's now only one cable operator in the UK and if Virgin decides to hike its prices, I have little choice when it comes to broadband
Do you think they used Perl?
About 27m voted in the last general election, I believe that at its peak, Big Brother only attracted 7m viewers. So even if everyone who watched Big Brother voted, there were still four times as many people who voted in the election; guess it's down to the loonies voting repeatedly. Still, it could catch on in elections - perhaps Blair will suggest that the richer you are, the more votes you have.
There's no correlation between the two figures. 70% of the oceans could indeed by shark-free but you could well find 100% of sharks in the 30% that aren't. Or perhaps that should be 100% minus the percentage that aren't working as patent lawyers.
The delicious irony of this is that the original Boston Tea Party was to protest against imported cheap tea and supported the right of American tea companies to charge higher prices. Now, which side would an 18th century Microsoft have been on?
One thing that we born and raised Brightonians do hate hearing is that Brighton is some suburb of London or, even worse, London-by-the-sea. It has a culture all of its own. A Wi-Fi service sounds good in principle but as I, and 100s of others, frequently stand on the London-Brighton trains, I think there's limited opportunity to do any work.
Sorry to be a pedant but Murdoch is a US citizen. He renounced his Australian citizenship to get around restrictions on media ownership. That, I think, tells you all you need to know about Murdoch's priorities. Fox News is a disgrace however - whatever the nationality of the owner.