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two 2009 February | The Gremlins Umbrella Authority
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A Domainers Fantasy: Old Domains

February 27, 2009 | Written by -GRUMBA- | Topic: My Views | Comments (3)

In 1995 when many top domain names were available for $100 USD, I was 5! I admit even if I was 18 then who knows as to whether the Internet would have had a similar influence on me. Furthermore it is unlikely I would have been prepared to splash out $100 for a website address thingy.
It is 2009, and I am 18, heading towards 19. I have been online for 5 ish years, and feel I have learnt a lot, and to an extent made an impact. When I first got into domaining I always thought ‘I really wish I owned a ccc.com’, then I got one.. then it became LLL.us, LLL.info etc, and built up to now where I own a couple of LLL.com, and a few other great domains.
The only domain type which has eluded me so far is a top category killer generic .com, simply because there aint many, and they are expensive! I would love to own such a domain, but I would not say it is a fantasy.

One thing I have been thinking about recently is old domains. A few years ago, I was extremely excited to win a 1995 domain on snapnames for $60. I thought that as it was old it would be worth loads. I forgot that anyone can use snapnames: if they had wanted it, they would have had it :)
I still have it, and couldnt sell it if I wanted to. It costs $7 to keep each year, so I may as well.
Digitalpoint seems to have quite a market for old domains. Recently someone was advertising a 1993 domain there for high $xxx. That is probably the oldest domain I have seen recently for public sale. My feeling is that if you are going old, you may as well go really old. This has led me to my newest fantasy/ambition. The birth date!
In 1993 I was 3, but in 1990 I was born! If you are older than 20 you have little to no chance of accquiring a domain registered on your birthdate. Over 24, and it is impossible… domains were not invented then. I was born in a nice round year: 1990, and there were around 1,300 domains registered then (by my calculations) relative to 70+ million today.
On my birth date, there would have been 1 if i am lucky, 3 max, but more than likely 0. I am now on a hunt for that 1 domain that is the exact age I am. When I find it, I will get it!

If any individual had the power to hunt down ‘this’ domain, it would be me. GUA domain tools, have more uses than you might think.

This is a fantasy in that it is something I really want, but that word suggests I will not get it. I will!
I will keep you updated.

Word of the week: Failure

February 25, 2009 | Written by -GRUMBA- | Topic: Word of the Week | Comments (0)

Following on from my post entitled ‘The value of content’ is this week’s word: ‘Failure’.
This time there is no wikipedia definition to complement the word. The reason being if an individual wants a definition of the word failure they can simply look it up on wikipedia.

Considering the ‘Word of the Week’ category in retrospect, If I am being honest I can see that the category was merely an attempt at making writing new content for the blog easier. I am however cutting my losses as I have on many an occasion, accepting my mistakes, and moving on.
Definitions of words are simply not interesting, not unique, nor original. Furthermore I was extremely arrogant with regards to my wit. I am not THAT clever, nor am I THAT witty, thus ‘Word of the Week’ has absolutely no value to this blog.

A blog that I occasionally read (r-e-d… as in the past tense) recently lost my readership for one simple reason: lack of original content. I wrote a post about this previously, but perhaps I did not emphasize or elaborate as to exactly how important unique content is.
It is so so so so so important. A blog revolves around content. Thus bad content equals bad blog.

The author of the blog in question clearly was having writers block, or simply had nothing interesting to say. So what did he resort to? He posted 2 blog posts entitled somewhere along the lines of ‘I don’t know what to blog about’, and ‘I know why I can’t think of anything to write about’.
Maybe it is just me, but I think that is a kop out, and a bad one at that. The posts were just fillers to make the blog look active when it fact it was not.

My last blog posts have been spread apart by a week. I don’t want that. I want to write daily for you, my readers. If however I can’t, I don’t. Simple as. Hopefully you would agree, it is better to have nothing than something bad.

So back to failure. My failures include (but are not limited to): not selling my LLLL.com portfolio at the top; investing in ccc.net; investing in llll.net; NOT investing in RBS shares when they were at 8p; arguing unnecessarily with potential business partners; getting an A in French GCSE; etc etc
Failure does not have a strict definition, but yet many things can be classed as a failure.

