On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 1:30 PM, Jules Richardson
<jules.richardson99 at gmail.com> wrote:
Ethan Dicks wrote:
... I spent the summer of 1985 in Britain and
remember the bog paper
as being quite stout...
The stuff we had to endure at school over there was certainly rather
robust
- although I recall it not being abrasive as such, but more like
baking
parchment in terms of texture (i.e. smooth and rather shiny in
appearance).
I didn't know how to describe it, but you're spot on. When
encountering it, we American students were gobsmacked (I think a
couple of students even wrote home to get some of the soft stuff sent
over).
I could certainly see it making its way through a
printer without
mishap.
I don't fancy the chances of Charmin through a teletype, but that
stuff... probably fine.
Enough about toilet paper, the burning question is how is it there are
even numbers in a supposed list of prime number calculations from SEAC?