Well here I am again demoted to anonymous. I think apart from the Google warning it is browser configurations, I suspect it was more to do with me fiddling around with Microsoft. Well I managed before and so will probably find the magic formula soon.
A bit of a panic the other day, the plug beside my computer blew, a strange deafening silence hit the room as the radio cut off along with a black screen. I did panic for a second, mostly for my expensive newish computer but then went down into the basement, flicked the fuse and things worked. I am going to get a 'surge' multi-plug soon, though I think the little black box on the lead is one.
But such triviality is nothing compared to the now successful (well it hasn't landed yet) rocket sent to the moon, privately funded (Musk sadly you will have got too old before you colonise the moon), with, wait for it, 125 small, sculptures of the phases of the moon by Jeff Koons. Think about that one, why send representations of the moon to the moon. Is there a philosophical meaning behind the gesture? Well when the human race has finally settled on the South Pole of the moon perhaps they will build a museum to house these wondrous art objects. Actually I would have sent the Mona Lisa, and should any stray alien be passing the moon, would wonder why we spent so much money worshipping a faintly smiling female.
The old clock I bought for Paul's birthday has a very pretty face and a little moon that slowly moves through the phases, though of course it has got it probably all wrong because it has stopped so many times. But I think Victorian enterprise is something we should admire, the workings of a clock is just as difficult in its time as the genius of a rocket is today.
BBC News and that heart stopping moment when the rocket leaves the Earth.












