Posts

Showing posts from September 3, 2016

GQ is curating Digg today. Check out their picks.

Image
GQ is curating Digg today. Check out their picks. Digg Editions gets you the most out of the internet with top news and the most interesting stories handpicked by our editors

googolplex: Word of the day for September 4, 2016

googolplex , n : (cardinal) The number 10 10 100 {\displaystyle 10^{10^{100}}} or 10 googol {\displaystyle 10^{\text{googol}}} , ten to the power of a googol. (figuratively) An unimaginably large number. (US, real estate, nonstandard, rare) An infinitesimally small portion of land, defined for legal purposes. The American technology company Google was founded on this day in 1998.

googolplex: Word of the day for September 4, 2016

Image
Word of the day is googolplex : (cardinal) The number 10 10 100 {\displaystyle 10^{10^{100}}} or 10 googol {\displaystyle 10^{\text{googol}}} , ten to the power of a googol. (figuratively) An unimaginably large number. (US, real estate, nonstandard, rare) An infinitesimally small portion of land, defined for legal purposes. The American technology company Google was founded on this day in 1998.

Picture of the day for September 4, 2016

Image
Terminal building of the airport in Weeze, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

Article of the day for September 4, 2016

Image
Article of the day is Wotton (Metropolitan Railway) railway station. Check it out: http://ift.tt/1oWeX6W

Picture of the day for September 4, 2016

Image
Picture of the day on September 4, 2016: Terminal building of the airport in Weeze, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

GQ is curating Digg today. Check out their picks.

Image
GQ is curating Digg today. Check out their picks.

Article of the day for September 4, 2016

The Article of the day for September 4, 2016 is Wotton (Metropolitan Railway) railway station . Wotton railway station in Buckinghamshire, England, was part of a horse-drawn freight tramway built by Richard Plantagenet Campbell Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville, 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos in 1871. It served the Duke's home at Wotton House and the nearby village of Wotton Underwood. In 1872 the line was extended to the nearby town of Brill, converted to passenger use, equipped with steam locomotives, and named the Brill Tramway. In the 1880s, the route was taken over by the Metropolitan Railway. Wotton, the Tramway's third busiest passenger station, was also a transit point for large shipments of milk from local farms. In 1933 the Metropolitan Railway became the Metropolitan line of London Transport, making Wotton a station on the London Underground, despite its distance from London. In November 1935 London Transport withdrew all services from the route. The Tramw

New edit in the Article on Google

Image
Google Custom Search Engine edited the Article on Google http://ift.tt/1oWeX6W

New edit in the Article on Google

On September 3, 2016 at 07:21AM, made an edit the Article on Google . The edit was about references for this article appear to be sufficient; removing maintenance tag.