Magazines where you build something over time

Discussion in 'The Muppet Show' started by clueless1, Jan 7, 2017.

  1. "M"

    "M" Total Gardener

    Joined:
    Aug 11, 2012
    Messages:
    18,607
    Location:
    The Garden of England
    Ratings:
    +31,886
    To be fair, if someone is dedicated enough to wish to purchase every issue ... surely they would have the good sense to put it on order, with their local newsagent, so that they do *not* miss an issue? :dunno:
     
    • Funny Funny x 1
    • "M"

      "M" Total Gardener

      Joined:
      Aug 11, 2012
      Messages:
      18,607
      Location:
      The Garden of England
      Ratings:
      +31,886
      Deposit in the post (plus £2.99 p&p) :rasp:

      How many issues? :scratch:
       
      • Funny Funny x 1
      • pamsdish

        pamsdish Total Gardener

        Joined:
        Apr 5, 2008
        Messages:
        5,151
        Gender:
        Female
        Occupation:
        Retired
        Location:
        "Black Country Wench" in Margam,Port Talbot,Wales
        Ratings:
        +4,445
        Unfortunately still doesn`t guarantee every issue, often short in bulk deliveries
         
        • Informative Informative x 1
        • shiney

          shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

          Joined:
          Jul 3, 2006
          Messages:
          63,524
          Gender:
          Male
          Occupation:
          Retired - Last Century!!!
          Location:
          Herts/Essex border. Zone 8b
          Ratings:
          +123,884
          How many do you want? :)
           
          • Funny Funny x 1
          • shiney

            shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

            Joined:
            Jul 3, 2006
            Messages:
            63,524
            Gender:
            Male
            Occupation:
            Retired - Last Century!!!
            Location:
            Herts/Essex border. Zone 8b
            Ratings:
            +123,884
            And capable of time travel. :dbgrtmb:
             
            • Agree Agree x 1
            • clueless1

              clueless1 member... yep, that's what I am:)

              Joined:
              Jan 8, 2008
              Messages:
              17,778
              Gender:
              Male
              Location:
              Here
              Ratings:
              +19,597
              All cars are capable of time travel. In fact all things are.

              We all travel forwards through time all the, erm, time.:)
               
              • Agree Agree x 1
              • "M"

                "M" Total Gardener

                Joined:
                Aug 11, 2012
                Messages:
                18,607
                Location:
                The Garden of England
                Ratings:
                +31,886
                I must have been very fortunate :heehee: "Back in the day ... " (and before internet) ... there was a similar offer on a "collection", which I wanted. Took the precaution of ordering it through a newsagent, never missed an issue. It wasn't for a model though and, in all honesty, I still refer to those binders, even now! So, maybe I was just one of the "lucky" ones :wub2:
                Yes, it did work out quite pricey over the long term but I still refer to them 30 years or so on (and the info isn't outdated) so perhaps, the 'investment' has worked out ok for me?
                 
                • Like Like x 1
                • clueless1

                  clueless1 member... yep, that's what I am:)

                  Joined:
                  Jan 8, 2008
                  Messages:
                  17,778
                  Gender:
                  Male
                  Location:
                  Here
                  Ratings:
                  +19,597
                  I know a few people with such magazine collections. I found my grandad's one once. I immediately put it back where I'd found it. Nothing was ever said.
                   
                  • Funny Funny x 5
                  • "M"

                    "M" Total Gardener

                    Joined:
                    Aug 11, 2012
                    Messages:
                    18,607
                    Location:
                    The Garden of England
                    Ratings:
                    +31,886
                    It wasn't a magazine collection :)
                     
                    • Informative Informative x 1
                    • shiney

                      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

                      Joined:
                      Jul 3, 2006
                      Messages:
                      63,524
                      Gender:
                      Male
                      Occupation:
                      Retired - Last Century!!!
                      Location:
                      Herts/Essex border. Zone 8b
                      Ratings:
                      +123,884
                      I used to sell those :dbgrtmb:
                       
                      • Like Like x 1
                      • Informative Informative x 1
                      • shiney

                        shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

                        Joined:
                        Jul 3, 2006
                        Messages:
                        63,524
                        Gender:
                        Male
                        Occupation:
                        Retired - Last Century!!!
                        Location:
                        Herts/Essex border. Zone 8b
                        Ratings:
                        +123,884
                        Interesting concept :scratch:. I'm fixed in the here and now and time flows past me. :dbgrtmb:

                        It's better to work on that basis otherwise you might start to experiment and could be caught in an ontological paradox. :)

                        You could try reading Heinlein's 'By His Bootstraps' or Asimov's 'The End Of Eternity'.

                        Or ask @Zigs for a trip in the GC Time Helicopter.
                         
                        • Agree Agree x 1
                        • shiney

                          shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

                          Joined:
                          Jul 3, 2006
                          Messages:
                          63,524
                          Gender:
                          Male
                          Occupation:
                          Retired - Last Century!!!
                          Location:
                          Herts/Essex border. Zone 8b
                          Ratings:
                          +123,884

                          As I don't trust the deliveries from overseas with all these airline strikes I shall be popping over to the Cayman Islands to pick them up once I've received all the deposits. So there may be a little delay. :blue thumb: :snork:
                           
                          • Funny Funny x 1
                          • clueless1

                            clueless1 member... yep, that's what I am:)

                            Joined:
                            Jan 8, 2008
                            Messages:
                            17,778
                            Gender:
                            Male
                            Location:
                            Here
                            Ratings:
                            +19,597
                            The here is everywhere and the now is both every moment that's ever been or ever will be, while simultaneously being nonexistent and nonsensical. To be able to describe now would require time to pass in discrete steps rather than being a single continuum that feeds back on itself influencing itself without even interacting with itself.
                             
                          • shiney

                            shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

                            Joined:
                            Jul 3, 2006
                            Messages:
                            63,524
                            Gender:
                            Male
                            Occupation:
                            Retired - Last Century!!!
                            Location:
                            Herts/Essex border. Zone 8b
                            Ratings:
                            +123,884
                            The interpretation of now is too subjective to be every moment of the past and future. The now is subjective time whereas the past and future may be objective observations of possible pasts and futures. Particularly if you subscribe to multiverse theory or infinite dimensional Hilbert space.

                            The here and now is the construct of the mind so that we can interpret the observable world around us - although your world may be different from mine :heehee:.

                            So, if we look at the clock on the wall we interpret the time it's showing as the 'now' time although we know it can't be. What we see is the time recorded by the clock when the light waves we are viewing left the clock and not the time when we receive the light.

                            It's much easier on the brain to think of it in the macro world of particle physics. When we see, in a telescope, a distant nebula exploding we know that what we are seeing occurred hundreds of thousands or millions or billions of years ago but the light has just reached us. So what we are observing is not 'now'. We are viewing the past but are not in it.

                            I know some people who are living in the past :hate-shocked: :snork:

                            Then we have the old theory and arguments of whether, if you had a time machine, what would happen to you if you went back in time and killed your grandfather when he was a child. :scratch: It's possible in a multiverse but not in a straight timeline.

                            Then, of course, you have all the religious theories. The short story by Arthur C Clarke 'The Nine Billion Names Of God' was an interesting concept which mixed religion and the use of computers.
                             
                            • Agree Agree x 2
                            • Phil A

                              Phil A Guest

                              Ratings:
                              +0
                              I've read that, is that the one with the kettles? :)
                               
                              • Agree Agree x 1
                              Loading...

                              Share This Page

                              1. This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
                                By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
                                Dismiss Notice