I think the important thing about failure, and what needs to be mentioned, is your response to it. If you fail, and ignore your mistakes you are destined to continue failing. If you act, and respond to the mistake, acknowledge your weaknesses, and grow past it you are destined for success.
I lost loads on LLLL.net, yet I still renewed 100 or so. Big Mistake! I ignored my first failure, and am destined to future failure with regards to these domains. It is a shame to think that although my domain investment returns are in profit, had I not failed here I would have more to reinvest for example.
Another thing to note about failure is NOT to dwell on it. Get over it, move on. It sucks big time, and I myself have not always done this… that does not mean I cannot tell you what I think you should do in such a situation.

At the end of the day, it is good to fail! Whether you like it or not. Just make sure your response is the correct one!

The Value of Content

February 23, 2009 | Written by -GRUMBA- | Topic: My Views | Comments (0)

The value of content

It struck me that making money online is not simply related to…, it IS content.
Websites you have bookmarked, are bookmarked for one reason, and one reason only… the content that they contain within.
To give a few examples of sites I visit:

Ebay. I visit ebay because it is the ONLY website on the web where I can reach a large audience with my items/content. Furthermore if I want to buy something, I will more than likely find it cheap on ebay.
BBC News. Always updated with the current news, great content, and well written: it is great to keep informed.
Dnforum. I visit dnforum because it is the ONLY website on the web where proffessional domain investors chat about their opinions on the state of the industry. This is valuable information, hence the value in the site.

Now those are only a few of the many many sites I regularly visit.. for the purpose of relating to the title of this post I refer to the final one: Dnforum.

Dnforum demonstrates perfectly the value of good content on a website. It is a forum, and it boast some of the biggest domainers in the industry as members. Of course it did not start like this, but it grew to this stage because of its content.
There is NO source on the Internet where you can get multiple views on important domain related topics, buy and sell great domains, and meet great contacts at the same time.

The first thing dnforum did right was that it chose its niche, and hit it hard.
Given this it grew exponentially, and with this the amount of content grew too. Being a forum, more users equals more content.
Such was the growth/success of the site that now any post on dnforum pretty much instantly hits the top of google within hours… anything useful you want to know about domaining…, there will probably be a dnforum page on the top results page of google.
Why is this? Simple.. the content. Original, and high quality content has earned dnforum a good pagerank, and good google spiderability (new word). Google knows that dnforum content is good, and thus it spiders it more regularly than other websites. Content, content, content !

The reason I thought of this topic again relates to dnforum. I was involved in a heated debate over at dnforum. At least 10 members were writing great argumentative content for dnforum. At least 3 of these members (myself included) have blogs. We are writing content for dnforum, and improving their rankings when we should be blogging about it, and helping our own rankings.
Dnforum is successful because there are like minded members all in one place. There are multiple sub-forums not related to domains, yet they are still popular simply because the people are already there.
They sell advertising spots for thousands of dollars monthly.. Why do people pay that? Because people are there, not just people, but people interested in a particular niche which the content has targetted.

Not only has the domain industry grown to such an extent that great domains are hard to come by (at least for cheap), but now the content market has become saturated. Content is vital in the growth of a website, but i reiterate, it MUST be unique, and original. If i were to create a domain forum now it would fail. Why? Because we have dnforum.com !

My Developments

February 17, 2009 | Written by -GRUMBA- | Topic: My Developments | Comments (0)

I thought a blog post to document my current developments was in order. Thus here it is.

Domain Investment has its pros and its cons. An obvious pro is the ability to make significant amounts of money. Unfortunately however the biggest downside I see, I relate to drought. I will explain (please note this analogy is not watertight).

Imagine a prosperous and growing country/economy. Food, water, and jobs are in abundance. If you get there early, before the boom then you can set yourself up for a very good life. This was the state of the domain industry in the mid nineties.
Fast-forward 10 years, drought has hit. There is no more water, and although jobs are currently secure, no water is a sure fire sign of a downturn to come. Crops cannot be grown, meaning less food, meaning more imports are needed, jobs are lost etc etc etc
If you have land, businesses, a private water supply etc, then you are fine. You can still make money. You can sell your assets to others who now NEED them, and you can make money. What you have is now in demand.

The relation is that contrary to what others say there are NO MORE good domains. Not only that, but given the growth of the Internet, people who have these assets are NOT selling. There are no longer any naive, unknowledgeable domain owners who will sell you their gold for a dollar.
Thus if you have water/a domain you can make a lot of money by holding and selling to the people/company that NEED your water/domain. After all they cannot get it anywhere else.

In simple terms if you own a good domain(s), then lucky you. If you do not, you may as well not waste your time….

