text stringlengths 1 160k | label class label 20 classes |
|---|---|
I am a novice (at best) in working with pc networks, and am in the
process of planning a small accounting system for a small business.
The particular need in this case is for three machines, each in a
different office of the same building, each having access to a
Windows-based accounting system.
My first thought is to set up MS Windows for Workgroups on each of the
machines (likely a 486 and two 386's) along with the appropriate Ethernet
cards and cabling that come with the Windows for Workgroups starter kit (one
additional user kit will be necessary). It then seems logical to purchase
a simple multi-user accounting system, along the lines of DacEasy or
M.Y.O.B., and fire it all up! The 486 will more or less act as server with
a report/check printer attached to it.
Cable runs of 30-40 feet will be necessary for this setup.
Well, this all seems too easy to me. Would any of you network gurus out
there tell me if I am out of my mind here? Any and all suggestions, however
trivial, will be immensely appreciated. My apologies if this has been
brought up before.
Thanks!
John
--
John E. Martin jemartin@nyx.cs.du.edu University of Puget Sound '92
Kent, WA (formerly martin@ups.edu) SeinfeldSuperSonicsRushBelaFleck
--
John E. Martin jemartin@nyx.cs.du.edu University of Puget Sound '92
Kent, WA (formerly martin@ups.edu) SeinfeldSuperSonicsBC++RushDWeckl
| 2comp.os.ms-windows.misc |
Enclosed is an advertisement for the Defending the Faith IV
conference to be held at Franciscan University of Steubenville (Ohio)
June 25-27. I attended DTF III last year, and plan to go again this
year. I would recommend it highly to Catholic interested in
apologetics. There will be lots of music, well-known Catholic speakers,
fellowship, as well as Eucharistic Liturgies Friday and Sunday.
Registration is $85 per person, but I believe financial aid is
available if you need it. Housing in residence halls (each of which has
its own Blessed Sacrament chapel), if desired, is $30/person for double
occupancy for two nights ($30 total). Reservations can also be made for
you at the very nearby Holiday Inn. I think it was $47 a night there
for my single room. Meals are available at the cafeteria (Friday dinner
through Sunday lunch) for $38 or $32, with or without breakfast,
respectively.
Franciscan University of Steubenville is located in eastern Ohio on
US Route 22, 1/2 mile west of the Ohio River and Ohio Route 7. Greater
Pittsburgh International Airport is less than one hour (35 miles) from
campus.
Feel free to e-mail me if you have any question I can answer.
Here is the agenda, as typed in by a friend of mine:
Friday afternoon special:
Reflections on C.S. Lewis, a preliminary session with Walter Hooper.
Walter Hooper is one of the foremost international experts on the
writings of C.S. Lewis. In 1963, he served as secretary to C.S. Lewis,
and he has since edited 18 of Lewis' literary works for publication.
Walter was ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1965, serving
in Oxford, England, until he entered the Catholic Church in 1988.
----------------
Friday evening, opening session:
In Search of the Truth: Finding the Fullness of Faith
Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz.
Know Your Rites
Kimberly Hahn.
-------------------
Saturday Morning
Apologetics Means Never Having to Say You're Sorry
Karl Keating
C.S. Lewis: My Signpost to the Catholic Church
Walter Hooper
Mass
Bishop Bruskewitz, celebrant
Fr. Ray Ryland, homilist
---------------------------
Saturday afternoon:
The Mystery of Femininity: Why It Excludes the Priesthood
Dr. Alice von Hildebrand
Men Make Better Fathers: Masculinity and the Male Priesthood
Dr. Peter Kreeft
----------------------------
Saturday evening:
When Do Catholics Hear the Gospel?
Dr. Thomas Howard
The Catholic Gospel: Not Just Saving Sinners
Scott Hahn
-----------------------------
Sunday morning:
There's No Place Like Rome: The Pilgrimage of Two Protestant Pastors
Panel.
Mass
Fr. Ray Ryland, celebrant
Fr. Michael Scanlan, TOR, homilist
- - - - - - - - - -
Here is the ad that appeared in _The Catholic Answer_:
DEFENDING THE FAITH IV CONFERENCE
CATHOLIC CHURCH TEACHING:
KNOW WHY YOU BELIEVE June 25-27, 1993
Times have changed. Major Catholic doctrines are misunderstood and
attacked. Like never before, believers need to know the reasons behind
the Catholic Church's teaching. As our first pope urged: "Always be
ready to give a defense for the hope that is within you" (I Peter 3:15).
