
A breath of fresh air: Our homes are full of pollutants found in everything from furniture to candles.My 19-year-old granddaughter has been given £5,000 and wants to invest it: Where should she start?.Is now a good time to shell out on Big Oil? As supermajors quit Russia and crude prices soar.Where can you get the best savings rate? The top deals to suit eight scenarios - from £50k-plus balances, to £10k pots or high rate current accounts.RAY MASSEY: Vauxhall to become purely electric brand within six years by switching to battery power by 2028.The £1k a month rental battle! Would you choose a London studio with a balcony or a six-bed end of terrace in Liverpool?.University graduates set to start paying student loans back over 40 years instead of 30: How much more will they pay and what do the new rules mean for young people?.FTSE 100 suffers worst week since pandemic crash as war in Ukraine sparks a sell-off across global markets.Why do I have to pay standing charges for my energy? We explain what they are and whether you can dodge the spiralling monthly costs.O’Rear said he used to know the landowners, but they sold to a new owner a couple of years ago. Sixteen years later, “Bliss” is almost unrecognizable. “So the next week I got a 100 8-by-10s from them saying ‘Please autograph them and send them back.”īut as Microsoft continues to rework Windows, so, too, do the owners of the vineyard. The clouds were there, the green grass was there and the blue sky.” Tell us about it.’ I wrote back and said, ‘Sorry, it’s the real deal. Some of us think it was taken out in eastern Washington in the Palouse area. “I got an email from someone at Microsoft-I suspect it was the engineering department-saying, ‘We have a contest going about that photograph,’” O’Rear said. And, most likely, “Bliss” will remain his most famous work forever. But “Bliss” remains his most famous work. He shot photos for other stories on advanced materials, as well as a coffee table book on Silicon Valley. It’s his hand, he said, holding a Motorola 68000 chip on the cover of the Oct. He helped pioneer National Geographic’s technology coverage.


O’Rear himself has his own, separate technology connections.
