Monthly Archives: January 2013

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-9h1FNBjvJU

Wait for it.

Moody, magnificent and menacing.

With the raw sexuality of a young Van Damme Byron.

But enough about Tubs.

Who’s the guy chewing the gum?

Previously: So When Are You Going To Unleash Magnum On Us?

Awesome Saturday Night Audience Guy

(Thanks Aaron McAllorum)

A bus passes the Headford Road Church stop at 07:34 and every 40 minutes until 19:34. At 2.15pm, when is the next bus due?

YOU decide.

Joe Hyland writes:

Thought you might enjoy this (above). My thoughts trying to figure out when the next bus was due from the timetable in Galway today….

 

 

Update: The conundrum (above) replaces an earlier puzzle-free timetable. Apologies all.

Hello Hugh.

“We recognise that linking is the lifeblood of the online world and we encourage our digital community to share links as widely as possible. Therefore, The Irish Times does not see links as copyrightable and will not attempt to impose any restrictions on the posting elsewhere on the Internet of mere URLs that refer to its content,” said Hugh Linehan (above), online editor of The Irish Times.

“We have no problem at all with anybody linking directly to our articles. However, The Irish Times takes issue with automated ‘scraping’, summarisation, and aggregation, of its content,” he said. “All commercial reproduction or republication of The Irish Times’ content is subject to licensing requirements that the Newspaper Licensing Ireland oversees.”

Scraping, eh?

Newspaper Responds To Copyright Row (Laura Slattery, irish Times)

Meanwhile…

Cough.

Splutter.

Pic via RTE

As modelled by software engineer Kevin Gill, who admits that these images of a transformed dusty Red Planet aren’t terribly scientific – more an educated guess combining hi-res NASA images of Earth with his own open-source learning programme and a bit of artistic licence.

Maybe more than a bit.

Shut up and start the reactor.

A Martian Dream: Here’s What the Red Planet Would Look Like With Earth-Like Oceans and Life (The Atlantic)