Advantages: Great sound quality, perfet at loud volumes, just in general FANTASTIC Disadvantages: none so far
Anything made by BOSE can be trusted. Its sound quality is always at its best, no matter what soundsystem you use from bose, and it's true... you get what you pay for.
Jus plug it in and press "ON" and you're set up! IT'S THAT EASY!
bose is a big brang name, and everyone expects the best from, and how right they are.
The sounddocks simplistic design brings out the best of your mp3 player, making it the whole music experience that much better.
For (at most) £300, you are getting exactly what you pay for AND more! The bose soundock has an inate wonder within itself, which brings you to appreciate the minor details embedded into whatever track you are listening to.
Its reasonably light weight, comes with an easy to use remote and from there onwards, it really is just you and your music
i can easily say that the best thing about ...
Advantages: free, interesting crypt, peaceful Disadvantages: not so many memorials to look at
Have you ever wondered how the tiered wedding cake came about? Look no further than the distinctive spire of St Brides just off Fleet Street. An 18th century baker William rich used the three tired spire as inspiration in a range of wedding cakes and it has became the standard ever since. However there is so much more to this delightful little church which I often visit to get away from it all.
Saint Bride's has a long and interesting history. Named after Saint Bridget, a 5th century Irish saint who turned well water into beer (a nice party trick me thinks and always a welcome guest) there has been at least been seven church buildings on the site since Saxon times. Being on Fleet Street it is known as the Journalist's church and it is associated with a number of literary figures such as Boswell, Dryden, Lovelace, the diarist Evelyn ...
?, and all of a sudden, a whole cottage industry sprang up tracing the fictional Robert Langdon?s breathless dash across London on so-called Da Vinci Tours. One of the most popular stops on that tour is Temple Church, and for a short time after the release of the film, it was a virtual no-go area for regular visitors, having been swamped by oversized Americans in daft clothing and breathless snap-happy Japanese. If it sounds like I am lazily reverting to national stereotype it?s because I speak from personal experience. I?ve lost count of the times that my quiet contemplation was interrupted by squeals of delight from ?Marty? and ?Mabel? as they discovered something they?d seen in ?that movie?. Sigh.
If I am taking a little while to come to the business end of this review, it?s because I am not a ?Grail tourist? and felt it imperative to ...