Grab your notebooks and get ready for an unforgettable spiritual and
intellectual weekend. This year's conference will candidly confront the
hardest questions and objections about the Catholic faith. Deepen your
understanding of Church teaching with _Scott_ and _Kimberly Hahn, Dr.
Thomas Howard, Karl Keating, Dr. Alice von Hildebrand, Dr. Peter
Kreeft,_ and _Fr. Ray Ryland_.
Cut throught the confusion and doubt, and be better equipped to give
a defense for the hope that is within you.
Join us at _Defending the Faith IV_, the fourth in a series of annual
conferences designed to strengthen the life of Catholics and others
interested in the Catholic faith. It can help _you_ know why you
believe.
Call toll free today: Franciscan University
800/437-TENT of Steubenville
or 614/283-6314 Steubenville, Ohio 43952-6701
- - - - - - - - - -
Steve Creps, Indiana University
creps@lateran.ucs.indiana.edu
| 15soc.religion.christian |
I'm trying to write some code that lets me draw lines and do rubber-band
boxes in Motif/X. I'm running on an 8-bit display for which I've created a
colormap and am using almost all of the colors. I want to draw the lines
in a drawing area widget -- a widget in which I'm displaying a bitmap using
XPutImage(). If doesn't matter if the lines I draw interactively stay
around when the window is refreshed.
Currently, to draw interactively, I begin with:
/* drawIndex is an colortable index I reserve for the Foreground */
/* my_default_bg_color is the color index for the background of my image */
palette_colors[drawIndex].red = palette_colors[my_default_bg_color].red;
palette_colors[drawIndex].green = palette_colors[my_default_bg_color].green;
palette_colors[drawIndex].blue = palette_colors[my_default_bg_color].blue;
XStoreColors( myDisplay, my_cmap, &palette_colors[DrawIndex], 1);
XFlush( myDisplay);
XSetFunction( myDisplay, gc, GXxor);
XSetForeground( myDisplay, gc, drawIndex);
Then to draw I do:
XDrawLine( myDisplay, XtWindow( drawingArea1), gc, x1, y1, x2, y2);
XFlush( myDisplay);
And when I'm all done, to return things to normal I do:
XSetFunction( myDisplay, gc, GXcopy);
What I'd like to happen is for the lines I draw to be the inverse of
whatever I'm drawing over. Instead what happens is I get white lines. If
the lines are over a white background - nothing shows up. If the lines are
over a black area - nothing shows up! It's very strange. But the GXxor
function seems right - since if I do a rubber-banding box, it erases and
redraws itself correctly (ie. not disturbing the underlying image).
Any suggestions what I'm doing wrong?
david
| 5comp.windows.x |
Does anyone have the scoop on Scot Erickson? How long is he going to be
out for?
| 9rec.sport.baseball |
Can anyone tell me the procedure for hooking a Personal Laserwriter NTR
serially to a mac? The documentation says it can be done, but I'm not sure of
the correct switch setting to use out of the given non-appletalk switch
options. Also, will I need to install a new driver so that the Chooser knows
the printer is hooked up directly (not networked)?
Thanks a lot,
Ross
| 4comp.sys.mac.hardware |
In article <1993Apr20.031127.25473@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu> asphaug@lpl.arizona.edu (Erik Asphaug x2773) writes:
>
>By the way, I'm moving to the Bay area so I'll be insuring the bikes
>there, and registering them. To ease me of the shock, can somebody
>guesstimate the cost of insuring a ZR550 and a R800GS? Here in Tucson
>they only cost me $320 (full) and $200 (liability only) for the two,
>per annum.
My agent is Daniel Sui, and he's done quite a good job
for me. You might check with him, as he's located in San
Francisco and specializes in bike insurance:
Daniel Sui Insurance
338 Balboa Street
San Francisco, CA 94118
1-415-752-3157
Michael
--
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Michael Nelson 1993 CBR900RR |
| Internet: nelson@seahunt.imat.com Dod #0735 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| 8rec.motorcycles |
--
Hi netland,
I thought that I once read about the existance of a virtual mwm like vtwm.
On the usual ftp sites (gatakeeper.dec.com, export.lcs.mit.edu) I can't find
any trace of this program. Could anybody give me a hint where to find this
program or confirm/deny the existance of this program.
Regards,
Stefan
| 5comp.windows.x |
In article <1993Apr21.212202.1@aurora.alaska.edu> nsmca@aurora.alaska.edu writes:
>Here is a way to get the commericial companies into space and mineral
>exploration.
>Basically get the eci-freaks to make it so hard to get the minerals on earth..
If raw materials where to cost enough that getting them from space would
be cost effective then the entire world economy would colapse long
before the space mines could be built.
