Douglas Adams/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Parent topics== | ==Parent topics== |
Revision as of 16:25, 11 September 2009
- See also changes related to Douglas Adams, or pages that link to Douglas Adams or to this page or whose text contains "Douglas Adams".
Parent topics
Subtopics
Bot-suggested topics
Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Douglas Adams. Needs checking by a human.
- Antarctica [r]: The Earth's southernmost continent, located almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle; covers the South Pole. [e]
- Apple Macintosh [r]: A personal computer that runs the Mac operating system (currently over BSD/UNIX), has a generally closed architecture, and is optimized for a consistent user interface. Developed in the early 1980s and released in 1984 by Apple Inc. (at the time known as Apple Computer). [e]
- Austria [r]: Federal republic in central Europe (population c. 8.2 million; capital Vienna), bordered to the north by Germany and the Czech Republic; to the south by Italy and Slovenia; to the west by Switzerland and Liechtenstein; and to the east by Hungary and Slovakia. [e]
- Bob Dylan [r]: American singer-songwriter beginning in the 1960's and later a member of the Travelling Wilburys. [e]
- Doctor Who [r]: British science-fiction television series depicting the adventures of a mysterious time-traveller known as 'the Doctor'; original series ran from 1963 to 1989 on the BBC, followed by a 1996 television movie; relaunched in 2005. [e]
- Film [r]: A visual medium involving the recording and display of images in motion over time, generally by photographic means. [e]
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology [r]: A private research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts with a strong emphasis on scientific and technological research. [e]
- Michael Hayes [r]: English television director and former actor, known for directing episodes of Doctor Who and A for Andromeda. [e]
- Monty Python [r]: British surrealist comedy troupe. [e]
- Paul McCartney [r]: (born 18 June 1942, Liverpool, UK) Singer, bassist, guitarist and songwriter in the 1960s pop group the Beatles. [e]
- Richard Dawkins [r]: British ethologist, evolutionary biologist; writer and broadcaster on science and atheism (born 1941). [e]
- United Nations [r]: An international organization that was founded in 1945 with the mission of preventing international war, protecting human rights, supporting social progress and justice, and helping with economic progress. [e]
- University of Oxford [r]: the oldest university in the English-speaking world. [e]