Google’s official ASCII logo

Google’s Marissa Mayer tweeted about Google’s official ASCII logo. The neat and geeky part is that the way you can see this Google ASCII logo is by searching in google for [ascii art]. Give it a try, and you will see the logo at the top left of the search box, that looks like this:

Google's Logo in ASCII

And if you were wondering, this is a true ASCII logo, this is not a graphic.

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Firefighters Battle With La Canada Fire near L.A.

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A Morris Fire broke out in the dry summers in the Los Angeles National Forrest on Wednesday reportedly. The firefighters are trying to control the fire that has already spread to L.A.Basin and San Bernardino County. There are two fires on the San Gabriele Mountains, northeast of L.A. The fire is raging towards the western side of the La Canada Flintridge City. The fire broke at 3:20pm on the Angeles Crest Highway. “Its pretty bad the smoke. Once I stepped out of the door I could smell it,” said Natacha Cuvelier, a student at the University of Southern California, L.A.

Sam Atwood, a spokesman of the South Coast Air Quality Management District told sources that the smoke would worsen in the days to come as per his experience. It was also a major concern since there was no sea breeze in the area. There has been do damage to life or property due to the two fires.

A forest service spokesman Jim Wilkins told sources that the “fire was doing pretty much what it wanted to” and that it was burning “freely”.

An emergency evacuation was made on the Williams Camp a resort on the banks of the San Gabriele River.

At least 25 acres of land has been completely damaged due to the fire as per the latest broadcasts. The area has not seen a fire since 25 years and was bone-dry which is why the fire seemed to be raging uncontrollably.

About 8 air-tankers and 9 helicopters were being used by the fire department to extinguish the fire, and more than a hundred firefighters were reportedly involved in controlling the fire.

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Recover deleted sms from mobile

Recover deleted sms from mobile

Read more about this in the hubpages and it will be useful for your daily life..

Thank You..

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Lotto, Powerball jackpots roll over

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The Florida Lotto and multistate Powerball jackpots took a leap Saturday night when no one matched all six numbers in either drawing.

Saturday's Lotto numbers were 18, 19, 20, 41, 50 and 51. With no winner, the top prize for Wednesday's drawing will be $15 million, the Florida Lottery said Sunday.

Saturday's Powerball numbers were 14, 15, 26, 32 and 36, and the Powerball was 12. Wednesday's jackpot will be $245 million.

Four $1 Powerball tickets matched the first five numbers but not the Powerball to win $200,000 apiece. They were sold in Florida, Maine and two in Kentucky. One $2 Power Play ticket, sold in Tennessee, matched the first five numbers to win $1 million.

Three Fantasy 5 tickets, including two sold in southwest Miami-Dade, matched all five numbers in that game's drawing Saturday night to win $84,489.67 apiece, the Florida Lottery said.

Saturday's Fantasy 5 numbers were 2, 8, 12, 17 and 35. The Dade tickets were sold at La Guardia Chevron, 11830 Bird Rd., the Publix supermarket at 15755 Miller Dr.

The third winner, a free Quick Pick ticket, was issued in Palm Coast.



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Top 10 nugatory things we say

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Top 10 nugatory things we say


We all say things sometimes that are kind of meaningless. Over time we overuse phrases to the point they are actually inconsequential (basically the definition of nugatory).

So let’s take a look--the top 10 nugatory comments we say or hear all the time:

10. Any Web site touting their “new” social networking feature. (Really? How many Facebooks can we have?)

9. “I’ll start my diet on Monday.” (If you say that, you are probably never going to.)

8. “But it’s diet/fat-free!” (Whatever makes you feel better … chances are whatever you are about to consume isn’t that good for you. The term diet or fat-free doesn’t make it healthy. But we certainly feel better when say that).

7. “It is what it is.” (We hear this one way too much in a business setting. Sure it is, so just drop it and move on.)

6. “Needless to say.” (If it’s needless, then don’t say it.)

