Posts tagged: wikipedia
Dutch Deep Frier
Croquetten are just one of many traditional Dutch deep fried dishes.
The ragout-filled dish was regarded as a French cuisine delicacy, first described in a recipe from 1691 by the chef of the French king Louis XIV and utilising ingredients such as truffles, sweetbread and cream cheese.[14] From the 1800s onwards, it became a way to use up leftover stewed meat. After World War II, several suppliers started mass-producing croquettes[15] filled with beef. The croquette subsequently became even more popular as a fast food; meat ragout covered in breadcrumbs which is subsequently deep-fried. Its success as a fast food garnered its reputation as a cheap dish of dubious quality, to such an extent that Dutch tongue in cheek urban myths relate its “allegedly mysterious content” to offal and butchering waste.[16] The kroket is even so popular that a disk-shaped version on a bun is sold at McDonald’s. Research in 2008 showed that 350 million kroketten are eaten in the Netherlands. It is estimated that 75% of all Dutch people will eat them, resulting in 29 kroketten per person per year on average. The major consumers are between 35 and 49 years old.[17]
Cheops Pyramid
Image Info
The photograph was taken by Jon Bodsworth and published on his Egypt Archive website, and released Copyrighted “Free Use” License
From Wikipedia:
This is Mr. Jon Bodsworth’s statement about the thousands of images he posted to Egypt Archive:
“All the photographs on this site are from my own originals and are copyright free. They can be reproduced in any medium. If you use any on the web I would appreciate an email. This site was designed to put as many photographs on the web as possible in an easy to use format.”
Sadly the site is no longer online, but people who care about free culture and the public domain owe a great debt to Mr. Bodsworth for freely sharing this important historical material.
Ptolemaic period cat mummy mask
This artifact is housed at the British Museum and the photograph was taken by Jon Bodsworth and published on his Egypt Archive website, and released Copyrighted “Free Use” License
From Wikipedia:
This is Mr. Jon Bodsworth’s statement about the thousands of images he posted to Egypt Archive:
“All the photographs on this site are from my own originals and are copyright free. They can be reproduced in any medium. If you use any on the web I would appreciate an email. This site was designed to put as many photographs on the web as possible in an easy to use format.”
Sadly the site is no longer online, but people who care about free culture and the public domain owe a great debt to Mr. Bodsworth for freely sharing this important historical material.
Until I went back to visit it this year, I had no idea that the Waterloo Public Library we used to go to — my first library — was a Carnegie Library.
Internet Blackout of the Day: The Great Wikipedia Blackout of 2012 has begun.
Reddit, TwitPic, Mozilla, Mojang, and thousands of others will soon follow suit. The Internet is officially on strike! Why? Because the House and Senate are conspiring with the entertainment industry to break the Internet.
Make no mistake: SOPA has not been shelved. And a vote on PIPA is just around the corner. Luckily, hundreds of companies, charities, and notable individuals with strong moral character have joined forces to stop these dangerous Big Brother bills from moving forward.
The fight is far from over, but hopefully today’s blackout will help bring this important matter to the attention of folks who rely on the Internet for entertainment and education, but have so far remained oblivious to SOPA and PIPA and their harmful consequences.
Do your part. Take action. Stop SOPA and PIPA and put an end to threat of Internet censorship.
[wikipedia.]
If you go to the English Wikipedia page and input your zip code, it will give you the contact information of your representatives.
Contact them.
This needs to be reblogged by everyone, no matter what their blog is about.
SOPA is *not* dead, just shelved, and even so, PIPA, which has the same objectives, is moving along full steam ahead.
This is why Identi.ca and Wikipedia have not given up on the blackout.
Even though SOPA has been “put on indefinite hold” it is *not dead, which is why
Geoff Brigham, #Wikimedia Foundation’s General Counsel, provides excellent reasons why the amended version of #SOPA should not be passed,
via Glyn Moody