Allen
--
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Lady Astor: "Sir, if you were my husband I would poison your coffee!" |
| W. Churchill: "Madam, if you were my wife, I would drink it." |
+----------------------55 DAYS TO FIRST FLIGHT OF DCX-----------------------+
| 14sci.space |
In article <93095@hydra.gatech.EDU> gt7469a@prism.gatech.EDU (Brian R. Landmann) writes:
>
e,
>Later, in the ninth inning with the bases loaded and two outs he puts
>lankford, a 300 hitter with power in as a pinch runner and uses Luis
>Alicea, a 250 hitter with no power as a pinch hitter. What the Helll
>is he thinking.
If memory serves me well, Alicea hit it, and damn near tied the game.
Torre obviously knows his players better than you do.
See y'all at the ballyard
Go Braves
Chop Chop
Michael Mule'
--
Michael Andre Mule
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta Georgia, 30332
uucp: ...!{decvax,hplabs,ncar,purdue,rutgers}!gatech!prism!gt0523e
Internet: gt0523e@prism.gatech.edu
| 9rec.sport.baseball |
>Date: Tue, 6 Apr 1993 15:40:47 GMT
>I need as much information about Cosmos 2238 and its rocket fragment (1993-
>018B) as possible. Both its purpose, launch date, location, in short,
>EVERYTHING! Can you help?
>-Tony Ryan, "Astronomy & Space", new International magazine, available from:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ocean Reconnaissance Launch Surprises West
Space News, April 5-11, 1993, p.2
[Excerpts]
Russia launched its first ocean reconnaissance satellite in 26 months
March 30, confounding Western analysts who had proclaimed the program dead.
The Itar-TASS news agency announced the launch of Cosmos 2238 from
Plesetsk Cosmodrome, but provided little description of the payload's mission.
However, based on the satellite's trajectory, Western observers
identified it as a military spacecraft designed to monitor electronic
emissions from foreign naval ships in order to track their movement.
Geoff Perry of the Kettering Group in England... [said] Western
observers had concluded that no more would be launched. But days after the
last [such] satellite re-entered the Earth's atmosphere, Cosmos 2238 was
launched.
"Cosmos-2238" Satellite Launched for Defense Ministry
Moscow ITAR-TASS World Service in Russian 1238 GMT 30 March 1993
Translated in FBIS-SOV-93-060, p.27
by ITAR-TASS correspondent Veronika Romanenkova
Moscow, 30 March -- The Cosmos-2238 satellite was launched at 1600 Moscow
time today from the Baykonur by a "Tsiklon-M" carrier rocket. An ITAR-TASS
correspondent was told at the press center of Russia's space-military forces
that the satellite was launched in the interests of the Russian Defense
Ministry.
Parameters Given
Moscow ITAR-TASS World Service in Russian 0930 GMT 31 March 1993
Translated in FBIS-SOV-93-060, p.27
Moscow, 31 March -- Another artificial Earth satellite, Cosmos-2238, was
launched on 30 March from the Baykonur cosmodrome.
The satellite carries scientific apparatus for continuing space research.
The satellite has been placed in an orbit with the following parameters:
initial period of revolution--92.8 minutes; apogee--443 km; perigee--413 km;
orbital inclination--65 degrees.
Besides scientific apparatus the satellite carries a radio system for the
precise measurement of orbital elements and a radiotelemetry system for
transmitting to Earth data about the work of the instruments and scientific
apparatus. The apparatus aboard the satellite is working normally.
| 14sci.space |
In article <bissda.4.734849678@saturn.wwc.edu>
bissda@saturn.wwc.edu (DAN LAWRENCE BISSELL) writes:
> The arguements he uses I am summing up. The book is about whether
>Jesus was God or not. I know many of you don't believe, but listen to a
>different perspective for we all have something to gain by listening to what
>others have to say.
Read the FAQ first, watch the list fr some weeks, and come back then.
And read some other books on the matter in order to broaden your view first.
Benedikt
| 0alt.atheism |
muddmj@wkuvx1.bitnet writes:
>> But, haven't "all sinned, and come short of the glory
>> of God" (Romans 3:23)?
>> Those that cite this scripture to claim that even
>> babes require baptism neglect that "sin is not imputed
>> when there is no law" (Romans 5:13).
>>
>> Therefore, until someone is capable of comprehending
>> God's laws they are not accountable for living them.
>> They are in the book of life and are not removed until
>> they can make a conscious decision to disobey God.