5. “She’s/He’s sweet, but…” (The but says it all, no need to attempt to sugar coat it, with weak imitation Splenda-sugar no less, by saying he/she is sweet.)

4. “We should get together sometime.” And the statement ends there. (If you wanted to get together, you would select a time and do it. No one means this when said that way.)

3. Prefacing or ending a statement with “Bless his/her heart.” (It doesn’t really make what you just said more polite.)

2. The immediate, knee-jerk “No!” response when you ask your boyfriend if your pants make you look fat. (Of course he’s going to say that, what else can he say? You’re not dating a dummy. You can’t trust that as a response with any validity.)

1. LOL! (We use it so much, there is no way you are literally laughing out loud each time you write it.)

Top 10 nugatory things we say


We all say things sometimes that are kind of meaningless. Over time we overuse phrases to the point they are actually inconsequential (basically the definition of nugatory).

So let’s take a look--the top 10 nugatory comments we say or hear all the time:

10. Any Web site touting their “new” social networking feature. (Really? How many Facebooks can we have?)

9. “I’ll start my diet on Monday.” (If you say that, you are probably never going to.)

8. “But it’s diet/fat-free!” (Whatever makes you feel better … chances are whatever you are about to consume isn’t that good for you. The term diet or fat-free doesn’t make it healthy. But we certainly feel better when say that).

7. “It is what it is.” (We hear this one way too much in a business setting. Sure it is, so just drop it and move on.)

6. “Needless to say.” (If it’s needless, then don’t say it.)

5. “She’s/He’s sweet, but…” (The but says it all, no need to attempt to sugar coat it, with weak imitation Splenda-sugar no less, by saying he/she is sweet.)

4. “We should get together sometime.” And the statement ends there. (If you wanted to get together, you would select a time and do it. No one means this when said that way.)

3. Prefacing or ending a statement with “Bless his/her heart.” (It doesn’t really make what you just said more polite.)

2. The immediate, knee-jerk “No!” response when you ask your boyfriend if your pants make you look fat. (Of course he’s going to say that, what else can he say? You’re not dating a dummy. You can’t trust that as a response with any validity.)

1. LOL! (We use it so much, there is no way you are literally laughing out loud each time you write it.)


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Term Insurance or Whole life Universal Insurance

Term Insurance or Whole life Universal Insurance

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Ignoring the Trees for the Wood

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Compass has a report out about the state of the housing market. Dire they say, there should be lots more, well, essentially, lots more of the things that Compass likes. State intervention, more taxpayers' money being spent, more social housing and, by the way, can we get the bankers out of the whole thing? It isn't all bad, it has to be said, they come out in favour of land value taxation which as has been pointed out here before is a thoroughly good idea.

However, they seem incapable of, while discussing which shade the bark on the trees should be, of understanding the wood which is our real problem in the housing market.

The need to understand notoriously opaque land markets and the complexities of the planning process also make housebuilding an extremely difficult industry for new competitors to enter, reducing competitive pressure further. The result is a business model that does not deliver the homes we need, but is very difficult to change.

Now someone like me would say, OK, then we should be looking at changing the planning system if that's one of the major problems. And of course, the planning system is. They note that in recent years we've been building flats on brownfield sites, the houses that do get through are rabbit hutches crammed together: and yet they fail to note that this is exactly what the planning system, in all its complexity, has been demanding. If you don't put 14 houses on a hectare you won't get permission. The extraordinary price of housing is not because houses are expensive to build, nor is land: what is expensive is the licence that allows you to build a house on a certain piece of land.

There have been solutions proposed to this of course: if the planning system is the problem then let's change the planning system. But of this sensible sort of thinking we get none from Compass: despite their approval of LVT showing that they have at least one rational individual within their ranks.

Still, at least they are not quite as crazed as the current government was with the Pathfinder scheme. This baby of John Prescott's was going to solve the shortage of affordable housing by knocking down hundreds of thousands of cheap houses: you can imagine how well that worked.

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