A miniature robot dispatched to explore a narrow, mysterious tunnel in Egypt’s Great Pyramid found its path blocked.
Author: Newley
Hi. I'm Newley Purnell. I cover technology and business for The Wall Street Journal, based in Hong Kong. I use this site to share my stories and often blog about the books I'm reading, tech trends, sports, travel, and our dog Ginger. For updates, get my weekly email newsletter.
“I’m Not Proud Of Some Of The Things I’ve Done.” A must-read for dog lovers.
Iraq Evite
The War on Iraq Evite. You’re invited!
Though I love living in Washington, one thing that’s always bothered me about the city is that everything closes so early at night–restaurants, bars, stores.
This article, in yesterday’s Post, laments DC’s early-to-bed nature. The piece also refers to a new vending machine in the Adams Morgan neighborhood–it’s an enormous contraption that offers everything from milk to snackfoods to DVDs night and day. While it’s controversial (some say it’s an eyesore and that it hurts local businesses), I love it: it’s very Japanese. And Japan, of course, is the vending machine capital of the world.
Nonprofit email newsletters
Here’s a practical, comprehensive description of how non profits can use email newsletters to communicate with their constituents.
Food poisoning in China
Rat poison may be responsible for a mass outbreak of food poisoning in China. More than 100 people may have been killed.
Fighting spam
“Fighting the Menace of Unwanted E-Mail” is an interesting op-ed that offers some ideas for dealing with spam. (New York Times; free registration required.)
Mesh cap appreciation
Here’s an exceptional site devoted to mesh cap appreciation. Don’t miss the community section.
“Misused” quotation marks
The Gallery Of “Misused” Quotation Marks is excellent. My favorite: “Sign on friend’s front door: Doorbell ‘out of order.’ Please ‘knock’ or ‘rattle’ letterbox.”
Britney Underground
Britney Underground. “The Britney Spears Live from Las Vegas ads assaulted the Big Apple for weeks, amidst the post 9.11 trauma and heartbreak. To mimic the question penned on one ad poster, can we afford this anymore? The message this scantily clad teen offers in a time of war is uncertain, but several NYC subway riders didn’t hesitate to express their thoughts.”