>>
>> A IDLER
>If babies are not supposed to be baptised then why doesn't the Bible
>ever say so. It never comes right and says "Only people that know
>right from wrong or who are taught can be baptised."
> What Christ did say was :
> "I solemly assure you, NO ONE can enter God's kingdom without
> being born of water and Spirit ... Do not be surprised that I
> tell you you must ALL be begotten from above."
>Could this be because everyone is born with original sin?
(I presume you are quoting John 3:3-7.)
1. My King James Bible says "Except a man be born of water
and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God"
(John 3:5). (Here "man" == "adult").
(However, this could be a quibble between translations.)
2. We can also analyze to whom the Lord is addressing:
"Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again"
(John 3:7). Here Jesus is clearly directing his remarks
to Nicodemus -- a ruler of the Jews (not a child).
3. We can ask ourselves why the Lord would even
introduce the concept of spiritual re-birth through
baptism if newborn babies weren't free from sin?
A IDLER
[Yup, in John 3:5 "man" is not in the original. A better translation
is "no one can enter...", as in NRSV. Of course in 3:7, Jesus is
addressing the person who came to him. There are other places in the
NT where he deals with children. They've been mentioned in other
postings. --clh]
| 15soc.religion.christian |
In article <1ra18bINNt31@gap.caltech.edu> daplurad@ugcs.caltech.edu (David Plurad) writes:
>In article <texdude.735595914@cs1.bradley.edu> texdude@cs1.bradley.edu (Philip Allen) writes:
>>
>>Who holds the record for most career strikeouts while playing for one team?
>>Who holds the record for most career strikeouts for the Rangers?
>>(Hint: Nolan Ryan isn't either)
>>What two pitchers have over 100 career saves for two different teams?
>>
>>Who is the only player to hit 300 or more career home runs and steal 300 or
>>more career bases for the same team?
>>
>>No fair peeking at your baseball stats....
>>
>>
>>Phil Allen
>>texdude@cs1.bradley.edu
>
>I'll post my guesses to some of these and other trivia questions posted.
>
>For most career K's with one team, if it's not Ryan, perhaps Steve Carlton.
No way -- gotta be Walter Johnson. All were with Washington.
Carlton spent too long in St. Louis to collect less than 700 there.
>With the Rangers, Hough was there for a long time.
I'd also guess Hough due to his length of tenure though I suspect
Bobby Witt wasn't far behind. Maybe even Jenkins snuck in close....
>In the 100 saves department...Maybe Lee Smith(he should have at least
>a hundred with the Cubbies, maybe enough with either the RSox or Cards.)
>Then maybe, Gossage?(NYY and SD), Fingers (MIL, OAK)
Fingers had to have achieved 100 with either MIL or with SD so, yes,
I'd go with that guess. Otherwise I was thinking that Reardon has a better
chance of having 100 with MIN along with (I would think) easily reaching 100
with MON.
>Don't know about the homers/steals dept.
Gotta be Willie Mays...I am fairly sure he had over 300 steals in his
career.
>In some other article,(Mets trivia), it could be Tim Leary in at least
>the losing to all teams, maybe beating all of 'em too. Probably Seaver
>and Koosman fit too.
Hmmm...Leary is a really good point. I'd forgotten about him. Well,
if nothing else, there are plenty of ex-Met pitchers in the category of
"could have lost to all teams" -- Koosman, Leary, Torrez, Ryan, Seaver....
I guess the best three guesses would be Leary, Ryan, and either Seaver or
Koosman.
--
============================================================================
Thomas Talavage : Purdue University, Electrical Engineering Grad Student
Grad School -- the greatest time of one's life -- where they pay you to do
what you have spent the last 16 years becoming good at!
| 9rec.sport.baseball |
In article <1993Apr15.164940.11632@mercury.unt.edu>, Sean McMains <mcmains@unt.edu> writes:
|> In article <1993Apr15.144843.19549@rchland.ibm.com> Ricardo Hernandez
|> Muchado, ricardo@rchland.vnet.ibm.com writes:
|> > And CD-I's CPU doesn't help much either. I understand it is
|> >a 68070 (supposedly a variation of a 68000/68010) running at something
|> >like 7Mhz. With this speed, you *truly* need sprites.
|>
|> Wow! A 68070! I'd be very interested to get my hands on one of these,
|> especially considering the fact that Motorola has not yet released the
|> 68060, which is supposedly the next in the 680x0 lineup. 8-D
Sean, the 68070 exists! :-)
|>
|> Ricardo, the animation playback to which Lawrence was referring in an
|> earlier post is plain old Quicktime 1.5 with the Compact Video codec.
