I'm quite busy at the moment, working on two interesting projects (of which, details soon!) and getting into the swing of the new academic year - quite a lot of really fascinating ideas coming out of this year's dissertation students so it might be an interesting term.
But in lieu of a more substantive post on design or education, or Florida's third world election system, I thought I'd post this article as it made me go ahhhh... There's a lesson for us all here - not sure what it is yet, but a lesson to be sure.
BBC NEWS | England | Gloucestershire | Sad flamingo tries to hatch stone: "Sad flamingo tries to hatch stone
A lonely and confused male flamingo has caused a flap at a nature reserve in Gloucestershire.
Andy, an Andean flamingo, spent a fortnight trying to incubate a pebble which he has mistaken for an egg.
Wardens at the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust in Slimbridge first thought the 40-year-old bird had injured himself.
Nigel Jarrett, a bird nesting expert, said: 'The birds are very attentive and do make excellent fathers, but this is above and beyond the call of duty.'
Mr Jarrett eventually replaced the pebble with a wooden replica of a flamingo egg.
Two weeks on, Andy is still there, leaving the 'egg' for only an hour a day when he goes to feed.
Mr Jarrett said: 'We let Andy sit on the replica in case a female flamingo for some reason rejected her own egg.
'We could have then placed the rejected egg under Andy for him to incubate as an alternative parent.'
Breeding season
Mr Jarrett believes Andy's broodiness is down to his body being full of hormones at the end of the breeding season.
'He doesn't seem to have a mate. It's possible that he did have a partner and for some reason their egg didn't survive as they can be snatched by gulls and crows.
'His mate may have left after the egg disappeared, but Andy may still not have noticed and carried on, thinking the pebble was a prospective chick.'"
Visual Communication: From Theory to Practice
(Winner of 'Best Higher Education Title' at the British Book Awards 2006)
by Jonathan Baldwin and Lucienne Roberts
More Than A Name: An introduction to branding
by Melissa Davis and Jonathan Baldwin