Originally posted by NickFitz
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Previously on "Some women should think of the consequences in the morning"
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostIs it just me or does anyone else experience a supersize font when they follow a link to the telegraph?
It’s like a mode for the visually impaired.
(To be precise, browser default is usually 16px; IE uses 12pt, which equates to 16px at the OS's default setting of 78dpi. The Torygraph's stylesheet sets a font-size on the body element of 62.5%, which brings the size down to 10px [though not quite accurately on IE, which treats 62.5% as 62%]. Then, paragraph elements are styled at 1.3em, which leads to the computed size of 13px.)
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Is it just me or does anyone else experience a supersize font when they follow a link to the telegraph?
It’s like a mode for the visually impaired.
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Too many chillies can be fatal !! Remember this ?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...i-for-bet.html
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Some women should think of the consequences in the morning
An Indian woman is hoping to enter the record books as the world's "hottest" woman after munching 51 fiery chillies in two minutes, organisers of the feat said Friday.
Anandita Dutta Tamuly, 26, chewed her way through the chillies before an audience late Thursday in India's northeast.
She consumed the chillies in the company of British celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay, who was producing a television show on food and anchoring the event in Jorhat, 300 kilometers (180 miles) east of Assam's main city of Guwahati.
"In two minutes, Anandita gobbled 51 red-hot chillies without batting an eyelid or shedding a tear, and also smeared seeds of 25 chillies into her eyes in one minute," Atul Lahkar, a chef who organised the show, told AFP.
The chillies are known locally as bhut jolokia and are a staple of local diet in Assam. They are recognised by Guinness World Records as the world's hottest chili pepper.
Guinness World Records had "asked us to provide them with a recording of the feat supervised by someone responsible. We asked Ramsay to be the adjudicator," said Diganta Saikia, another coordinator.
Tamuly said she became hooked on hot peppers when she was five years old.
"I had a sore tongue and my mother applied a chilli paste to cure the infection. After that I developed a penchant for chillies," Tamuly said.Tags: None
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