|> I've seen digitized video (some of Apple's early commercials, to be
|> precise) running on a Centris 650 at about 30fps very nicely (16-bit
|> color depth). I would expect that using the same algorithm, a RISC
|> processor should be able to approach full-screen full-motion animation,
|> though as you've implied, the processor will be taxed more with highly
|> dynamic material.
|> ========================================================================
|> Sean McMains | Check out the Gopher | Phone:817.565.2039
|> University of North Texas | New Bands Info server | Fax :817.565.4060
|> P.O. Box 13495 | at seanmac.acs.unt.edu | E-Mail:
|> Denton TX 76203 | | McMains@unt.edu
Sean, I don't want to get into a 'mini-war' by what I am going to say,
but I have to be a little bit skeptic about the performance you are
claiming on the Centris, you'll see why (please, no-flames, I reserve
those for c.s.m.a :-) )
I was in Chicago in the last consumer electronics show, and Apple had a
booth there. I walked by, and they were showing real-time video capture
using a (Radious or SuperMac?) card to digitize and make right on the spot
quicktime movies. I think the quicktime they were using was the old one
(1.5).
They digitized a guy talking there in 160x2xx something. It played back quite
nicely and in real time. The guy then expanded the window (resized) to 25x by
3xx (320 in y I think) and the frame rate decreased enough to notice that it
wasn't 30fps (or about 30fps) anymore. It dropped to like 15 fps. Then he
increased it just a bit more, and it dropped to 10<->12 fps.
Then I asked him what Mac he was using... He was using a Quadra (don't know
what model, 900?) to do it, and he was telling the guys there that the Quicktime
could play back at the same speed even on an LCII.
Well, I spoiled his claim so to say, since a 68040 Quadra Mac was having
a little bit of trouble. And this wasn't even from the hardisk! This was
from memory!
Could it be that you saw either a newer version of quicktime, or some
hardware assisted Centris, or another software product running the
animation (like supposedly MacroMind's Accelerator?)?
Don't misunderstand me, I just want to clarify this.
But for the sake of the posting about a computer doing it or not, I can
claim 320x200 (a tad more with overscan) being done in 256,000+ colors in
my computer (not from the hardisk) at 30fps with Scala MM210.
But I agree, if we consider MPEG stuff, I think a multimedia consumer
low-priced box has a lot of market... I just think 3DO would make it,
no longer CD-I.
--------------------------------------
Raist New A1200 owner 320<->1280 in x, 200<->600 in y
in 256,000+ colors from a 24-bit palette. **I LOVE IT!**<- New Low Fat .sig
*don't e-mail me* -> I don't have a valid address nor can I send e-mail
| 1comp.graphics |
cmtan@iss.nus.sg (Tan Chade Meng - dan) writes:
>I somewhat agree with u. However, what it comes to (theist) religion,
>it's a different matter. That's because religion is like a drug, once u
>use it, it's very difficult to get out of it. That's because in
>order to experience a religion, u necessarily have to have blind faith,
>and once u have the blind faith, it's very diffcult for you to reason
>yourself back to atheism again.
>Therefore, it's unreasonable to ask people to try religion in order to
>judge it. It's like asking people to "try dying to find out what
>death is like".
Well now, we can't judge death until we are dead right? So, why should
we judge religion without having experienced it? People have said that
religion is bad by any account, and that it is in no way useful, etc.,
but I don't totally agree with this. Of course, we cannot really say
how the religious folk would act had they not been exposed to religion,
but some people at least seemed to be helped in some ways by it.
So basically, we can not judge whether religion is the right route for
a given individual, or even for a general population. We can say that
it is not best for us personally (at least, you can choose not to use
religion--might be hard to try to find out its benefits, as you state
above).
keith
| 0alt.atheism |
In article <1993Apr18.000152.2339@gnv.ifas.ufl.edu> jrm@gnv.ifas.ufl.edu writes:
>You are loosing.
^^^^^^^
>There is no question about it.
You can't spell. There is no question about it.
>Of those who vote, your cause is considered an abomination. No matter
>how hard you try, public opinion is set against the RKBA.
We must be reading different public opinion polls. I agree that the
misguided public would like to see assault weapons banned (mainly because
they are being lied to by the media about the frequency of their use
in violent crime ... ~1%), but if public opinion were so dead-set
against the RKBA you can bet that idiots like Metzenbaum and Schumer
would be seeing their foolish bills getting passed through Congress
a LOT easier than they are. And as governments go broke and can no
longer protect their citizens you can bet that the American people
will start to really appreciate the usefulness of firearms. Contrary
to what you might think, time is probably on OUR side, not YOURS.
