BBC coverage.
I did note, with some amusement, that two things failed to work properly. The firing of the thruster to land the module and the firing of the grapples to anchor it to the comet. However the feet seem to have secured themselves properly.
I also noted that the communications are intermittently blacking out.
I have some interesting stories about ESA and the way their engineers go about testing.... Like Ariane5. Or the stories I know about Huygens when it hit the surface of Titan and why it had a communications blackout.
I worked at ESOC back in 1996 and a close friend of mine used to be a space operations manager there until he retired recently. It's funny what you hear....
But, in the end, with a lot of hard work and around £1bn, they've pulled off a space first. So I guess it's well done to them.
[Edit]
What was I saying about issues... That was a tad premature. Seems it bounced and has now lost contact..... Ooops.