Tuesday, August 31, 2004
Too good to be true? Too strange to believe? Hoax, prank or urban myth? If you need to know about "public domain Time Travel technology" as advocated by Tmxxine (quite possibly a hoax), and Snake Wine (real enough in the sense that instead of a worm in tequila you get a snake in rice wine) or if you need to know the truth about Titanic senior wireless operator, Jack Phillips, being the first to radio for help using the new international distress call of SOS (ooops ... it's an urban myth) ... you do, don't you ... then two sites very much worthy of your attention are the Museum of Hoaxes by Alex Boese (apparently pronounced 'Burr-za') and the Urban Legends Reference Pages by Barbara and David P. Mikkelson. Caution friends, these are both serious time sinks and your new boss could be watching.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Tmxxine is the directive force behind ASQu
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/ASQ - a programming language neccessary for the tmxxine hardware. It seems similar to the idea of the 'semantic web'