Did I mention - I must have mentioned, or at least, you must have gathered if you follow my Flickr presence at all - that I’m travelling a lot for work at the moment.
I was going to type a question mark there, only I can’t find it on this funny french mac keyboard. I’m assuming there’s a “gallic shrug” key instead - perhaps this one: §. I can’t imagine what else it’s used for.
This keyboard is INCREDIBLY difficult to wrap my head around - not least because I’ve been up since 3.45 this morning, and apparently I’m better at touch-typing than I imagined, because my fingers keep finding the wrong (right) keys and I just want to go freestyle qnd stop concentrqting qnd stqrt typing properly even though it zonùt ,qke qny sense qt qll becquse the fucking keys qre in the zrong plqce; qs you cqn see; obviously:
And relaaax.
Anyway, I’m travelling a lot at the moment, and this has had the happy side-effect of giving me enough tier points to be a proper exec card holder with BA - after several years of *nearly* qualifying for decent perks like lounge access when travelling cattle class, only to have all my points reset at the start of the next club year. But not this year: ha HAH! - which means I can now spin away the hours before my flights by sitting in a swanky lounge, drinking free tea and using their internet connection.
Which is exactly what I’m doing now, from deep within Paris Charles de Gaulle.
Er, that’s all for now.

In the category ‘uninter. misc. knowl.’, the § is a paragraph-sign, or section-sign.
Strange how information stays and leaves at the same time. I still know it but it is also gone it’s way.
Yeah, it’s a section sign more than paragraph, I think.
I know in US Legalese you’ll see stuff about Law 1500, §1056 or whatever, and in the M$ Character Map tool it’s described as “section”, and in HTML entities it’s known as §, which is a bit of a clue too…