So you have your great domain(s), and you are holding it whilst waiting for some large company which needs it. So what now? You develop!

A lot of people have said to me that development is great: it prevents your domain being taken in a WIPO case. This is categorically NOT a reason to develop. Maybe you are waiting to sell in the long term, but whilst you are holding, you should develop simply because a good domain deserves a good website to complement it.
Furthermore, develop a domain well and you can make some money, and have some fun too.

My position is that I got in late, but still ended up with some good domains. I worked my butt off, and am now sitting here and weighing up my options.
It is getting harder and harder for me to pick up good domains. If I want to get a good domain, then I have to buy it off a reseller. If I do that, I have to pay a premium. If I am going to do that I MUST have a development plan, and a good one at that! Thus I am not really buying; rather I am developing what I have and hoping that I can make money from running good websites rather than flipping domains.

So what am I doing?

Anfield.com
I am a fan of Liverpool Football Club, and Anfield is the name of their stadium. It thus makes the perfect domain on which to develop a fan site/news resource.

MMMM.com
Mmmm….. Food. I have developed this website into an interactive picture based recipe website. Users design and add their own recipes, and can then share them with one another. Yum!

PubJudge.com
This website again has been developed by me as a user influenced pub rating website. It covers the whole of the UK, and allows visitors to read, rate, and review each, every, and any pub in the UK

And then of course there is GUA.com :)

In the works I have:

Good.Causes.net
A Domain hack on which I intend to document the best Charities, and funds around: what they do, what they need, and how YOU can help.

Quests.net
I intend to develop this into a new genre of social media: an online game/competition. I don’t want to spoil the fun, but it will be good !

It does not stop there. I will gradually be developing all of my domains, I simply don’t have the time to develop them all well in a week :)

Finally although I spoke of development (above) from the point from view of a domain flipper looking to maximize profits, I am actually a passionate web designer too. Fun is more motivation to me than money, and I like to produce websites which can be used, and enjoyed by everyone!

Finally I do not freelance, unless you are prepared to pay a premium for the best, most original domain development you can find. My ideas, and development are unique, original, and exciting. I don’t want to dilute the web :)

Cheers

Domains, Shares, or Neither?!

February 10, 2009 | Written by -GRUMBA- | Topic: My Views | Comments (0)

My windscreen wipers on my car recently stopped working. Being the lazy chump that I am I did not bother to repair them for a few days, and when I eventually had time I was unable to fix the problem myself. I proceeded to drive to work the next morning, but upon finishing it was raining: I was stranded.
The first point to make is never be stubborn or lazy: it never works out in the long run. Anyway, the long and the short of it is that I got the car to a garage, and the next day was informed the cost of repairing a wiper was £260 !! (~$400). To put that into perspective, about 1/8th of the value of the car! Now I did not really have a choice, and have since had the car repaired. So where does this all fit in?

When I invest money I am fully aware of the risks associated with the specific investment, such that if I lose it is my own fault. In domaining, my successes have significantly outgrown my failures. In the stock market, my hope is likewise. In real life finance however, I seem to have significantly more ridiculous outgoings/losses such as the above relative to my income.
Were I to have lost that £260 on a domain, or on the stock market, then fine. On a windscreen break that was not even my fault, not fine!
Now I do not intend to get into the psychology of losing. . . but this showed me that having money hanging around doesn’t get you anywhere. Every so often you get completely random outgoings, and thus your net money can not, and will not go up if you simply leave it. For that, you have to take a proactive approach and invest… invest hard.

Being a seasoned domain investor I have recently been put into a position whereby I have had to weigh up my financial position, and investment opportunities.

I have a certain, significant amount of cash sitting in my paypal account. My choices are essentially invest it in domains, or withdraw it to my bank account.

Domains
In the current climate the value of domains has dropped quite significantly. What is more, they are significantly less liquid than they previously were. Finally most people with the best domains, simply are not selling.
I have had these funds in my account for upwards of 2 months, and they have only slowly been decreasing. I would like to have a few great opportunities present themselves such that I can have clearly defined investment positions.
This feeling is to such an extent that I nearly put all my money into a great domain, that was slightly overpriced, and completely un-liquid… The only reason I didn’t is because such a domain is only worthwhile should you have the time to develop and market it to MAKE it worth the cost.

