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She came from Siatham's 'Spice T' litter. Her litter mates are: Siatham Tamarind; Siatham Tandorri, Siatham Tarka Dhal, Siatham Thai Style, Siatham Thyme, Siatham Tindaloo, Siatham Top Chilli and Siatham Tumeric. |
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Lip parlours should be made to prominently display photos of Ivy Tilsley and Lesley Ash in their waiting rooms. |
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It was the same last year when we were in Norfolk, piles of rubbish discarded (including nappies and broken bottles) on the beach, there were bins nearby. I picked up as much as I could, but it's no wonder the seas are so polluted. |
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This constant Britain bashing is tiresome |
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Mine is pretty clear. People love to decry our country and people. I don’t get it. Yes of course we have a % of idiots and not so bright ones, but doesn’t every country? I don’t understand why people who seem to dislike this country and it’s people so much, stay here. It’s a beautiful country with amazing scenery and, generally, wonderful welcoming people. |
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How was yours in Yorkshire ? |
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Having to wade through line by line refusing consent to be tracked every time I visit a website. They have a HUGE number of companies that they pass this stuff on to I didn't realise quite how many, until I noticed they stopped the "don't consent all button"
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And another one. These bloody apps and internet things are great until you have a problem and want to speak to a human. You then get sent to the 7 steps of AI hell that make press 1 for this a 2 for that seem like a picnic.
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And, on the question of the perpetrators Britishness, the SE corner of the IOW is not known for its summer influx of overseas visitors. Unless the West Midlands is now regarded as a foreign country. I am now off out again to clear up some other twats rubbish... |
Being told that office workers need to return to the office so that they can spend their money in the local food establishments and bars etc in order to keep those businesses going.
The enforced working from home due to Covid has shown companies how effectively huge numbers of office workers can do their jobs from home with little need to waste time and money on a daily commute. Less commuting is good for environment and reduces the pre covid problem of over packed commuter train services. It will save companies huge amounts on leasing office accommodation (turn the spare into housing at affordable prices). The last few months has proved that technological advances do enable many office workers to do their jobs from home. We didn't tell people to not use cashpoints when they first were introduced because doing so would cost many bank staff their jobs. We do not tell people to not bank online because that will cause bank branches to close and bank staff to lose jobs. No, we accepted the technological advances because they make everyday life easier and less time consuming via removing the need to queue in bank's every time you want to make a transaction. It is up to companies to adapt to changes that technology enables which results in positive changes to the way we live and work. The best companies will survive, others will not. The loss for businesses based near major office blocks is a gain for local businesses as office workers now based at home will still need to eat and drink. For example, Pret are planning to make up for the lost shop business by starting home delivery service. If I go out for food or a drink after work, I do so in Beckenham rather than in Canary Wharf or the City. For what it is worth, I save 40 hours per month commuting time by working from home. I work an extra 20 hours (for free) so my employer gets more work out of me and I take 20 hours for myself. A win, win scenario. |
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drivers - whose limited ability has been obviously further eroded by lockdown. Frankly many of the idiots on the road should retake driving tests before being allowed anywhere near their vehicles..
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Roadworks or more precise roads closed without any proper diversion signs. Being in the back end of Herefordshire and Somerset trying to move between two major towns to be met by Road Closed signs without any proper diversions. Both time finally worked out route which was a comedy of chaos and delays as it involved narrow country lanes unused to traffic and drivers unable to reverse. These were roads ok some had grass growing in the middle of them. Names like Turn Hill was aptly named it had turns. Something Drove I assume was the path to town for geese.
Fine urgent road works but for non locals a decent sign posted diversion. Along decent roads would save insurance companies fa fortune from my experience. |
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Getting really ****ed off with gammons trying to dismantle the beeb. Utter wankers.
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Perhaps you could pop in on your way home to do some of the detritus that I find from the road that adjoins one side of our property ? |
The paper stickers that for some weird reason they attach to wood, you try to peel the bastards off only to leave the majority behind, when it is eventually removed you are left with a sticky residue that only white spirit seems able to remove, does my effing head in, more prep work needed than for painting an internal door.
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If Stella came to do it, I could give one of them a day off !
All heart, me. |
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That’s so good to know :p |
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Pan pipes.
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In fact stickers on anything that you need to remove them from should not have them there. Not so prevalent anymore, but stickers on CD cases was always my pet peeve. I was looking at a big old flowerpot we have a few days ago, and despite it being out in the sun for about two years now, you can see where the label I removed was. |
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I can spend more time being useful for my employer, more time with my kids & more time reading/at the gym. |
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One young man we know had to work from a small alcove at the top of the stairs, with a two year old constantly demanding his dad’s attention. After a few weeks he was going nuts and longing to return to normality.
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What happens to the Xmas party and actually getting to know the people you work with?
WFH isn't the answer to office life. If you start a new job when will you meet a colleague to show you how to actually do the job? |
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Can you still sit on a photocopier?
Ah, the memories. |
Storms.
