The most recent 20 comments posted to Making Light by Andrew Brown:

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Posted on entry "Why are British Sex Scandals So Much Better than Ours?" ::: January 17, 2007, 03:32 AM:
Petronella Wyatt only has this silly name because her mother is Hungarian. No wonder she prefers to be known as Petsy; her column on the "Spectator" was known to the staff as "Pet's Corner".

While on the subject of funny names, I would just point out that no one in Britain has ever been christened "Randy California".
Posted on entry BBC hamsters ::: January 12, 2007, 10:22 AM:
No -- the hamsters are our only hope against the squirrels
Posted on entry What the BBC News learned this year ::: December 29, 2006, 05:18 AM:
The BBC web science coverage is notorious for tabloid bullshit. We should all be ashamed of it in this country, and certainly not take seriously anything it reports.
Posted on entry Against entropy ::: October 30, 2006, 03:43 PM:
Harriet, that's sweet, but I never met him, though we did sometimes correspond. In any case, I learned this evening that the piece about him was the penultimate one of those columns. They just shot the worm.
Posted on entry Waifs and strays ::: October 19, 2006, 02:59 AM:
That ad is really rather glorious, but the most impressive thing is that when I watch it from a British IP address, the slogan at the end spells "colour" right.
Posted on entry John M. Ford, 1957-2006 ::: September 25, 2006, 12:50 PM:
This is just horrible. I had really hoped to meet him some time. That he wrote the entropy poem off the back of a piece of mine is something I will always be proud of. Miserable condolences to everyone who knew him.
Posted on entry And I Awoke and Found Me Here on the New York Times ::: August 19, 2006, 02:16 PM:
But it doesn't scan properly if you go on: try singing

NYTBR! Gonna buy five copies for my mother

if you dont believe me.

(or maybe I'm just grumpy because I never had a freaky old lady, name of Cocaine Katie, who sewed patches on my jeans.)

(but I do have a deadline)
Posted on entry Hard-won convenience ::: August 14, 2006, 12:26 PM:
Works beautifully in Opera 9.01
Posted on entry Spoofed ::: July 20, 2006, 04:06 AM:
I have (touch wood) run windows 2k without a virus scanner for five years now and never been caught out. The trick is to use a good firewall (kerio personal firewall in this case) a good spam filter, and to shun Outlook and IE even if outlook is a good pim. Common sense also helps.
Posted on entry Greetings from the melting pot ::: May 19, 2006, 03:52 PM:
It would be surprising if there were not. I would look first at Russians and Hassidim. But their children may be another story. Those Amish still speaking German ("Pennsylvania dutch") might be regarded as very long-term non-assimilated immigrants.

What's worrying people in Europe is tha tthe children of immigrants seem in some respects less assimilated than their parents. But it's a complex story. I do know there were Swedish-language newspapers in parts of the midwest up until about 1950.

Maybe the word you're looking for is not "assimilation" but "conversion" -- if America is regarded as a religion, which can be differently inculturated into differeing ethnicities, then there is a melting-pot model which is different from, and likely to be more successful than, the obvious European one.
Posted on entry Happy birthday ::: March 21, 2006, 04:21 AM:
Many Happy Returns from North Essex!
Posted on entry Open thread 59 ::: February 08, 2006, 02:08 PM:
Entirely random, but someone here is bound to know: What happened to William Browning Spencer?
Posted on entry Meanwhile, while you were following serious news ::: December 24, 2005, 04:03 AM:
"Per Aspel ad astra" &emdash; I can't think of that straight. The motto of my first, good,. English school was Per ardua ad astra, a phase in which stars were large heavenly bodies, not slender bodies in the entertainment industry.

As for Granny and the plastic drainpipes -- it is so disgusting that only another obscure english pop culture reference will rescue it: it should have happened to an aging teddy boy
Posted on entry Meanwhile, while you were following serious news ::: December 22, 2005, 04:09 PM:
I don't know, about twenty five years ago, when I was first turned down for a job at the BBC world service, they told me "We don't all want to be Alistair Cooke", and now it seems to be true.
Posted on entry Dressing Down (and Sidewise) ::: December 02, 2005, 05:47 AM:
I know I ought to know this stuff, but where are the texts for these? I know the entropy sonnet, but you can't tell from the pictures what are the words to the dungeon rules or the infernokrusher thing. This complicates decision making for those of us with geeky daughters as christmas approaches.
Posted on entry Forty-two Years ::: November 22, 2005, 03:05 PM:
Here's an unimproving memory. Kennedy was shot in my first term at an English prep (boarding) school. I was eight. The youngest boy in the house was seven. We slept in dormitories named after Royal Navy battleships, about eight to the room. One of us was an American child, named Richard Ashcroft. When we heard the news, we chanted, after lights out, "the president of Ashcroft is dead" until he cried. This was hugely gratifying, since no one had cried for about a month. Every little boy in the room had cried themselves to sleep for the first week or fortnight, or month after school started in September. I had taken up beating my head against the pillow until I was numb all over; apparently it's something I still do, in my sleep, when I am distressed. I cannot say how much we learnt to enjoy the spectacle of other boys in pain, and the best thing about chanting "the president of Ashcroft is dead" was that none of us could understand, really, why it upset him.
Posted on entry Duffer's Drift ::: November 18, 2005, 04:23 PM:
This is great. But why is it also linked from "Kansas morons" in the particles?
Posted on entry New model patent crank ::: November 17, 2005, 08:55 AM:
There will be a big piece denouncing software patents in saturday's guardian. Unfortunately they lost the distinction between copyright and patent where software is concerned -- it's the distinction between good and bad cholesterols. But I wish I had known about the flying saucer when I was writing it.
Posted on entry Life as Art ::: November 13, 2005, 03:50 AM:
The British Museum -- but I doubt I'd ever leave the reading room. I know that's cheating. But -- really -- could there be any other choice? Everywhere else you'd just have to read what was in the gift shop.
Posted on entry Open Thread 50 ::: October 06, 2005, 08:45 AM:
"Live kyat impeachment bath tool" I should like to see one of those used on Mr Bush.

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