At work, for the past month I've been thinking about almost nothing except our media campaign (we finally launched our site on May 3rd, after three years of development). Since I can't really work on my papers, it makes it seem more inviting to do so, which is of course a good thing, as I haven't made much progress since early in the year.
R. saw a promising work opportunity in the paper, so we rushed out a resume and his Sunset article.
I love this tag file quote used by "Iron Chef Vastrox" in J's D&D forums, originally written by fellow forum participant Asta Kask:
"The proper classification of elves remains something of a conundrum. While some sages classify them as mammals (Faerinidae), other scholars say that the long lives of the elves and their remarkable ability to adapt to whatever climate they happen to live in, producing a number of subspecies (the number appears to increase exponentially and it is believed that in 200 years time the entire elven species will consist of different subspecies, i.e., one subspecies per living elf), leads naturally to the conclusion that they should be classified as as a sort of bacterium."
R. saw a promising work opportunity in the paper, so we rushed out a resume and his Sunset article.
I love this tag file quote used by "Iron Chef Vastrox" in J's D&D forums, originally written by fellow forum participant Asta Kask:
"The proper classification of elves remains something of a conundrum. While some sages classify them as mammals (Faerinidae), other scholars say that the long lives of the elves and their remarkable ability to adapt to whatever climate they happen to live in, producing a number of subspecies (the number appears to increase exponentially and it is believed that in 200 years time the entire elven species will consist of different subspecies, i.e., one subspecies per living elf), leads naturally to the conclusion that they should be classified as as a sort of bacterium."