Tuesday, May 14, 2002
"Are you a list pro?" List Making Contest Winners!
Posted by Jason Dunn in "EVENT" @ 11:15 AM
http://www.iliumsoft.com/contest.htm
The winners from the Ilium Software ListPro contest have been chosen, and the two top lists are excellent.
• 1st place: Jill M. created "Boredom Busters", a large collection of tips, games, bits of info, URLs, etc - it's a useful resource to flip through when you have some down time. Jill won herself an iPAQ!
• 2nd place: Robert Y created "Japanese Dining", an intriguing list of Japanese terms related to dining, and dining etiquette. Who knew that Akami Maguro was the lean meat near the spine of the tuna fish, or that it was considered rude to point gesticulate with chop sticks in your hands, but that it was polite to slurp? Fascinating reading for students of Japanese culture like myself.
Other winners include a massive list of Mary Kay inventory (Ed will be pleased with that!), and a list of 197 Pocket PC software titles where the author included a lot of detail on each application. Heck, I'd keep ListPro on my Pocket PC just for the one time when I'll need to know what six short beeps meant on an AMI BIOS-based motherboard.
The winners from the Ilium Software ListPro contest have been chosen, and the two top lists are excellent.
• 1st place: Jill M. created "Boredom Busters", a large collection of tips, games, bits of info, URLs, etc - it's a useful resource to flip through when you have some down time. Jill won herself an iPAQ!
• 2nd place: Robert Y created "Japanese Dining", an intriguing list of Japanese terms related to dining, and dining etiquette. Who knew that Akami Maguro was the lean meat near the spine of the tuna fish, or that it was considered rude to point gesticulate with chop sticks in your hands, but that it was polite to slurp? Fascinating reading for students of Japanese culture like myself.
Other winners include a massive list of Mary Kay inventory (Ed will be pleased with that!), and a list of 197 Pocket PC software titles where the author included a lot of detail on each application. Heck, I'd keep ListPro on my Pocket PC just for the one time when I'll need to know what six short beeps meant on an AMI BIOS-based motherboard.