Every so often I buy great domains at great prices, from various non-domainers who I contact via email. These are the kind of domains I want: they are generally cheaper, and of better quality than the names being traded between ‘domainers’.
The problem is there are not many of these left, and they are extremely hard to find. Perhaps I will find another few great deals, but is it worth simply holding my cash online and waiting, or would it be best invested elsewhere?

Stocks
The stock market is another investment opportunity I have been seriously considering. The common statement with the stock market is don’t invest more than you can afford to lose. I could invest a few thousand pounds, and I could lose it (although I’d prefer not too..)
The banking sector worldwide is in turmoil, but I feel bank shares could be a great money making opportunity such that I may consider investment in HSBC, or RBS. These are extremely risky, but potentially seriously rewarding opportunities. It is perfectly viable to double your money in the long run, but again you could simply lose it.
I have also compiled a list of shares that seem interesting to me, as potentially profitable companies. I will research them more, and perhaps I will make some investments as opposed to punts :)

Being new to the stock market, I have very little idea as to its workings. I have done a lot of reading, and research. One great book being ‘The Naked Trader’. I intend to use the prophecies contained within to aid me in my first stock market investments.
I hope it goes well, and that I make significant gains. Sadly success is not a certainty.

When I started in the domain business, I was naive, and down-right idiotic. I have come a long way, and today have what I believe is an amazing portfolio. This is in a maximum of 3 years..
I thus feel success in the stock market is perfectly viable for me if I take my time, and do my research.

The question is do I maintain my domain holdings in the hope their value recovers, and invest my current free funds in the stock market? Do I sell my un-liquid assets at reduced prices to fund a larger investment in the stock market? or Should I maintain my position, continue looking for great domains and forget the stock market altogether?

Cheers

Irrational National Rail: Lack of customer service

February 5, 2009 | Written by -GRUMBA- | Topic: My Views | Comments (0)

It is a well known truth that the customer is always right.
The basis of that statement is that even if the customer is categorically wrong you should be spending your time gently guiding towards the right viewpoint as opposed to categorically dismissing their intelligence.

Unfortunately London Midland, one of many UK train carriers have really gotten it wrong. Although not actually National Rail, London Midland comes under the authority of National Rail, the UK’s overriding governing body for train services. Thus, given my want of a catchy press style title, I used their name instead !

So, a bit of background (for those not in the know). The UK train service offers a railcard system for the young (16-25), and the old. These are sold with the line ‘Up to 1/3rd off rail fairs’. If you travel by rail regularly, then the £24 cost of a railcard is well worth it.
On a recent trip from Liverpool Lime Street, I ran to jump on the train towards Crewe. The next train would have been an hour later. I sat, out of breath, and opened a book. Moments later the train left.

As is custom, 5 minutes later a big burley man came walking down the aisle exclaiming ‘Tickets Please’. When he arrived at me, I asked for a one way ticket to Crewe with a railcard, and got the response back of ‘No!’.
At first I thought maybe I don’t need a ticket, regardless I checked. He then burst into a long, stern, and extremely rude statement of how I had sneaked past a barrier to get on the train without a ticket, and how I should have bought a ticket before hand. Therefore I would have to buy a normal ticket.

Now I took the time to politely point out that in fact there was no barrier, and that I had only just managed to get on the train, thus I had no opportunity to get a ticket. What is more the policy has always been buy a ticket before boarding unless you cannot. I could not.
After a back and forth (to my embarrassment), I gave in and simply bought a normal ticket for £10. This thug publicly embarrassed me, and called me a liar.

I have lied in the past, who hasn’t, but on this occasion I spoke the complete truth. What did not seem to figure with him was that I got no benefit from getting on the train without a ticket.. I still intended to buy a ticket, as I always do, and as is common practice on trains.

My feeling on the matter is that I bought a railcard but cannot use it. Thus I want my £24 back. What is more, I am disgusted at the customer service, or lack thereof that I received, and am thus going to be pursuing some sort of compensation.
The service was more like verbal abuse ! To put a point home, I am requesting compensation for every train ticket I have purchased: in excess of £500. My point being you should treat customers properly, especially loyal ones. After all, they pay your wages!

This extends to any, and all businesses. If you make a lasting positive impression on a customer, then they will likely utilize your services or product again. In some businesses, 1 loyal customer can be the difference between make, and break. In this case however National Rail have a monopoly over the train service market because, well… they are National Rail.
If I could, I would boycott usage of these services, sadly I cannot.

