Home discussions products about writing Projects

Open Source for Collaborative Knowledge Development and Learning

Note: This site's content is accessible to all versions of every browser. However, this browser may not support basic Web standards, preventing the display of our site's design details. We support the mission of the Web Standards Project in the campaign encouraging users to upgrade their browsers.


Blog Entry [details and replies]

The Wales-Wide Web :: Graham Attwell on Learning, Knowledge and Technology Weblog 455 entries 26-October-2007 1 authors
show or hide details for this item John Steinbeck on patents Blog Entry 0 replies3 resources 09-September-2006 Graham Attwell
Kind:
Blog Entry
Created:
09-September-2006 18:30:17
Last Updated:
09-September-2006 20:30:44
Author:
Graham Attwell
Status:
published

Resources and Links:

Cast on - podcast for knitters Cast on - podcast for knitters [ Go there ]
Cast on - podcast for knitters
r podcast r podcast [ Go there ]
r podcast
Tonia Tonia [ Go there ]
Tonia
Text of excerpt from East of Eden by John Steinbeck which I featured on my latest podcast.

Tonia emails: "Hi Graham


That John Steinbeck that you read on you
r podcast, Brilliant. Do you have the text for that in a digital form?"

Here you go, Tonia. Its on pages 52-53 of the Penguin edition of East of Eden.

"Meanwhile Samuel got no richer. He developed a very bad patent habit, a disease many men suffer from. He invented a part of a threshing machine, better, cheaper, and more efficient than any in existence. The patent attorney ate up his little profit for the year. Samuel sent his models to a manufacturer, who promptly rejected the pans and used the method. The next few years were kept lean by the suing, and the drain stopped only when he lost the suit. It was his first sharp experience with the rule that without money you cannot fight money. But he had caught the patent fever, and year after year the money made by threshing and by smithing was drained off in patents. The Hamilton children went barefoot, and their overalls were patched and food was sometimes scarce, to pay for the crisp blueprints with cogs and planes and elevations."

Tonia also points me to the brilliant Cast on - podcast for knitters site. Its very cool - check it out.

Technorati Tags: ,

Comments please

If you are already registered here, please click the "Login" button to send your username/password with the comment. Click the "Anonymous/Join" button to leave a comment without logging in.

Please tell us who you are

E-Mail Address (Required)
We need a valid email address in order for you to post a comment. You will recieve an email containing a special validation link. The comment will not be published until validated
Name
Please leave your name
Join the site (optional)
If you would like to join the site while posting this comment, then choose a username.
Usernames must contain no spaces or special characters.
Title
Lead-in
Body Text ( HTML tags are allowed )
Validation
Please enter the text from the image above
Preview your comment