Office System
"Do you miss me yet?" she asks again.<br>
"Do you miss me yet?" she asks again.<br>
A collection (sort of) of short speculative-fiction presented as "The Periodic Table of Science Fiction." Bet you can't read just one!
My buddy Jeff and I went to the movies last week and I'd see this before any of the movies we saw trailers for.
<I>The Blackwing Diaries</I> makes a few points about characterization. This blog has become a regular stop for me.
A (very) short history. You mean it wasn't just a John Hartford song?
I've mentioned, <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/033106success/">here</a> and <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/040306crimson/">there</a>, the lovely and romantic collaboration between Mark Lanegan and Isobel Campbell, <i>Ballad of the Broken Seas</i>. I should tell you that, when I first heard this album, my face went sour and my high hopes fell far and flat. It wasn't what I expected. It struck me as being a bit odd and aloof, foggy and cold; I wanted it to be easier, gentler.
Carl van Schaik says it's the culture. They learn from one another. I sure learn from the people who read stuff I write.
I guess that depends on the era.
The story of Carl Friedrich Gauss' schoolboy triumph over a manipulative teacher is well-known, but Brian Hayes discovered a more interesting tale—and a moral.
As far as color perception goes, it's in the brain. Maybe. Probably.