The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Comments on: George Orwell joins blogging fray

Cool 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 13:43 GMT

I actually look forward to reading some of this, being a fan of some of the man's work. It should provide an.....interesting...insight into his everyday mind.

Where's the Big Brother angle? 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 13:45 GMT

Go

"Readers expecting this piece to end on some zinger about Big Brother will be sorely disappointed and/or summarily dispatched to Room 101."

Ok so now I get to become a guest on a BBC2 program with Paul Merton? Do I get paid for this? When can i start demanding, in my new found TV celebrity status, to have Liqourice Allsorts in my dressing room arranged in the shape of Sarah Bee's face?

Questions, questions...............

Now that GO's personal life is going to be scrutinised... 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 14:05 GMT

Go

...I have to wonder if his most famous book wasn't somewhat prophetic!

Surprised it wasn't mentioned 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 14:15 GMT

Heart

In "Upon Further Reflection" B.F. Skinner mentioned that George O. faked his own death.

B.F. states that George grew tired of being the depressing and dark George O.

Nice... 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 14:21 GMT

Thumb Up

...to see El Reg (Sarah Bee, anyway) getting into the spirit by writing the article in TrueSpeak.

Zinger 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 14:39 GMT

Black Helicopters

Were you thinking of KFC by any chance

Mine's a Zinger tower burger if you're buying Sarah

On a serious note, this looks like it will be an interesting read, might even knock El Reg off my top destination spot.

Mine the one with the handbook for AirWolf in the pocket (it was a black helicopter after all)

@Nice.. 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 14:51 GMT

Unhappy

That should have been Newspeak: Doubleplusungood of me.

@GrahamT 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 15:43 GMT

Happy

You type out your post, you re-read it and finally preview it. The the moment you hit the post button you realise your mistake.

There has to be a word for that.

@pctechxp 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 15:54 GMT

Flame

Dam you! I want KFC now! Its like heroin in a bun... My wife is going to kill me if I go to KFC on the way home...

Just like Samuel Pepys. 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 15:55 GMT

This isn't the first diary on the net.

And they still can't set it up so the Leap Years will match

Re: Just like Samuel Pepys. 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 16:02 GMT

(Written by Reg staff.)

Where does it say it's the first diary on the net, Dave?

Have... have I done bad?

isn't SB 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 16:16 GMT

the stung one right now? paying too much attention? have a xanax. i bet GO did...

Strike me! 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 16:21 GMT

Heart

Superb use of strikeout there, Ms Bee!

@Sarah Bee 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 16:30 GMT

Heart

"Have... have I done bad?"

My God woman! Do you know what that last comment can do to a man.

Images of puppy-dog eyes and a coyly-bitten bottom lip come flooding in... I'm off home now for a cold shower.

AC, because if my girlfriend found out what I was thinking I'd be in big trouble.

Re: Just like Samuel Pepys 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 17:02 GMT

Oh no, you don't get out of it that easily.

From the article, selectively quoting:

"George Orwell's diaries are [...] the [...] first [...] online [...] blog"

Damned by your [...] own [...] words.

down and out 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 19:41 GMT

Paris Hilton

Because his writings are famous not only in London

Surely this can be prevented? 

Posted Friday 1st August 2008 23:48 GMT

Black Helicopters

Usually there's someone claiming copyright and preventing publication. What's gone wrong?

I get confused... 

Posted Saturday 2nd August 2008 13:48 GMT

Are we at war with Eurasia or Eastasia these days?

The most interesting places in our cyberworld.... 

Posted Sunday 3rd August 2008 09:17 GMT

Go

are where there are journo's raising subjects, and commentators responding to both the original thread, and other commentator's comments, if you are still following (I'm not).

It is an absolutely brilliant wheeze for "The Orwell Trust" to start a thread by this pre-internet blogger, he was not only very talented (quality of writing), but actually had something to say about the human condition.

Perhaps a corner of the Register could be devoted to publishing the musings of some of the more interesting philosophers and writers from the past that did not have an internet. I am thinking of characters ranging among Mohandas Ghandi, Leo Tolstoy, Robert Anton-Wilson, John Ruskin, Bob Dylan, Bugs Bunny etc. etc.

As it is, we hear far too much from "professional politicians" and the various other parasites that infest our world.

Holistic Orwell 

Posted Sunday 3rd August 2008 20:06 GMT

Thumb Up

Actually Orwell also wrote a column in several newspapers, which are intersting to read, as well as several other novels, amongst which 'The Road to Wigan Pier', A Clergyman's Daughter' , "Keep the Aspidistra Flying' and ' Down and Out in Paris and London' were seminal to me during my teen years................I'd recommend you read them all, including the journalisms.

Publishing someone's thoughts without their permission after they're dead? 

Posted Monday 4th August 2008 00:53 GMT

Joke

Well, that's positively Orwellian.

@Niall 

Posted Monday 4th August 2008 06:26 GMT

>There has to be a word for that

It's more of a condition "Fat Finger Syndrome". Not to be confused with FFS which is what you might think when you realize what you've done or equally think when some smart arse corrects you as if didn't already know.

Let me guess 

Posted Monday 4th August 2008 07:43 GMT

Each of his 70-year-old blog entries will attract dozens of inane comments pointing out that what he wrote back then is equally true today if you just replace xxx-old-politician with xxx-new-politician...

@Niall 

Posted Monday 4th August 2008 09:05 GMT

Happy

I don't know what that is called, (the Doh! moment? doubleunthinkread? ) but the length of time between clicking the "Post Comment" button and realising the mistake is definitely the ohnosecond.

I do know they become more frequent with age.

Big Brother is watching me 

Posted Monday 4th August 2008 09:24 GMT

Unhappy

I tried to look at the Orwell blog today using the link above. My company's content filter blocked it as a "Blog/social networking" site.

Oddly I can read pepysdiary.com everyday, and that is a far racier diary than Eric Blair's is likely to be: but then, who says censorship has to be logical?

@Niall 

Posted Tuesday 5th August 2008 11:24 GMT

Thumb Up

> There has to be a word for that

The Meaning of Liff (http://folk.uio.no/alied/TMoL.html) is no help in this instance.

In that spirit, I suggest

Dorking (n), [from Dork (v.i.)]

To post a smart comment containining an elementary error to the entire Internet.

We've all done it. People on Slashdot do it all the time.

@ Jonathan Richards 

Posted Wednesday 6th August 2008 10:23 GMT

Ah, I see what you did there...I mean you did do it on purpose I'm guessing? ;)

*pauses to check, check and double check for elementary errors*

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