Profile for ef
Field | Value |
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Displayed name | ef |
Member number | 2476 |
Title | Guardian |
Postcount | 1828 |
Homepage | |
Registered | Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Recent posts
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Author | Recent posts |
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What is yours favuorite in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Sunday, June 19 2005 23:55
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quote:I've been given unlimited webspace, but don't want to abuse that. If you can find a way to cut down on size, I'll host the whole bunch. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Your gift or talent in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Sunday, June 19 2005 22:06
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A diagnose may open much needed space for individual development, as parents tend to stop blaming their offspring for perceived 'misbehaviour' once they hear it, instead start to support their kids. Away from that, you are right. A diagnose creates a shelter that may be necessary, but is of course a limitation in itself. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
What is yours favuorite in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Sunday, June 19 2005 03:14
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quote:MMh. How many MBs is all this? -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Elections: The Registration Thread in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Saturday, June 18 2005 15:35
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I want to vote. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Internet Explorer Troubles in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Saturday, June 18 2005 14:32
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I don't know if you are interested, but you can get such programs from the CDs that come with computer magazines. You would have to check regularly, until you hit on something you want to have, and then buy the magazine. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Internet Explorer Troubles in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Saturday, June 18 2005 07:22
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quote:Why not? Mozilla Firefox is free, as is the mail program Thunderbird. Then there's Open Office and The Gimp for graphics and design. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Internet Explorer Troubles in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Saturday, June 18 2005 00:52
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Why do you use IE? There are better choices. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
What is yours favuorite in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, June 16 2005 14:22
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quote:But his were real potatoes, magical potatoes. It's only that we couldn't let him grow them in the taproom which was needed for corpses and other stuff. And yes, he grew cucumbers too. I remember now. :) I think he got an upstairs chamber, so everything was fine. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
What is yours favuorite in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Wednesday, June 15 2005 21:36
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quote:But I'll never forget the way you used an otherwise tidy inn to grow potatoes. :) -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Annotated Maps Down in The Avernum Trilogy | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Wednesday, June 15 2005 00:18
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Silver is around and posting occasionally. So you could ask him, if he's moving or upgrading his site. -------------------- Polaris Rache's A3 Site reformatted 2/3 done Rache's A3 Site, original version Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Websites for depressed people in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Tuesday, June 14 2005 00:58
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What I found on the 'Living Well' section of this site is a lot better than what I found anyplace else, it touched more than my mind. Living Well Loss of Joy (from that site) Selfdestructive Behaviour (from the site) Relaxation (from the site) -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Karma and Bush, and also the WTC in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, June 2 2005 17:26
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quote:It would take a very long time before steel trosses reached even the fire's temperature, as researches show. But let's assume it happened. Then all 287 columns would have to have weakened to the point of collapse simultaneously, at the very same moment, to cause such a symmetrical, telescoping fall as seen in the North Tower. Away from controlled demolition only earthquakes are known to trigger the simultaneous damage needed to cause total collapse. But let us assume that somehow miraculously all 287 columns melted at the same time, bent, and caused the floors to loosen and fall. How do you explain the immensity of the dust cloud that evaporated immediately within the first seconds of the collapse. Within those first few seconds the speed of the falling floors would never have been sufficient to reduce concrete to powder fine dust forming mushroom clouds. We may never know the truth. But of one thing I'm sure: what we were told to see is not what happened. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Karma and Bush, and also the WTC in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, June 2 2005 15:56
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Professionals around here have their doubts. Kerosine fires reach temperatures between 1110 F to 1740 F (950°C). Steel melts at 2890 F (1588°C). The usual forging temperature for steel lies between 2000-2550 F (1400°C). The quantity of gasoline does not heighten a fire's temperature. It burns longer with more gasoline, but not hotter. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Karma and Bush, and also the WTC in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, June 2 2005 14:08
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The twin towers imploded. No bomb and no plane is able to cause an implosion. Implosion is a technique used to blow up and pulverize multi-floor buildings in a controlled fashion. The market leader for this type of demolition is Controlled Demolition Inc., to who the the towers' rubble was sold and who were asked to remove it. [ Thursday, June 02, 2005 14:13: Message edited by: ef ] -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Karma and Bush, and also the WTC in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, June 2 2005 13:29