It is similar to the franchise model. A franchisee can technically do what he wants with his particular shop, or business BUT at the end of the day if the franchiser does not do a good job and monitor/maintain the respective franchisees, then the reputation of the business as a whole is affected.
This was the fault of London Midland, but National Rail should not be letting it happen !

Should you pay to go to school?

February 3, 2009 | Written by -GRUMBA- | Topic: Uncategorized | Comments (4)

In the UK, school is compulsory up until the age of 16. You are legally obliged to attend school, and if you do not, then it is your parents who take the hit.
After 16, school is entirely optional. You can drop out at any point, or simply not continue at all.

It figures logically that if the British government are going to demand you attend school, then they cant viably force you to pay as well. Hence the state sector.
State school is the general term for a school which is fully, or partially funded by the government, and is thus free for pupils to attend.

The other ‘breed’ of school is Public School, for which you have to pay out of your own pocket. Unfortunately however, not only do you have to pay, you have to pay an extortionate amount!
In Britain the likes of Eton, and Harrow ring bells when public school is referenced. Is it however worth paying to go to school?

I come from an informed background with regards to this topic: I attended Packwood Haugh (from 10-13), and Shrewsbury School (from 13-18). Both well respected public schools.
I also have family who have attended Eton, and a variety of friends at public schools all around the country.
Now my parents footed the bill for my education, for that I am thankful. I, however never wanted to attend public school, and thus I feel I have no obligation of thanks towards my parents. I am not ungrateful, it is simply that my parents were the ones that ‘thought’ public school was the best route for me and my education.. they wanted to pay, and that was their choice.

My distaste for public school arose because during an 8 year period, my education has been hindered both socially, and academically by public school. I came out of school with 10 GCSEs, and 4 A-Levels all at A or A* Standard. By any standards that is very good, and I am sure my respective schools would happily take the credit for those results. I however feel from actually enduring the experience that I could have matched, or improved on those grades, AND enjoyed myself more had I studied at the local college.
Now, I have no intention of starting a stick throwing match with any individuals BUT I will list a few things about public school that I think are ridiculous:

At Packwood
i) You were only allowed 50p worth of sweets per week. You were not allowed to bring in anything from home.
ii) You had absolutely no freedom: you had no access to computers, you had no access to the outside, phones were not allowed etc
iii) You were bound by a ridiculous set of timings: you do this at x, this at y, and that at z. Then Bed! (None of the set ‘things’ were fun).

Now between 10-13 admittedly you are young, and innocent. You need guidance, and rules to an extent. However I feel that if you are actively thinking ‘This is ridiculous’ at 11, then something is seriously wrong.

At Shrewsbury
i) You have no freedom. You are not allowed to make mistakes, they essentially ban growing up. I learned almost everything I have in life breaking the rules.
I agree, it is better to avoid a fight, but at least if you get into one you will know not to do it again.
Rules such as no eating food from outside school really took the biscuit… McDonalds is a part of teenage life. Simple as.
To a lesser extent: drinking. Fair enough be strict on it if you are underage, but imposing rules such as ‘You can’t go to the pub’, even when you are old enough again, really take the mick. Some people actually want a life..
Then there was chapel, which had a compulsory attendance. I got threatened with expulsion for not attending chapel (ridiculous in itself).. The fact that I did not want to, and would rather have had a lie in, apparently did not translate to the school staff. Admittedly that sounds damn lazy, it was, BUT I got nothing from chapel, it was simply a waste of my time. I would have liked to have been able to make my own choices thank you.

ii) Staff. A surprisingly large number of the teaching staff were totally incompetent. You know something is wrong when the pupils teach the teachers, and the ‘big boys’ fail to acknowledge the idiocy contained within their workforce. If I am paying thousands of pounds a year, I’d actually like to get something for it.
On the flip side, some of the staff were absolutely awesome, and great people. In some of my subjects although I had 2 teachers, 1 teacher taught us everything as the other was so bad. Fortunately I never had 2 buffoons. It was sufficiently bad that I had to personally request to move classes at one point for fear of failing an A-Level. The rest of my class mates were not best please, because they all wanted a move too!
I imagine that on numerous occasions the heads have been made aware of this problem, and yet they do nothing. It sucks for the staff who are good, and essentially work double time, to help the students.

