OMG. Nailed me, too. 

Not just one encyclopaedia either: there was the one with the engravings of
fur-clad cavemen attacking a mastodon and the early days of the
Stockton-Darlington railway, another with flags of nations and maps with a
lot of red on them, and yet another from which I tried to learn Spanish,
French, Latin, astronomy, shorthand and drawing. You should not draw any
positive conclusions about my current proficiency in any of those topics...

--
David Harley BA CISSP FBCS CITP
ESET Research Fellow & Director of Malware Intelligence

 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] 
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
> Sent: 16 May 2010 07:38
> To: grandpa of Ryan Trevor Devon & HannahRob; Drsolly
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [funsec] The Random Information Age
> 
> --- On Sun, 5/16/10, Drsolly <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> > Mine had eight volumes. A-bon,
> > book-dew, dia-grap, gras-lom, lon-pap, 
> > par-sop and sou-zwi, And the index volume.
> 
> I can clearly remember the pictures in mine of T-Rex dragging 
> its tail on the ground and Brontosaurus' standing in the 
> water because they couldn't support their own weight.
> 
> Ah, the unflinching authority of a well-bound collection of 
> masticated wood fiber...  Those were the good old days!
> 
> -chris
> 
> 
>       
> _______________________________________________
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