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Me in words instead of Userboxes :) edit

I am a teenage boy living in Pennsylvania. I like to read and mess around with computer stuff, especially Wikipedia. I am also a Boy Scout.

I heartily support placing stub templates on pages; I'm sick of clicking "random article" and getting an article with two lines! Often, I have the list of stubs up in a different tab.

Check out the Main Page Redesign Proposal!

Along with anything else Webkinz, Survivor, and NCIS related.

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Note to vandals: If you wish, you may vandalize this page. I will, however, revert the edit asap.

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--Spider1224


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Awards! Yay! edit

  The Wwesocks #1 signer of Guestbook Barnstar
This barnstar is awarded to Spider1224 for being the first one to sign wwesockssign's Guestbook.
 
Thanks for signing my Guestbook! To futher thank you, this is one free bootleg German ticket to see The Dark Knight at any bootleg movie theater neer you! Gears of War 2


Funny-as-heck-things edit

WP:LAME WP:LAST WP:UA LaPianista's Humor Page Funny Quotes! Museum defies pope over crucified frog Drug-addicted elephant kicks heroin habit

 
Content of Wikipedia, June 2008


John Rocque's maps of London were published in 1746. A French-born British surveyor and cartographer, John Rocque produced two maps of London and the surrounding area. The better known of these, depicted here, is a 24-sheet map of the City of London and the surrounding area, surveyed by Rocque and engraved by John Pine and titled A Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster, and Borough of Southwark. Rocque combined two surveying techniques: he made a ground-level survey with a compass and a physical metal chain – the unit of length also being the chain. Compass bearings were taken of the lines measured. He also created a triangulation network over the entire area to be covered by taking readings from church towers and similar high places using a theodolite made by Jonathan Sisson (the inventor of the telescopic-sighted theodolite) to measure the observed angle between two other prominent locations. The process was repeated from point to point. This image depicts all 24 sheets of Rocque's map.Map credit: John Rocque and John Pine