Still at work.
Natter .38 Special
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
still at work too. but almost reday to leave. Maybe 20 more minutes.
that's fucked up, yo
why, oh why did I click on a link that was followed by that. I'm a masochist, I tell ya.
Jesse is a taunter.
Msbelle and Tom should go home.
Msbelle and Tom should go home.
I'm going to pretend this applies to me.
Unfortunately, I came to work late so I gotta stay until 6:00.
hissssss, snarl
Someone remind me that reading the LJ posts of a local Gothic Model is a bad thing to do? That she's a sweet, if dim, girl, and that when she says things like I've been thinking about when I should stop modeling. 35? Seriously though, who wants to see a puffy wrinkled girl in her late 30's wearing stuff she shouldn't? that she is completely unaware that people she knows are older and heavier than her. Must. not. smite.
I'm getting writer's cramp from doing 13 different FedEx labels. (No, my firm doesn't use the convenient computer printed ones.)
I guess not. I don't even know what that is.
Google, damn ye!
Seriously though, who wants to see a puffy wrinkled girl in her late 30's wearing stuff she shouldn't?
Bwahaha @@ hahaha @@
I feel the need to report on how productive I was at work today. By the end of the day, I had a pile of 33 finished proposals ready to go out (17 pages each), plus one other thing. I didn't do all that much work, but I sure had a lot to show for it at the end.
In totally other news, a friend of mine got West Nile!
Monkey-Lizards of the Triassic
And for a few million years near the end of the Triassic, one strange group of reptiles could be found climbing through the treetops. This group was so well-adapted for an arboreal lifestyle that they have been named the Simiosauria, or Monkey-Lizards.
Ten years ago - Washington Post article on Microsoft's exciting new Windows 95: [link]
You can hide under a bridge, row a boat to the middle of the ocean or wedge yourself under the sofa, cover your ears and then hum loudly. But get near a newspaper, radio, television or computer retailer today and you will experience the multimillion-dollar hype surrounding the launch of Windows 95.
Microsoft Corp. is spending about $300 million to trumpet the arrival of Windows 95, an upgraded operating system, the software that tells the machinery inside your personal computer what to do. Marketing mavens believe the all-out media blitz is the largest product advertising campaign ever. Print ads – from both Microsoft and increasingly giddy computer retailers – have been inescapable over the past few weeks.