>This is the end. By the finish of the Clinton administration, your
>RKBA will be null and void. Tough titty.
Yeah, right. Don't hold your breath. My condolences on the discovery
of uncomfortable resilience in your mammary glands, but this has nothing
to do with the issue at hand.
... ridiculous tripe deleted ...
>The press is against you, the public (the voting public) is against
>you, the flow of history is against you ... this is it !
Yeah, the liberal press doesn't like us much, but you can't really
expect coherent thought from them anyway. Their opinions are based
more on a desire to appear politically correct than on facts (which
are generously provided by the FBI, if they'd bother to put on their
Birkenstocks and go to the library to read them). Most of my friends
are anti-gun, and without exception NONE of them bases his/her opinions
on facts. They would rather believe (despite all evidence to the
contrary) that disarming law-abiding citizens would make the world
more civilized, when all it really does is make us all sheep. They
would rather wallow in their pitiful liberal white guilt about how
society has driven the criminal to rob, rape, and murder. They
support spending millions of public dollars protecting the rights of scum
who have already demonstrated that they have no regard for society
or its laws. They ignore the fact that areas with the strictest gun
control (NYC,DC) have the worst crime and areas with little gun
control (VT,NH,ID) have very little crime in comparison. But they
have to ignore this because otherwise they would need to confront
the fact that law-abiding citizens who own guns are not the ones that
are causing most of the trouble in society. Oh no, we certainly can't
accept that! But I guess I have faith that when crime starts making
significant inroads into their neighborhoods and starts directly
hurting them and their families, they will probably whistle a different
tune. They just better hope it isn't too late then.
>Surrender your arms. Soon enough, officers will be around to collect
>them. Resistance is useless. They will overwhelm you - one at a time.
Hmmm. I wasn't expecting company tonight. I might be able to whip
up a quick cheese and cracker plate, but they should probably bring
their own drinks. Do I have time to vacuum the rug?
>Too fucking bad. You have gone the way of the KKK. Violent solutions
>are passe'. Avoid situations which encourage criminals. Then you will
>be as safe as possible. Such as it is ...
I'm glad you ended the posting here. Your medication seems to have
worn off ...
-----------------------------------------------------------
Lee Gaucher NRA | My opinions.
gaucher@sam.cchem.berkeley.edu | No one else's.
-----------------------------------------------------------
| 16talk.politics.guns |
I am having a problem with the high order bit of a character being
clipped when entered in an xterm window under motif. I have reprogrammed
the F1 key to transmit a <ff> <be> character sequence by using the
following line in .Xdefaults:
~Ctrl ~Shift ~Alt <Key> F1 : string(0xff) string(0xbe) \n\
I merge in this line with xrdb -merge and then create the new xterm
which has the remapped F1 key. The problem that arises is that the
application which is recieving input at the time only sees a <7f> <3e>
sequence, which is <ff> <be> with the high order bit of each
character being filtered or ignored.
When I run xev and press the F1 key, I get the correct value showing
up in the following two key events:
KeyPress event, serial 14, synthetic NO, window 0x2800001,
root 0x28, subw 0x0, time 2067815294, (67,80), root:(74,104),
state 0x0, keycode 16 (keysym 0xffbe, F1), same_screen YES,
XLookupString gives 0 characters: ""
KeyRelease event, serial 16, synthetic NO, window 0x2800001,
root 0x28, subw 0x0, time 2067815406, (67,80), root:(74,104),
state 0x0, keycode 16 (keysym 0xffbe, F1), same_screen YES,
XLookupString gives 0 characters: ""
Notice that the keysym being transmitted is correct; 0xffbe.
But when I use the F1 key while in vi or in a program I wrote to
spit back the hex values of keyboard input, I only get <7f> <3e>.
Does anyone know why the high order bit is being filtered and what
I can do to make sure that the entire 8bits make it through to
the final application? Any help is greatly appreciated.
Please *email* any responses.
Jim Kavitsky
kavitsky@hsi.com
| 5comp.windows.x |
feustel@netcom.com (David Feustel) writes:
[other uninformed, purposefully ignorant gun control ranting deleted]
>* Thanks to the N.R.A., the A.T.F. is prohibited from researching the
>effectiveness of using taggants in explosives, Taggants are a cheap
>and technologically feasible microscopic additive that would help
>investigators at crime scenes - like the World Trade Center bombing
>- trace the explosives involved.
I want this man to tell me how in the hell you can take the
explosives used in the WTC bombing, considering that the
consensus seems to be that the explosive was a fertilizer-based
one. Ammonium nitrate, to be exact . . . of which about
90,000 tons disappears per year (if I recall the stat correctly;
I don't have it here.) Just one more disregarding of reality
to push a point.
