It was 75 degrees today, and at 8:40pm, it's down to 60 :)
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Topic:
tattoos
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I have five, though the 5th isnt published yet - probably 50 hours worth:
http://www.checkoutmyink.com/profile/caldercay |
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Topic:
What do ladies really want?
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The Bill passed. |
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Topic:
Look up at the sky tomorrow
Edited by
centered
on
Thu 04/22/10 10:14 AM
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In the pre-dawn hours of April 22 (1:00 - 3:00 am), be sure to look up. If you do, you'll likely be treated to a spectacular celestial show in the form of the Lyrids meteor shower [snipped] And actually, you can see the showers (given you have a clear sky) from a few days before the 22nd to a few days after. I recommend you check the Clear Sky Chart for your area to see which night is best for viewing. A bright moon can obscure the showers too. http://stardate.org/nightsky/moon Start here: http://cleardarksky.com/csk and choose your state (or province/etc), then your city. Note that there may be quite a few observatories in your area (such as 'private'), so I suggest you scroll down the list to find the observatory closest to you. You might even want to check 2-3 observatories close to you. The chart uses military (24hour) time format, so 22 (2 over a 2) would be 10pm and a lone '2' would be 2am (Friday in this sample). Thursday . . . . . . .Friday 1111111112222 12345678901230123... Moving across the chart, for the 'cloud cover' and 'transparency' rows, you'll want dark blue cell colors for the best sky for observation. Where to look? Towards the NE and look for the star Lyra - here's a map to get your oriented: http://www.spaceweather.com/meteors/lyrids/lyrids.html |
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McAfee antivirus program goes berserk, freezes PCs
By PETER SVENSSON NEW YORK – Computers in companies, hospitals and schools around the world got stuck repeatedly rebooting themselves Wednesday after an antivirus program identified a normal Windows file as a virus. One good reason to avoid using a M$ operating system. |
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fastfood don't count....or does it? :P Carbonara - takes about 10 minutes - recipe in this thread: http://mingle2.com/topic/show/271541 |
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Just two more reasons to never use Google ... Startpage is a lot more direct, and it NEVER records your IP address or keeps track of which sites you visit, how often, how long, etc etc ... I like that. I see NO reason to trust Google's 'good will' when they demonstrate no respect for the privacy of their users. Your mileage, however, may vary ...
Google fixed the Buzz glitch - you have to opt-in now, instead of it being automatically public. And as far as "StreetView" goes, well, what do you expect? They're taking millions of photos, ya gotta expect some objects to be exposed. In Google's defense, they do work to blur faces, license plates, etc, and are re-working many streetviews because of privacy concerns. |
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Topic:
Google Just Gives It Up ...
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Don't ever count on Google to live up to any 'principled' concepts like 'privacy' when it comes to protecting its user base. They get a 'request', they're gonna give it up like a prom date with too much to drink. They will NOT fight to protect the privacy rights of ANY user of its service. Again, 'Google' at your own risk ... This article is so off-base. This is about Google reporting to the public about the number of requests that come in from Gov't and private orgs and individuals about REMOVING content from search results. And the part about disclosing information about companies or individuals concerns illegal activity. http://www.google.com/governmentrequests/overview.html People read into things incorrectly, In addition to writers of articles mentioned. |
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Edited by
centered
on
Wed 04/21/10 09:54 AM
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Where do you think your microwave oven came from...? NASA...
