Second-Hand Songs is a collaborative website that maintains a global database of mainly cover versions of original works.
It includes links to freely accessible recordings of the covers, and external identifiers for those works and performances in other databases.
As of 2021, it included roughly a million covers of 100,000 original works.
anyone like doing jigsaws i find this site very hood got plenty jigsaw with 2 daily ones added everyday
https://www.jigsawexplorer.com/
One I use most summers is Blitzortung. This allows you to see real time lightning strikes & exactly where they are hitting.
https://map.blitzortung.org/#1.75/35/-43.4
And when I am at the coast, I regularly use Marine Traffic, to identify what I can see.
https://www.marinetraffic.com/en/ais/home/centerx:4.5/centery:53.0/zoom:6
Oh & if anyone wants to identify that aircraft that you can see, then the following is handy…
Side by side georeferenced maps viewer - Map images - National Library of Scotland https://share.google/YKhk6JZg1MpE9RsOC
I have shared this one before a little while back on a different topic. Fascinating in my humble opinion, it’s so easy to see what was or wasn’t around your locale way back in the past. The default mapping is the first edition ordnance survey maps but there’s plenty of other options on the drop down menu ![]()
Best used on the PC, phone screens are a bit titchy.
I’ll share another.
Freecycle. This is a free to join organisation, that allows it members to share unwanted items between each other for free. I have picked up all sorts & recycled my own unwanted items here many times. Items offered can be almost anything. I have picked up DIY tools, including a ladder. Plants, books, a heated clothes airer that was unused. It was too big for the givers home.
if anyone is into sports of any kind then i watch all mine on this website football snooker darts cricket golf ect all live and all for free.
A list of all radio traffic on the night of April 14-15, 1912 relating to the RMS Titanic.
The distress call, SOS was new & the Titanic was a Marconi operated radio. So the correct Marconi distress was sent. CQD. CQ is a calling any station prefix.
Later as things became more urgent the new SOS distress was also sent.
BBC article about Artie Moore, a Welsh shortwave listener who heard the Titanics distress calls 3000 miles away. He was not believed, until the news officially reached the UK.
I’m finding this quite addictive, even when at home in the armchair. I’m quite drawn to checking out what’s crossing the Solent. Feeling a day trip coming on! ![]()
Shared one about 12 years ago I came across as the result of a typo error, it was soon deleted by admin ![]()
Just gonna check if it’s still live.
Uh oh! ![]()
Relax Chilli, it’s gone, what a difference one key makes and can register on one’s browsing history!!
I miss typed ebay at the time