REVISITED: BugMeNot.com
Chicken Fight
Remember this?
Well the folks at BK are killing bandwith again with a Chicken Fight.
It is a cool site to kill some time at, as LONG as you promptly return to UES, after you kick the other chickens ass.
REVISITED: It’s only the voices in my head…

A still photo from television footage of Bush as he debated Kerry on September 30 in Coral Gables, Florida, appears to show a small, boxy shape between the president’s shoulder blades.
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Campaign officials declined to discuss it further because they weren’t certain a bulge even existed and do not want to appear to take seriously what they consider a “wild accusation.”
Another great site that is DEVOTED to this rumor is www.isbushwired.com. This site is a clearinghouse for discussion of whether President Bush uses an earpiece through which he’s fed lines and cues by offstage advisers.
RIAA who?
As a follow up to “Don’t let daddy RIAA catch you downloading”:
PeerGuardian is a free program that hides your file sharing from known RIAA informants.
You have a firewall to keep out hackers, so why not have a firewall to keep out the RIAA? If you’re running Windows, PeerGuardian does just that.
Keep RIAA informants off your case
Each time you launch PeerGuardian, it downloads the latest list of known RIAA informants and blocks them from connecting to your computer. The list contains hundreds of known IP-address ranges the RIAA has used to catch file swappers.
Does PeerGuardian offer 100 percent protection? No. If an unknown RIAA informant sneaks through, you’re still busted.
Remember, the best way to not get caught is to not share pirated files. Support the musicians or movies you love and pick up a CD or DVD. Then share it. (Just kidding.)
Revisited: Stamps Of Approval
Stamps Of Approval: “Nobody’s dog deserves to be on a stamp. That was our first thought when we heard that the U.S. Postal Service had approved a pilot program for personalized postage. For about twice the regular cost, consumers can now slap any old picture on a stamp and surprise the recipient of their postcard or envelope (the image, of course, must not be deemed objectionable by the folks at Stamps.com, the online firm handling the trial run of Uncle Sam’s postage gambit). But since objectionable is such a subjective term, TSG sought to determine what kind of interesting stamps we could actually create.”