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quote:Oh yes, of course we all saw that happen. What I'm refering to are those layers and layers of dust, you remember them? Pulverized concrete, that would otherwise have come down in chunks and pieces. That type of demolition needs explosives of a very specific kind and is not typical for plane crashes. I'm not striving to contribute to any conspiracy, I just doubt that the planes were responsible for the towers' collapse. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Where do we all live? in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, June 2 2005 05:04
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I protest. I'm not a dane. They call us 'Krauts'. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Karma and Bush, and also the WTC in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, June 2 2005 04:59
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It's frightening how very little time it takes to turn a myth into accepted truth. And 9/11: there are a lot of questions and doubts as to what precisely hit the Pentagon. A Boeing seems the most unlikely answer. Away from that you'll find specialists enough who'll tell you that the twin towers could never have come down the way they did without controlled demolition. [ Thursday, June 02, 2005 05:02: Message edited by: ef ] -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Karma and Bush, and also the WTC in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Monday, May 30 2005 16:11
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For clarification: Iran is responsible for the Halabja gassing, not Saddam Hussein. I'm citing from an article, you can find many more on this subject. http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/SUR407A.html: ...The CIA officer Stephen C. Pelletiere was the agency's senior political analyst on Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war. As professor at the Army War College from 1988 to 2000, he says he was privy to much of the classified material that flowed through Washington having to do with the Persian Gulf. In addition, he says he headed a 1991 Army investigation into how the Iraqis would fight a war against the United States, and the classified version of the report went into great detail on the Halabja affair. Pelletiere went public with his information on no less a platform than The New York Times in an article on January 31 last year titled 'A War Crime or an Act of War?' The article which challenged the case for war quoted U.S. President George W. Bush as saying: ”The dictator who is assembling the world's most dangerous weapons has already used them on whole villages, leaving thousands of his own citizens dead, blind or disfigured.” Pelletiere says the United States Defence Intelligence Agency investigated and produced a classified report following the Halabja gassing, which it circulated within the intelligence community on a need- to-know basis. ”That study asserted that it was Iranian gas that killed the Kurds, not Iraqi gas,” he wrote in The New York Times. The agency did find that each side used gas against the other in the battle around Halabja, he said. ”The condition of the dead Kurds' bodies, however, indicated they had been killed with a blood agent -- that is, a cyanide-based gas -- which Iran was known to use. ”The Iraqis, who are thought to have used mustard gas in the battle, are not known to have possessed blood agents at the time.” Pelletiere writes that these facts have ”long been in the public domain but, extraordinarily, as often as the Halabja affair is cited, they are rarely mentioned.” Pelletiere wrote that Saddam Hussein has much to answer for in the area of human rights abuses. ”But accusing him of gassing his own people at Halabja as an act of genocide is not correct, because as far as the information we have goes, all of the cases where gas was used involved battles. These were tragedies of war. There may be justifications for invading Iraq, but Halabja is not one of them.” ... -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Whee in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, May 26 2005 09:31
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Congrats and a toast! You've been 'frolicking in postland' for quite a while now. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
blades of exile problem in Tech Support | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Wednesday, May 25 2005 05:33
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I haven't seen SkeleTony in a while. He offered some files for download that solved Win XP's compatibility problems. Princess Ruth got them from him, so maybe you PM her and ask her to mail them to you? -------------------- Polaris Rache's A3 Site reformatted 2/3 done Rache's A3 Site, original version Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Drakefyre, Mariann, Jeff, Linda.. you're all dead. in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, May 19 2005 21:44
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No alcoholic fillings, Aran? What are your bakers up to? Yes, let's party. I bring apple tart with calvados, and I won't forget the extra drip after the baking. :) -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Drakefyre, Mariann, Jeff, Linda.. you're all dead. in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Thursday, May 19 2005 13:07
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You will. I agree, Aran. Never seen a cake like Alec's. It looks all wrong. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Small question in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Friday, April 29 2005 23:52
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Try this site: Pure Mac Eudora has a freeware version and may offer some of the features you are looking for. -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Small question in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Friday, April 29 2005 14:57
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Sorry, so what exactly is a mail forwarding programme? I mean, what do you want to do? -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |
Benedictus XVI has a twin brother... in General | |
Guardian
Member # 2476
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written Friday, April 29 2005 11:41
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quote:Wasn't there that Borgia pope Urban VI or something? Who had seven children, Cesare and Lucrezia Borgia among them? -------------------- Polaris Posts: 1828 | Registered: Saturday, January 11 2003 08:00 |