[more bunk deleted]
aaron
arc@cco.caltech.edu
| 16talk.politics.guns |
Regards,
Steve.
/*******************************************************************
* Steve Shapiro * All views and opinions expressed *
* SKS Computer Consulting, Inc. * are my own and are offered as-is *
********************************************************************
* Steve.Shapiro@f440.n101.z1.fidonet.org BBS: (508) 664-6354 N81 *
*******************************************************************/
| 6misc.forsale |
In article 9610@charon.cwi.nl, huub@cwi.nl (Huub Bakker) writes:
..deleted...
In plain Motify using a dialog 'in-line' like this simply isn't done. You need
to set callbacks from the buttons/widgets in your dialog and let the callback routines
do the work. In the callbacks you can then carry on the flow of logic.
XView from Sun actually supports this very neatly with a 'Notify' box, which can
return a status in-line, it does actualy ease coding but goes against the event
driven style of an application.
Summary: Redesign required.
---
_/ _/ _/ _/ "Delta hedging a long option position also
_/ _/ _/ generates a short gamma exposure and any return
_/_/_/_/ _/ _/ _/ generated from delta hedging options can be thought
_/ _/ _/ _/ _/ of as compensation for assuming gamma risk"
_/_/_/_/ _/ _/ _/ -- Radioactive investment management... whew!
| 5comp.windows.x |
------------ Part 7 of 14 ------------
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-------- End of part 7 of 14 --------
| 2comp.os.ms-windows.misc |
In article <ltgnt9INNfpq@earth.cs.utexas.edu>, mcguire@cs.utexas.edu (Tommy Marcus McGuire) writes:
> In article <1993Apr23.143128.21344@dsd.es.com> bgardner@pebbles.es.com (Blaine Gardner) writes:
> >In article <ltdv8aINN3hb@earth.cs.utexas.edu> mcguire@cs.utexas.edu (Tommy Marcus McGuire) writes:
> [...]
> >>"Hey, what the hell do you mean by that? You suck. I have a god-given
> >>right to express opinions, carry a gun and to not wear a helmet, goddamn
> >>it. Everything you stand for is STUPID."
> >
> >I'd give it an 0.5 on a scale of 10. [analysis and hints deleted]
>
> Aw, c'mon. The serious overreaction ought to be worth a couple of points,
> not to mention the bit condemning everthing the flamee might ever say.
> The non sequitur about guns and helmets is just the proper flourish.
Nope. Flames should be *interesting*. Around here, guns & helmets
are the wallpaper.
> I personally am of the opinion that there are two types of good flames.
> The first does trade ``quality,'' in the sense you mention, for heat.
> This has a certain surprise value and if done correctly, which I
> contend was done above, is reasonably entertaining.
Not everyone in rec.motoland is so easily amused. Blaine, as an Elder,
has seen the Superflamers at their peaks (or depths, if you prefer).
With that sort of incendiary backdrop, awarding your faltering Bic a
0.5 was the purest act of charity.
> While
> it is true that
> the flame I posted does not mention anyone's habitual velocity, friends,
> dinner, or entertainment, it says what it needs to with the appropriate
> flair and it is short. The weakness of this type of flame is actually
> that it can easily be taken too far, at which point it becomes trite and
> boring.
Unless, of course, your audience has only seen several thousand similarly
uninspiring attempts in this arena. In that case, the trite & boring
threshold tends to drift away from where you first set it, as yours will,
eventually (or not).
> The other type of flame, which you seem to be glorifying above,
> ... [blah, blah, blah] ...
> In summary, Blaine, your score for that flame is incorrect. While it may
> be the wunder-flame, the weaknesses you point out are not necessarily
> weaknesses, and your suggested corrections are not always useful nor
> applicable.
Until you can yank the flame out of Blaine's Internet Port before he
can io_close() it, you are in no position to lecture him, grasshopper.
> You also probably couldn't outrun a tennis ball with a
> flatulent dog stapled to your posterior, and I'll bet you and your
> motorcycle lean to the outside while turning. The same goes for anyone
> who looks like you, too.
Oh please (yawn), you're slipping further down the scale with each
successive attempt. It's so embarrassing to watch. Say, you're not
from Waco, are you?
Chuck Rogers
car377@torreys.att.com
| 8rec.motorcycles |
In article <1qpd98$b7e@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu>, taite@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu () says:
>
>In article <rayC5Mvvn.LJ1@netcom.com> ray@netcom.com (Ray Fischer) writes:
>>taite@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu () writes ...
