Pause

Nov 3
The day you genuinely wish for someone’s death it is not with a shout, but with a plea

The day you genuinely wish for someone’s death it is not with a shout, but with a plea


Oct 26
Never fall in love with potential‘Cause you can’t see it with your own eyesAll the pretty faces and sorry wordsCan take away your pride

Never fall in love with potential
‘Cause you can’t see it with your own eyes
All the pretty faces and sorry words
Can take away your pride


Oct 3
Sometimes I miss how it was when I was a kid; when God was in his heaven and all was right with the world.  However, now, there are moments like this, and I wouldn’t trade them for anything else in existence.

Sometimes I miss how it was when I was a kid; when God was in his heaven and all was right with the world.  However, now, there are moments like this, and I wouldn’t trade them for anything else in existence.


Sep 24

I hope we travel the world together.  It’s too beautiful not to share it with you.


Sep 11

Ways I Know We Belong Together



Me: what is one word for “not mine”
Diego: nacho!


Aug 18

That about says it all...



Diego: oh max, you fiend *tuts*
Me: can you be any more British?
Diego: I dunno, let me check my crumpets
Diego: crumbs, it seems I can!


Jun 3



Jun 2
Have you ever had that frustration of walking into a bookstore, looking for a specific book, and being told it’s out of print or not in stock?
One company wants to put an end to that. In a move some are calling the most significant step in publishing in the last 500 years, a New York company is trying to make books available on demand, printed out locally, rather than centrally as they always have been.
On Demand Books has installed a trial machine in a central London bookstore. It’s called the Espresso machine, but it has nothing to do with coffee beans. This baby’s grinding out books.
“Effectively, it’s a great big office printer stuck to a rather lovely in my opinion, but perhaps not the most aesthetically pleasing collection of technology,” says Marcus Gipps, floor manager of Blackwell’s bookstore on London’s Charing Cross Road, perhaps the bookiest corner of one of the world’s bookiest cities.
The printer runs at about 100 pages a minute, Gipps says. The machine then sticks and binds the pages together itself and — out comes a book. A real book, just like all the other books on Blackwell’s shelves.

Have you ever had that frustration of walking into a bookstore, looking for a specific book, and being told it’s out of print or not in stock?

One company wants to put an end to that. In a move some are calling the most significant step in publishing in the last 500 years, a New York company is trying to make books available on demand, printed out locally, rather than centrally as they always have been.

On Demand Books has installed a trial machine in a central London bookstore. It’s called the Espresso machine, but it has nothing to do with coffee beans. This baby’s grinding out books.

“Effectively, it’s a great big office printer stuck to a rather lovely in my opinion, but perhaps not the most aesthetically pleasing collection of technology,” says Marcus Gipps, floor manager of Blackwell’s bookstore on London’s Charing Cross Road, perhaps the bookiest corner of one of the world’s bookiest cities.

The printer runs at about 100 pages a minute, Gipps says. The machine then sticks and binds the pages together itself and — out comes a book. A real book, just like all the other books on Blackwell’s shelves.


Welcome!

Welcome!


Remember Me as a Time of Day

You’re the sunlight streaming through my windows as day turns into night

Remember Me as a Time of Day

You’re the sunlight streaming through my windows as day turns into night


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