Let’s move on, shall we?
Q1) Search teams went out, on 28th January, 1968: hunting for a crashed B52. The bomber was armed with four what: hydrogen bombs, cruise missiles or anthrax bombs?
Q2) Which country’s name was first used on 28th January, 1933?
Q3) Canada chose its flag — by an act of Parliament — on 28th January, 1965. Famously, the flag has a red what in the middle?
Q4) The Spanish Legion was first raised on 28th January, 1920. The Legion was, originally, the Spanish equivalent of what: the SAS, the French Foreign Legion or the Green Berets?
Q5) Finally … Henry 7th of England was born: on 28th January, 1457. Which dynasty was he the first king of?
Q1) The Paris Peace Accord went into force on 27th January, 1973. The Accords formally ended which war?
Q2) During the Arab Spring, 27th January, 2011, saw the start of revolution: where?A2) Yemen.
Q3) Nazi death camp, Auschwitz, was liberated on 27th January, 1945. As a result, 27th January is known as what?A3) Holocaust Memorial Day. (Along with a various number of names, internationally.)
Q4) James Cromwell was born on 27th January, 1940. He played Dr Arthur Arden in Series 2 of what?
Q5) Finally … Which footballer was banned from playing: on 27th January, 1995?
“I believe easel painting to be a dying form, and the tendency of modern feeling is toward the wall picture or mural.”Jackson Pollock, January 28, 1912 – August 11, 1956.
* If I’ve understood things correctly? Open source software is unlike any other. That fact that its source code is easily accessible means it can be studied a lot more easily by those of us with an interest in such things. And can also easily be improved. It can also be easily modified to allow illegal access to copyrighted content. My personal belief? Is that making the fully-loaded boxes illegal would not be good for the open source movement. And that content providers — Amazon, the BBC, Netflix, whoever — need to put work into closing the loopholes that allow such access. I also believe banning the sale of the boxes will be futile. Given any one of us would be able to buy the normal box, and modify it to access content for free.
Arghhh! Politics make strange bedfellows.
ReplyDelete1. hydrogen bombs
2. Pakistan
3. maple leaf
4. the French Foreign Legion
5. the House of Tudor
Q1) Hydrogen bombs
ReplyDeleteQ2) Pakistan
Q3) Maple leaf
Q4) The French Foreign Legion (Funnily enough I was reading about them because one of them is mentioned in a book I’m translating at the moment)
Q5) The House of Tudor
Sad news about Sir John Hurt. I think I saw him first as Caligula in I, Claudius. He was a good reason to watch anything he was in, for sure.