TFL are bloody cheeky

“We are also providing a number of alternative bus services, picking up at stations served only by the Northern line, particularly in North London, to link with other Tube lines.”

Because obviously those in the south with less transport links to tube lines don’t need replacement buses. So out of 7 services only 1 is south of the river. Grrr.

Commuter Hell

balham station
With the Northern Line shut all day many people walked further into town until Balham to try and get the overground train into town. Sadly I start my journey here. The station was like a war zone. So I wallked to Wandsworth Common.
Not much better there. I continued on to Clapham Junction where it was not much better there either :o(
More pictures on flickr

stalk to your hearts content

I built a tool like this when I first started at AOL. It was using an old proprietary coding language only AOL use and would not have been suitable for member use so I just used it to stalk ahem I mean search for people on gaydar and AOL.
Gregg.com goes a bit further though and lets you look up on a few other sites too.

oops

Imagine you write an inspirational religious book about coming back to god. Then you call it ‘After you’ve blown it’ and the publisher decides ona suspiciously phallic image.
afteryouveblownit.jpg

As you can see

amazon have already amended their coverwork.

I so need one

Well actually no one really needs a loo that lifts the lid for you, heats the seat and has a handy little ahem washlet but I want one anyway. The remote is more complicated than any we currently own for TV or other equipment.

.NET Windows XP and MSN Messenger

Okay so you have a login for your machine in XP. You sign into any .NET account and it is bound to your machine login. So he .NET login is used for MSN Messenger. So if several people use your machine and sign into MSN Messenger, then their email addresses are added to the dropdown list presented when you come back and login later to any .NET application. At first this is not too much of an issue. Until you get to the point where youhave about 50 due to you letting work buddies log in to send a message. How to delete email addresses from that list for privacy reasons or otherwise is not obvious.

So here is my quick guide. In Control Panel, select User Accounts, click on your login account, click on the Advanced tab and then click Manage Passwords. You should now be presented with a list of accounts, which are the accounts listed in the .NET login. And a Remove button. Highlight the ones you don’t want and hit the Remove button.

Easy – not ;o)