Last login: 3 months agoR0bb3rt
r0bb3rt is a 33 year old married guy from Netherlands.
Likes 340 pages, 15 videos, 73 photos20 fans • Received 5 reviews
Member since Apr 07, 2007

Favorites » His Blog

YouTube - Room Eleven - Hey Hey Hey
Liked it May 12, 2:31am 2 reviews music, video
http://video.stumbleupon.com/?p=gapoca1cge
fantastic song from the new album of room eleven
http://www.schradinova.com/links.html
Liked it May 12, 2:18am 1 review photography
http://www.schradinova.com/links.html
wonderful pictures collected by janne schra
http://www.wikirat.com/_Guaranteed_smile_makers_1
No opinion Jan 16, 2:51am 140 reviews photography
http://www.wikirat.com/_Guaranteed_smile_makers_1
http://bestofdigg.zaridi.to/
No opinion Jan 16, 2:31am 146 reviews blogs
http://bestofdigg.zaridi.to/
Kapu
No opinion Jan 14, 10:52am 262 reviews photography
http://www.kapu.hu/ajanlo/40erdekes1/
http://www.office-humour.co.uk/content/images/2006/09/4792.jpg
No opinion Jan 13, 9:59am 58 reviews satire
http://www.office-humour.co.uk/content/images/2006/09/4792.jpg
StumbleUpon - whiterose07s web site reviews and blog
Liked it Jan 9, 11:54am 612 reviews stumblers
http://whiterose07.stumbleupon.com/
nice collection of beautiful pictures
Connect-4
Liked it Jan 9, 11:39am 1 review board-games, connect-four
http://homepages.cwi.nl/~tromp/c4.html
I finally know why i always loose connect-four games
The Four Laws of Simplicity, and How to Apply Them to Life | Zen Habits
Liked it Jan 9, 11:37am 20 reviews self-improvement
http://zenhabits.net/2008/01/the-four-laws-of-simplicity-and-how-to-apply-the...
Great article

From the site:
1. Collect everything in one place.
2. Choose the essential.
3. Eliminate the rest.
4. Organize the remaining stuff neatly and nicely.
Mentally Calculate the Day of the Week for a Date at Jamin
Liked it Jan 6, 8:05am 5 reviews mathematics, fun
http://pubcrawler.org/2006/11/02/mentally-calculate-the-day-of-the-week-for-a...
from the site: "It's easier than you might think to calculate the day of the week for a date from September 14th, 1752 (the day the Gregorian calendar was made official in America and England) to the indefinite future."
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