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No more getting fingered anally by a predatory female director for me. |
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Local government isn't part of the Civil Service. |
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The current Prime Minister's hard hat, apron-wearing, school dinner eating and general "joining in" photo opportunities. Does it have to be every single time and place he visits?
Me and Liz agree to do a couple of "and what do you do's?" and then bugger off sharpish before the poor people get too close. |
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Whenever I hear them I just think 'from arse to sewer' and 'bullet ready'. |
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Thanks for the image.
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Are you having a post mid life crisis? |
My wife was determined that we would ‘enjoy’ a lunch today whilst taking advantage of the Eat out to help Out discount. When I mentioned that everywhere local was totally booked out, she proved me wrong and used her feminine charm to get us a table at a hotel tucked away in the New Forest.
Unsurprisingly the food was old school hotel grim, but that wasn’t my gripe. Her choice of venue cost us just shy of £50 in taxi fares to save £20. :D |
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Feck me, taxi fares of 50 notes. Doesn't sound like the type of haven that featured on The Trip, either. |
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Things that annoy you
Making the decision this evening pre showering to have a trim on the tripod leg. Scissors was getting boring so chose the clipper option with no attachment. Much better until I lost concentration and nicked the sack. Instantly jumped back like it’d touched my balls on an electric fence knocking things off the cabinet in the bathroom. Put hand under balls to see blood on hand! Stopped at this moment and decided to shower and can only compare the pain thereafter to pouring vinegar in a cut once the shower water touched affected area. Scissors next time.
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https://i.ibb.co/hmM9SBw/9379-D636-2...2-E205-F04.png Both the Haven - which you’d have to pay me to eat in during the summer holidays - and the Tripp - which is a great pub, but has had nothing but trouble since it reopened - were fully booked anyhow. Like your research.:p |
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The current Leeds love in by the media
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£50 in taxis ? :eek: I hope you were pissed as farts |
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Believe it’s known in the trade as a ‘Mackem Pointer’. |
As apparently I am now the designated market shopper in the house, it is rather annoying to find the market of choice think it is a grand idea to "rearrange" things... bastards!
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You won the Championship FFS not the ******* World Cup. *****. |
Don’t blame Leeds fans at all for celebrating loud and long as they have been waiting so long but I do find the media love in annoying. TBH it’s bad enough every year as they go gooey eyed over the promotion teams like some teenage infatuation only to abandon them by the eof the year as no hopers. With Leeds it does seem to have that extra zing as journalists remember yesteryear, or should thag be yesterdecade :)
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It's all a bit like when Wolves got back up, but even they seemed a little less obnoxious about it than Leeds.
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The words “Leeds” and “obnoxious” do sit rather well together.
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I’d love for it all to fall apart for them and end up in a relegation battle right to the end, but I suspect they’ll never get fully dragged in |
Minor grumble but I thought i would look up the Richard Osman book that's due out next week to perhaps order it on Kindle. Crikey £9.99 for a digital version of a first book. I am happy to pay £2.99 with a 20% sell on fee based on profit but that's having a laugh isn't it
To make the point, the Audiobook only costs £8.20, so how on earth is the digital book version more than that? I don't begrudge him his success as he seems such a nice bloke for a Fulham fan and successful nerds are a good thing. I susbscribe to audible anyway and so might pick it up there but fancied it on kindle. |
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I've never got past the notion that reading a novel on a screen is a bit like work, a task. Give me a physical tome every time.
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Still get the occasional $2.99 for some self published guy's book, but usually they are not that great. I haven't bought a paper or hardback book for years, so not really sure how this compares, although I just saw two Brad Thor paperbacks my wife got recently, and they both have $9.99 stickers on them. Both are $8.99 on Kindle. |
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I don't think I'm complaining about the cost of books on Kindle (I know this is the "Things that annoy you" thread), but was responding to cantspell's post - who was annoyed. Personally I think they are pretty good value in the scheme of things. |
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Always remember that it annoyed me that books qualify for sales tax in the US whereas no VAT on books in the UK (is that still the case?) |
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I admit I do tend to look out for the various kindle sales and pick books up cheap, in part because I discove new authors that way. |
Nothing to do with being a tight sod then��?
The ?s are meant to gr a smiley face! |
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No tax on Kindle purchases, don’t know about books though. |
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Prices are still high for long time published books.
I sometimes baulk at paying the prices Amazon (or Penguin etc,) charge for a paperback from Greene, Hemmingway or Steinbeck. Then I have to generally double that to get the book to me in Chile. A few titles I would rather have a physical copy. I would have imagined that there statute of ownership rights would have passed by now and these titles would be more affordable. I doubt grandchildren and great grandchildren are benefitting from the author's works. I suppose there are sites you can download for free - like archive etc.. But I should be able to get these titles as a new paperback for 6 or 7 dollars and not the double price quoted. Publishing outlets or someone somewhere are overbenefitting from rights they signed decades and decades ago. |
Cheap isn't necessarily good. I'd be happy to see the return of the net book agreement.
Not sure any of those writers are yet out of copyright, maybe Steinbeck. |
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Once written down it would of been on the scrolls, hence the Carry on Cleo joke. |
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