Seriously, it’s not funny anymore. These G3 Worldwide Netherlands guys - how are they handling their deliveries? Yes I know bikes are quite popular for commuting in Netherlands, but I don’t think using bike to deliver my Snow Leopard was a good idea at all; otherwise – I honestly can’t understand why the hell it takes so long.
Posted via email from Roman’s posterous | Comment »
Posted via email from Roman’s posterous | Comment »
Posted via email from Roman’s posterous | Comment »
See and download the full gallery on posterous
Posted via email from Roman’s posterous | Comment »
Posted via email from Roman’s posterous | Comment »
Posted via email from Roman’s posterous | Comment »
See and download the full gallery on posterous
Posted via email from Roman’s posterous | Comment »
The Royal Oak In 1651, when King Charles of Scotland, son of the recently executed Charles I, and his army met Oliver Cromwell’s troops at Worcester, they were soon on the run. With Cromwell’s men on their heels, Charles Giffard, King Charles’s adviser, knew that they had to move fast. A reward of £1,000, a vast sum of money, had been offered for the king’s capture, so Giffard disguised the monarch as a woodsman.
Samuel Pepys later wrote: “[Giffard] told me … that he knew but one way how to pass the next day, and that was to get up into the great oak, in a pretty plain place where we might see round about us, for the enemy would certainly search at the wood for people that had made their escape… While we were in this tree we saw soldiers going up and down in the thicket of the wood, searching for persons escaped.”
It took another six weeks before the young king was finally smuggled to safety in France. He finally returned to London on May 29, 1660. In 1664 this day was made a national holiday to mark the Restoration and was officially called “Oak Apple Day” in honour of the oak tree that had protected the king from certain death.
It was surprise to me to find out the history behind the innumerable amount of the Royal Oaks here in the UK. Rest of “The stories behind Britain’s pub names” also worth some attention.
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Posterous looks quite cool. Just wondering whether it can handle HTML emails with links to other websites?
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So, think twice when asking yourself “Do I really need that MobileMe if I only want the push email and my calendars in sync”? The answer is likely to be “NO!”, because since version 3.0 of iPhone (and with a current beta release of Yahoo! Calendar) you can easily keep all your events in sync.
Firstly, make sure, that you’re using the beta version of Yahoo! Calendar. To do this, go to switch.calendar.yahoo.com and ensure that you’re on a bleeding edge. Few simple steps to make it work on your iPhone.
Now fire up iCal app on your iPhone and you will see an extra calendar, which you can use like your local - with an only difference whichever changes you make, they will immediately appear on your web-based Yahoo! Calendar.
To make it work on your Mac, just follow these simple instructions on Yahoo! Calendar’s help pages.
That is it chaps, your Yahoo! Calendar should be now on your Mac and on your iPhone - and should it happen you’re separated from your beloved gadgets, you can always type calendar.yahoo.com in any web browser to see all your meetings and appointments.
Event in your Yahoo! Calendar:
…is in your iCal:
…and on your iPhone!
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Update: по-русски.