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Saturday 6 August 2016

The world's first website went online 25 years ago today


n this day 25 years ago the world's first website went live to the public. The site, created by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, was a basic text page with hyperlinked words that connected to other pages.
Berners-Lee used the public launch to outline his plan for the service, which would come to dominate life in the twenty-first century.
"The WWW project merges the techniques of information retrieval and hypertext to make an easy but powerful global information system," said Berners-Lee on the world's first public website. "The project started with the philosophy that much academic information should be freely available to anyone."
Berners-Lee wanted the World Wide Web to be a place where people could share information across the world through documents and links navigated with a simple search function.-read more

Tuesday 2 August 2016

B

I t w e. y l s. .n o of K a g a. H c m k la n c o t l. N t a W a m b c g.

I like everyone do not like bullies in any form not verbal 'physical;written as can be hurtful and make me go back to old self .also yes I do bite back and I do apologise but really hate people that use others to fight thier battles as I always deal with my problems myself and makes me feel like the bad guy which I know I am not.

posted from Bloggeroid

Monday 1 August 2016

Oh it's got worse

Recently a person I know very well has had to have a catheter placed to aid fluid retention which has built up and affects the chest. Drink given IE water to help pass urine and chart of in and out plus a night bag if gets worse hospital tests that's hope for the best for the most beautiful person in my life.

posted from Bloggeroid

Sunday 31 July 2016

The 340-year-old cheese found on shipwreck off Sweden

340 year old cheeseDivers have found what they believe to be a very old, very smelly cheese in a jar stuck on the sea bed, near Sweden.
The stinky discovery was made when the team were exploring the wreck of the Kronan, a warship that sank 340 years ago.
They didn't know it was cheese until the journey to the surface caused some of the contents to leak, releasing a very strong smell.
But in matters as important as the potential discovery of 340-year-old cheese, you can't just trust your nose.
So the team have sent their discovery to a laboratory so that they can know for sure what they have found.

don't go to the moon ?

if you are an astronaut you may be five times more likely to die of a heart attack if go all the way to the moon.this is due to cosmic radiation beyond earths  protective magnetic field .3 of apollo 24 astronauts who flew to moon have died of heart disease  including neil armstrong the first man on the moon .

42 Old English Insults

Besides being the greatest writer in the history of the English language, William Shakespeare was the master of the pithy put-down. So the nervous servant who tells Macbeth his castle is under attack is dismissed as a “cream-faced loon.” Oswald in King Lear isn’t just a useless idiot, he’s a “whoreson zed,” an “unnecessary letter.” Lear’s ungrateful daughter Goneril is “a plague-sore,” an “embossed carbuncle in my corrupted blood.” And when Falstaff doubts something Mistress Quickly has said in Henry IV: Part 1, he claims, “there’s no more faith in thee than in a stewed prune.” (And there’s a good chance he didn’t intend “stewed prune” to mean dried fruit.) But you don’t have to rely just on Shakespeare to spice up your vocabulary. Next time someone winds you up or you need to win an argument in fine style, why not try dropping one of these old-fashioned insults into your conversation? 

1. ABYDOCOMIST

Abydos was a city in Ancient Egypt whose inhabitants, according to one 19th century dictionary, “were famous for inventing slanders and boasting of them.” Whether that’s true or not, the name Abydos is the origin of abydocomist—a liar who brags about their lies. -read more

Dartmoor Lynx recaptured after three weeks on run latest news update

Flaviu the lynxA lynx that escaped from Dartmoor Zoo in Devon has been captured - after more than three weeks on the run.
The police had warned that the cat, named Flaviu, could be dangerous if cornered.
The Carpathian lynx, the size of a large domestic cat, was found after walking into a humane trap and is now back at the zoo.
Zoo owner Ben Mee told BBC Radio Devon it was "a huge relief" to have got the animal back.
He said that they had been "living in the hope" that he would wander into a trap looking for foodread more