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I merely chewed in self-defense, but I never swallowed.
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That seems to point up a significant difference between Europeans and Americans. A European says: "I can't understand this, what's wrong with me?" An American says: "I can't understand this, what's wrong with him?" - Terry Pratchett
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If you could only eat at one fast food restaurant the rest of your life, which one would you choose?
Formspring question of the day
I don't eat at fast food restaurants. I was fortunate to grow up somewhere with very few options for fast food and never developed a taste for it.
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Optimistic and cheerful. Possibly irritating to those who are more pessimistic.
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Hide under a duvet: I can't stand thunderstorms.
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Almost never. I do hesitate before following people who have the default egg as an avatar, but I always read a person's tweets before deciding to follow them.
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I've lived in five different countries on three different continents so it's difficult to know how to answer this. The furthest I've been from where I grew up is Singapore.
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I would either sit in the corner of the playground eating sandwiches and reading, or I would be inside with the gaming club playing the Marvel Superheroes RPG.
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San Francisco. I've lived in London, Vancouver and Singapore but San Francisco is my favourite by far.
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I would want to age no further and have control of the TARDIS. Simply put, I'd wish to be The Doctor.
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I'd spend my time inventing the internet.
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It would be @mirtos but she already did. And that's awesome.
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Gogle Reader. I get all my sites aggregated through RSS.
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I grew up with cats, but dogs all the way now. I'm the proud dad of two labs: Oliver and Winston.
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The Cliff notes version: Theoretical Physics degree -> Math PhD -> MUD coding -> Sony London -> EA Canada -> Lucasfilm Animation Singapore -> LucasArts. That, lots of luck, and my incredible supportive wife @mirtos.
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In a strikingly dull move, I'd buy somewhere to live. My current rent would then go into a Fun Fund.
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2002. I'd finish what I started instead of leaving.
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That's a fascinating question, do go on. *listens*
Dominic Hamon’s Bio
Software engineer. British. Google. Short enough?

