Basingstoke!
GavinWraith (26) 1563 posts |
I was impressed by Rick’s Baedeker of the home counties, so, thinking sideways, I googled “Basingstoke!”. Note the exclamation mark. Not a sausage about Ruddigore, my dear. Is there any way of scrolling forward by a chosen number of pages in Google? |
Wouter Rademaker (458) 197 posts |
“I can take you as far as the Basingstoke roundabout” |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
Basingstoke is something of a manufactured steel, glass and concrete blemish on the immediate area. Old Basing is quite pleasant, village green, old riverside pub and all. |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Exclamation noted, but it doesn’t work. Google strips out punctuation stuff, which is pretty annoying when you want to look for something in code like “
In the URL, push
You can play around with odd values: http://www.google.com/search?q=“this.here[that]”&num=42&newwindow=1&safe=off&start=67 |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
You could be describing Bracknell. Or Slough. At least Woking has some attributes (used to be a nice library, when it had lots of books). I wrote a story about a decade ago. Sci-fi with aliens. Basingstoke got trashed, painfully. Actually, it is dedicated to the link announcer on… TVS? Newbie Meridian? Back in the early ‘90s they were broadcasting “War Of The Worlds”, the crappy American one where the Martians float because they didn’t have the technology or budget to make convincing tripods (so instead they made extremely unconvincing spaceships that looked like those things used in curling crossed with a 1950’s iron)… anyway, the link announcer said something like “Oh look, they’ve set it in America, because that’s where aliens always go. Alien’s would never attack somewhere like Basingstoke.”. So any time I write a story that involves aliens, Basingstoke gets it. It’s like my own personal trope. ;-)
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GavinWraith (26) 1563 posts |
Google “come friendly bombs”. Thanks for the &name and &start information. |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
(^_^) I noticed the Google graphic – 197th anniversary of Ada Lovelace. Yikes, the first computer program is nearly two centuries old! |
Tim Rowledge (1742) 170 posts |
… and it’s still not finished! |