
750 grammes : 80 000 recettes de cuisine
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750 grammes : 80 000 recettes de cuisine gratuitement mobile et tablette ! 750 grammes vous propose...

CoPilot UK & IRE – Offline Sat-Nav, Maps & Traffic
Navigation and Travel
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30% Off | Summer Sale | Limited Time Only The sat-nav app that’s built for you, the driver....

Baltic Maps
Navigation and Travel
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Original, most detailed maps and address data of Baltic States - Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia. In a...

The Guides
Games
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Featured by Apple in: 15 Most Mind-Bending Puzzlers, 15 Most Mysterious Games, The Best Games...

Flash Résultats
Sports
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Restez connecté avec tout ce que vous aimez à propos de sport. Avec l'application FlashResultats,...

Lee KM Pallatina (951 KP) rated Red Dwarf in TV
Jun 22, 2019
The show follows Dave Lister, a chicken-soup-machine repairman, who is the only human survivor of a radiation leak on his mining space ship and possibly the last living human. Having come out of time stasis 3,000,000 years into the future, Lister has very little company, one in the form of a hologram of his dead shipmate, Rimmer, self obsessed Cat, who has evolved from the descendants of Lister's pregnant cat, senile ship computer Holly and Kryten an Android whose sole purpose is to serve and clean.
This masterpiece was created by Rob grant & doug naylor (GrantNaylor) and has spawned 12 series (Back to Earth counted as the unofficial 9th and a 13th series heavily rumoured) multiple books, audio books, collectibles, magazines and a mobile game.
I'm still hoping for a mainstream console game, but until then, enjoy SmegHeads!

David McK (3587 KP) rated Mortal Engines (The Hungry City Chronicles, #1) in Books
Nov 20, 2019
This was one of those stories that I'd been meaning to read for ages, but had never really got round to, and proved to (effectively) be a mash-up of Young Adult dystopian future with steampunk.
Steampunk, as a genre, is not one that I've really read all that much in - ab out the only other one that currently springs to mind is Jim Butcher's Cinder Spires series (all one book, so far!), but I tend to associate it more with an alternate past or present than the far future, which is when this one is set.
The main draw for me - and, I'm sure, many others - was the central concept of cities on wheels, cities that need to keep mobile and scavenge/attack each other in order to keep going - or, as it is described here by characters within, of 'Municipal Darwinism'.
While I found the writing and general plot a bit - how shall I say? - lacklustre? flat? I did enjoy the central premise of the story, and may come back to the world to see what else happens in future instalments.