Where do you think your trusty remote came from...? NASA... Where do you think the NET, really came from...? NASA... By-Product. Where do you thing our communications capability is from...? NASA... The microwave did not derive from NASA. It was discovered "by accident" by Dr. Percy Spencer (engineer at Raytheon) in the 1946 timeframe. The remote control? You mean, like a TV remote control? The first remote control for opening garage doors appeared in homes in the 1940's. The first wireless TV remote control was created in 1955. Actually, the Internet's beginnings started with a marriage between MIT and ARPA in the early '60's - NASA didn't get involved until many years later - and even then, they weren't instrumental in evolving the 'Net. NASA was more interested in implementing its own "internet", called, "NASA Science Network". The very infrastructure of the Internet was in place before NASA was involved. "Communications capability"??? The first wireless communications began back in 1887. Mobile phones were in existence in 1946. NASA didn't have much to do with modern communications. I've heard and read a number of misleading attributions to NASA, such as NASA inventing Velcro - it was finalized in 1955 by a Swiss mountaineer. Heck, NASA wasn't created until Oct 1, 1958. Ok, I'm done with being off-topic :) |
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what program are you using?... that would help a lot in andwering your question(s)... $.02 Windows xp Firefox That help? View -> Zoom -> Reset Or use "CTRL -" (or is it "ALT -" ... I forget, I don't use Windows) That's the "minus" key. |
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Topic:
Texas Wildflowers
Edited by
centered
on
Tue 04/20/10 02:36 PM
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Here's a slideshow of all the photos - samples follow .... sorry, I couldn't help including the "birds"
http://s942.photobucket.com/albums/ad261/myswtest/texas-flowers/?albumview=slideshow . . . . . . |
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Topic:
Texas Wildflowers
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What are the red flowers? No doubt, "Indian Paintbrush". |
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Edited by
centered
on
Tue 04/20/10 01:51 PM
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School is much more than the academic piece. The newsperson
stated that to the teens, with respect to sports - school exposes a person to various sports - to be exposed to it would reveal whether the person would like it or not. It's also about social interaction - to socially interact with just a few people here and there isn't enough. While the rest of the kids are in school, these kids are at home, or maybe at the mall, but they aren't interacting with their social peers. And to have no "hierarchy", no rules, what's up with that? These parents are sooooo misguided. These kids will have a big surprise on their hands when they get older and get out in the world, when they discover there is structure to it all. The question, "what about when you go to college"? That was a good question - and the girl said, "I'll just get a book and learn it". Ha! I'd like to see these kids' GED test scores when they get to the "pre-college" age. THe kids can't be blamed for this though - it's the parents who are at fault (IMO) for choosing this direction for their kids. |
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no link, too lazy to type it in. Gotta go to work actually. Later i will.
You can just highlight, copy-n-paste the URL ... or click this: http://news.yahoo.com/video/health-15749655/extreme-parenting-radical-unschooling-19218933 :) |
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Topic:
DropBox ...
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What an elegant solution to a common problem ... take a look - you'll prolly decide it could solve some problems for you, too ...
https://www.dropbox.com/ For some reason, this link is NOT clickable. Instead, copy/paste it into your menubar and it'll bring you to the site. Sorry for the inconvenience. This SHOULD be a 'live link', but it's not working properly. Been using Dropbox since, almost, "day 1". I use it between my Mac laptops, Linux desktops, and iPhone. |
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http://www.alternet.org/story/146509/the_financial_terrorists_who_destroyed_our_economy_will_pay_zero_in_taxes_--_and_get_%2433_billion_in_refunds
[...] The point here is that while the economic crisis has been devastating for 99% of America, the Wall Street elite are awash in record breaking profits. The most profitable firm in Wall Street history, Goldman Sachs, just had their most profitable quarter in their 140-year history and Wall Street firms issued an all-time record breaking amount in bonuses. All of this is occurring after giving these firms $14 TRILLION in taxpayer support - that works out to be $46,662 of your hard-earned money. [...] |
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Topic:
oxymoron......
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Lets all see how many different oxymorons we can come up with..this should be fun and interesting..okk, I'll start.. My next tattoo I have scheduled to have will be "FOREVER" and "ALWAYS" around my wrist as a bracelet...how much more oxymoron can ya get..LOL ... I'm not getting it :) "forever" and "always" are synonyms, unless you're calling the two words "oxymorons" for a rhetorical effect :) Technically, I would think, "never always" and "never forever" or "ending forever" or "temporarily forever", etc. makes more sense. Did I mss something? :) |
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Edited by
centered
on
Tue 04/20/10 08:41 AM
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This is just too good ... If this happened to me, I wouldn't give my name either ... the world's gonna find out soon enough this guy had a heapin' helpin' of 'STUPID!' for breakfast ... the pelican's fault ... indeed ... Time to man up, hoss ... (I wonder how long it took the cops and firefighters to stop laughing once they left the scene ... ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.galvnews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=792e1da427373dfb $2 million Bugatti crashes into lagoon [snipped] I know exactly where the crash occurred ... driven that stretch, cant' tell ya how many times. Here's a video of the crash actually happening (a bit of swearing in it): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NJmB1F2mdE Maybe someone can slow down the video and see where the gull fly's across :) (edited to change URL to the youtube video, versus on facebook) |
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Topic:
Flowers?
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Ok,--- cheezy or still "en vogue"...?? Thoughts???
$.02 I've yet to meet a woman who'd refuse flowers. What's important is whether *you* want to give flowers and not base the decision on whether it's en vogue or not. |
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