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A reward has been offered for a giant inflatable pig which floated into the Californian desert during a concert by Pink Floyd frontman Roger Waters.
This isn't one of Roger Waters's best quotes: "Waters said 'that's my pig' as it drifted away during Sunday's gig."
Yeah, I've been using Ultramon for a few years, it's pretty sweet. (I also like that you can have 1 desktop background per monitor, although that's hardly groundbreaking functionality.)
It's quite a fun tool, and not without some commercial value to Facebook should they get it right: Yahoo have been able to track that kind of trend information for years, and it's highly valuable to some industries. (How many people are talking about a new Madonna album/film/whatever? etc) That kind of large-scale anonymised data collection is one of the big ways I see social networking sites being monetised, and I'm sure it's also the reason behind AOL's acquisition of Bebo. If they integrate chat and Bebo they'll be gathering a huge amount of information as to what the "youth of today" are talking about, as they're talking about it.
I don't know why, but Garfield cartoons are much funnier without Garfield being in them: Garfield without Garfield.
Paul, pretending to be Borg, or Dalek, or something... Shot glasses stuck to his head, anyway:
I don't remember this bit much, but I took the photo so I must have been there. It was on the way out of the bar:
This jogged a memory when I saw the photo, and I'm glad the motorbike didn't have an alarm on it. (It wasn't ours, by the way.)
The Girona skyline was quite impressive with the cathedral lit up at the top of the hill:
The next day we went for a wander. This is the abbey:
More of the abbey:
Ruins of the castle on top of the hill, although how all that stone got up there I have no idea. I thought things usually fell down, not up, but maybe it's different in Spain.
A scenic courtyard:
The same courtyard:
The cathedral, from the top of the hill:
The town wall is quite immense and there's a surprising amount intact that you can walk along:
Looking down on the town wall from one of the towers:
Girona cathedral and the landscape beyond:
Neelesh inspecing the wall for, err, some reason:
The side of the cathedral:
Another church near the bottom of the cathedral:
Some gates. Girona was great for just wandering around and finding interesting bits and pieces:
What the town wall looks like from the bottom:
Some very intriguing steps halfway up the town wall. Not quite out of reach of the ground, but not exactly useful either:
A most excellent sign:
The place was a bit of a maze and created some amazingly rich residual spaces:
A view out from inside the old city wall:
Paul's wildlife photography. I think the cat can probably see him:
A Spanish cat:
The cathedral doorway:
The cathedral itself. Although not a great piece of architecture its sheer volume was quite impressive. It sits like a stone cube on top of the hill:
This road obviously isn't a main arterial route. Ho ho ho:
It wouldn't be a foreign visit if I didn't see a church covered in scaffolding:
Paul attempting to have a face-off with a tree. As far as I know, they're still at it:
Like many continental parks, the one in Girona consisted mostly of trees and dust. The avenue makes a nice photo, but there really isn't a great deal there if you're not really into gravel:
The view back from the park to the cathedral and churches was worth it, though:
Just what you like to see on holiday: festering bones:
Their idea of christmas lights was slightly strange. They seem to have covered barbecue grills in fairy lights, and that's about it:
Our apartment was at the end of a timewarp:
Neelesh and Paul, travelling through time: