The cover of this week’s Economist magazine is simply beautiful:

The cover of this week’s Economist magazine is simply beautiful:
Here’s a link to a striking Guardian article about the changes in Britain during the last 50 years: The nation in numbers.
Did you know, for example, that Mohammed was the country’s 20th most popular name in 2004?
Things are changing…
Well, what happened here? I haven’t posted anything in over a month. No excuses, really — although the Movabletype publishing system did stop working on my server for a while (no idea why, but it was my hosting company’s fault). I was just busy and uninspired.
Anyway, here’s what’s new.
A photograph very similar to the one at right appeared on the cover of one of Britain’s national newspapers today, and perfectly illustrates a point I’ve made before: namely that umbrellas are a useless defence against snow.
Almost half of the British Isles is further north than Moscow, yet many of the British still have no idea how to cope with winter weather.
From the Daily Telegraph:
Directors at Jessops are contractually bound to receive as little as a week’s payoff if they are fired after a big fall in the company’s share price, according to the camera equipment retailer’s annual report.
The clause, which was agreed by Jessops’ two executive directors when the company floated in November, has been hailed as an “innovative approach” by corporate governance campaigners to tackle the issue of directors being rewarded for failure.
From the Financial Times:
Carly Fiorina will be paid a $21.4m severance package after being fired as chief executive of Hewlett-Packard last week. She will also be able to keep her computer and receive free tech support for three months.
Only three months? It’s a good thing she got the cash.
Music in the Kitchen? Sure, I can play that game; despite not being much of a chef.
In fact, music has recently been rejuvenated in our kitchen with the arrival of a BT Voyager Digital Music Player. Sitting simply in the corner, it allows us to listen to anything our computer can play on CD, MP3, or stream via the Internet. Consequently, I’ve been listening to NPR and the CBC a lot recently.
Palaces are for royalty. We’re just people with a bank account.
Grace Kelly to Cary Grant in Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch A Thief (1955)
Apparently, the UK has more mobile phones than people these days.
On one hand, that’s not surprising when you consider that Vodafone, O2, Orange, and T-mobile all have shops within 200 meters of one another on my local high street. Strangely however, the biggest of them, Vodafone, hardly ever has any customers in it.
People must be buying their phones some other way.
Today’s silly news that the A to Z is one of Londoners’ best loved books
reminded me that one of the most consistently best-selling books in the UK is the Department of Transport’s Highway Code.
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