iii) Censorship. In relation to ii), I previously had a website, and on it at one point I posted about the above: the incompetency of staff etc. Admittedly it was written in ’15 year old’ but independent of that, it was merely fact.
I got detention, my website was blocked, and what for… the truth.
In continuation, the Internet was severely filtered. Again, if you are under 18.. block porn, but games, videos, proxies etc… we all have a right to do as we please. If we lived at home we could, and would be browsing such topics, so this is clear, blatant, and unsubstantiated censorship.

iv) Charity. WTF you are most probably thinking, charity is great… Yes it is but not the Shrewsbury way. Shrewsbury is a registered charity, for self professed tax reasons (now that is naughty). The school is essentially a business, but to increase the efficiency of their extortion they have managed to become a charity.
On occasions they have worked with other charities, for example ‘Shrewsbury House’, a youth group of sorts running in Everton. Every 5 years they run a 27 mile sponsored walk for charity. Great ! BUT We paid £26,000 a year (oh did I not mention how ridiculous the fees were), and they then expect us to pay MORE out of our own pockets for a hostel they run..
I’m not a spoilt arse, and I am happy to raise sponsorship for such a charity BUT if the school is a charity in itself, surely it could spare £100 from each of our stupendous bills to the group…

To extend on the business side of the school, the school as of this year started accepting girls. This ended over 100 years of tradition. A good decision for the male pupils, but it is pretty obvious this was done for nothing more than money, and press. Only now will they realise that such a transition is not easy..

v) Extortion. This is an interesting one. Not only did the school extort its pupils, charging ridiculous fees, for awful teachers, lack of freedom, and social injustice, they were also found to be extorting us. Apparently (and it does not surprise me), the reason our already ridiculous fees went up each year was because a few of the top public schools (including Eton) were price fixing: raising their prices together, to similar levels such that there was no cheaper option for potential students.
The extortion in the price was explained to me to be for the new building work that took place, and all the facilities available to us. They did build an impressive swimming pool, and an amazing cricket center. Problem is I never used the cricket center.. so why should I be paying for it? I asked, and it was explained it was because it all averaged out.. some people use this, but not that etc. However this was a blatant fallacy, it was essentially sportsmen used everything, the others used nothing. Ergo, the sportsmen should pay.
To add to that, the exotic sporting trips: football teams going to valencia, and tennis teams going to Portugal (amongst other things). As far as I could figure we (the other pupils) paid for them to go. Now I am all for supporting teams, and friends but not £26k..!

vi) Perverts, and Paedos. Add Mike Clarkson into the mix: a classics teacher, who taught tennis. On a tennis trip to Portugal he proceeded to film a pupil ‘at it’. Then there is the pupil that took up-skirt photos of female staff…
So if the above was not bad enough, we were also in a community full of wierdos.

Based on the above, I think it is easy to understand why such a school attracted the super rich, the ridiculously posh, and the pompous.
The super rich just want to show off how rich they are, the ridiculously posh are of the attitude that ‘State schools are full of chavs’ (yet we cannot blame their simple minds), and the pompous were those who were sad enough to actually have arguments about how old their money was.. ‘Herbert you are nuevo riche!, Daddy says you are scum!’.
I kid you not those kind of people made up about 80% of the community, and to be honest thinking back it sickens me.

Just to add I made a lot of great mates at these schools, and would not change a thing If i was 11 again. Its not all about the environment, it is about the memories you make.., and I made a lot of good uns. Unfortunately not many of them fit within the constraints of the school rues :)

So.., I have outlined what is bad about two particular schools, and I imagine many of the above extend to public schools in general. I have however, yet to answer the question.

There is a local college near me, which my brother attended. It is one of the best colleges in the country, and is completely free. You retain your freedom, you can do what you want, you can enjoy your education, you can meet people of both sexes, and again to reiterate it is free!
What is more the academics of the college are better than that of the astute Shrewsbury School. Actually Shrewsbury School, and most public schools are distinctly average. The majority of the pupils are not clever, they simply think that school=qualifications, and if you pay to go to school, you get better qualifications. Unfortunately for them, that is not true…

A friend of mine pointed out that many top politicians went to top public schools. My response is simply that only the pompous annoying buffoons are the ones who go about shouting this fact, simply because they are under the false impression that it means something.
All those respectable politicians who went to state school don’t feel a need to shout about where they went to school to make themselves feel good.

So in conclusion, No you shouldn’t pay to school. If you do you should at least get your monies worth. Thus if you have a choice I would go state, you will more than likely come out of it better off!