Tag: flagged-for-deletion
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Scarab beetle
This little guy was hanging out on our eggplant.
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West Virginia river
Beautiful country here in West Virginia.
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At the end of the tunnel
Nicolas riding his big wheel.
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Sleeping Pookers
22 hours of sleep is obviously not enough. 🙂
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Sleeping Pickles
Right in front of the TV.
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Roosevelt School
Long since abandoned. Fixer upper?
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9ball frustration
Chris is frustrated at his miss on the 9 ball.
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Downtown Lincolnton, NC
From the car.
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In between
Date taken: July 15, 2003 – New York City.
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My Eliza
Chilling in the living room.
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Back lit Pickles
Silouette of my bud.
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Sleuth
Dr. Nick I presume.
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Jelly Jenga
Settin’ them up, knockin’ them down.
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Solar cubism
A bug that seems to continuously create art.
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Day light
And, cubism.
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BBQ Chicken and Salmon
And of course, a little wine.
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Gypsies
Lots of them.
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Brick
Built to last.
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Ten pins
I had a hard time knocking them all down at once.
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A river side stroll
The Lackawanna River while on my walk today.
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The Wine Library
There is a lot of wine at Wine Library.
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I’m a vayniac
If you watch WLTV, you know this chalk board.
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A wee fire
The perfect size for a few marshmallows.
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Post downpour
The photo doesn’t do the view justice, as usual.
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In the cab
The iPhone helped the cabby find Brooklyn, Ha!
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Lunch at Wendy’s
We don’t get Wendy’s often. Yeah, classy I know.
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Indy catch up
Catching up on Indiana Jones, in style.
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The number one
The first floor in a parking garage.
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Pittsburgh beer
Too many choices? I’d like to think just enough.
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Bethlehem, PA
Taken while walking to get coffee.
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Review: \”Times\” a new feed reader
The Apple Blog’s Bob Rudis reviews a new feed reading application called Times which is set to be released at the end of this week. As Bob states; feed readers are pretty prevalent, but I’ve never seen one that displays aggregated content in this manner. Here is a quick screenshot. An example view in Times.
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Review: \”Times\” a new feed reader
The Apple Blog’s Bob Rudis reviews a new feed reading application called Times which is set to be released at the end of this week. As Bob states; feed readers are pretty prevalent, but I’ve never seen one that displays aggregated content in this manner. Here is a quick screenshot. An example view in Times.
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Review: \”Times\” a new feed reader
The Apple Blog’s Bob Rudis reviews a new feed reading application called Times which is set to be released at the end of this week. As Bob states; feed readers are pretty prevalent, but I’ve never seen one that displays aggregated content in this manner. Here is a quick screenshot. An example view in Times.
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Review: \”Times\” a new feed reader
The Apple Blog’s Bob Rudis reviews a new feed reading application called Times which is set to be released at the end of this week. As Bob states; feed readers are pretty prevalent, but I’ve never seen one that displays aggregated content in this manner. Here is a quick screenshot. An example view in Times.
-
Review: \”Times\” a new feed reader
The Apple Blog’s Bob Rudis reviews a new feed reading application called Times which is set to be released at the end of this week. As Bob states; feed readers are pretty prevalent, but I’ve never seen one that displays aggregated content in this manner. Here is a quick screenshot. An example view in Times.
-
Review: \”Times\” a new feed reader
The Apple Blog’s Bob Rudis reviews a new feed reading application called Times which is set to be released at the end of this week. As Bob states; feed readers are pretty prevalent, but I’ve never seen one that displays aggregated content in this manner. Here is a quick screenshot. An example view in Times.
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\”Internet Asshattery, Armchair Scaling Experts Edition\”
Leonard Lin takes out the laundry. Lin decides not to sit idly by while "tech journalists" and "experts" tee off on some of the engineers and programmers behind a few of the more widely used social applications about "scaling issues". First, he speaks about Michael Arrington’s crack at Blaine Cook of Twitter. In short, Arrington
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\”Internet Asshattery, Armchair Scaling Experts Edition\”
Leonard Lin takes out the laundry. Lin decides not to sit idly by while "tech journalists" and "experts" tee off on some of the engineers and programmers behind a few of the more widely used social applications about "scaling issues". First, he speaks about Michael Arrington’s crack at Blaine Cook of Twitter. In short, Arrington