>>> If all choices should have federal funding so poor people can afford
>them,
>>>then shouldn't firearms be federally subsidized? After all, it is the
>people
>>>in the ghettoes who are most affected by the proliferation of weapons among
>>>criminals. Shouldn't they have federal funding so they can protect s
>themselve
>>>and their families from inner city criminals?
>>
>>Criminals mostly (70%) get (steal) their guns from people who buy them
>>legally. In order to reduce the number of guns criminals use, you'd
>>need to to _reduce_, and not increse, the number of legally held guns.
>
> Wrong, NYC subway breath. Criminals are going to have guns regardless
>of what legislative remedy you come up with. However, it is the law-abiding
>citizens who suffer when guns are harder to obtain. Case in point:
>Washington,
>D.C. is the murder capital of the U.S., but has banned handguns and has some
>of the most restrictive gun control laws in the nation. They ain't working,
>big brother Ray.
They don't work because you need a nation-wide confiscation of all guns,
Ralphie. That's why it dosen't work in D.C. They didn't confiscate the guns
that all ready exist. Therefore what Ray said still applies.
> If only we could keep guns
>out of criminals hands, we would just have a bunch of citizens getting
>stabbed,
>choke|, and beaten to death.
However Ralphie, the amount of killings would go down. Think about it. With
guns it just takes the pull of a trigger. Other forms of murder require much
more effort on the part of the murderer.
>In the UK, I read recently that some young women
>have been killing even without guns (which are nearly impossible to obtain
>there) and it is a cause of great concern to the Brits. Well-armed citizens
>mean that this country will never fear from the government, criminals or
>invasion. We may have twice the murder rate of the UK, but who gives a flip?
You should! Although maybe you're right. Well armed citizens wouldn't have
to worry about little boys and their threats against women and abortion
clinics.
>Why should we want to compare our society which is extremely heterogeneous and
>wealthy to one that is basically homogeneous and in dire straits?
Ralphie, ever been to London or any major city in the UK? You know not what
you speak. And as far as England being in dire straits, have you forgotten
your lines about civil wars and society erupting in the U.S.
> What about
>Japan? If Americans were willing to give some of the Draconian punishments
>that the Japs are, perhaps we wouldn't need guns. Or the Germans. They have
>a 20th century history of being extremely reactionary, so guns or no guns
>those
>suckers know how to take care of bih'ness.
Do you have a point here? Except to explain the crap that follows.
> Point is, Raymeister, that America is violent. And to put up in an OhSo
>DarwinianManner, the toughest on this planet survive. Not the GoodPeople
>[tm],
>but the tough ones. The top 3 nations in GNP in the world are Japan, Germany,
>and the U.S. All these countries have a violent tradition. Pure coincidence?
>I doubt it.
>
Ralphie, only you in your sick mind would think that this is the reason Japan
and Germany's GNP are two of the highest. Probably had more to do with the
economic re-building after World War II. I think you need to study the issue
a little more. But in Ralphie's World, violence is to be worshipped. Isn't it
Ralphie (or whichever of your multiple personalities wrote this post)?
> Ralph D. Taite
> President, Institute for Conservative Policy Review
>
>>--
>>Ray Fischer "Convictions are more dangerous enemies of
>truth
>>ray@netcom.com than lies." -- Friedrich Nietzsche
>
>---
>One man come in the name of love.
>One man come and go.
>One man come here to justify.
>One man to overthrow.
>
| 18talk.politics.misc |
Actually, they are legal! I not familiar with the ad you are speaking of
but knowing Popular Science it is probably on the fringe. However, you
may be speaking of "Public Missle, Inc.", which is a legitimate company
that has been around for a while.
Due to advances in composite fuels, engines are now available for model
rockets using similar composites to SRB fuel, roughly 3 times more
powerful than black powder motors. They are even available in a reloadable
form, i.e. aluminum casing, end casings, o-rings (!). The engines range
from D all the way to M in common manufacture, N and O I've heard of
used at special occasions.
To be a model rocket, however, the rocket can't contain any metal
structural parts, amongst other requirements. I've never heard of a
model rocket doing 50,000. I have heard of > 20,000 foot flights.
These require FAA waivers (of course!). There are a few large national
launches (LDRS, FireBALLS), at which you can see many > K sized engine
flights. Actually, using a > G engine constitutes the area of "High
Power Rocketry", which is seperate from normal model rocketry. Purchase
of engines like I have been describing require membership in the National
Association of Rocketry, the Tripoli Rocketry Assoc., or you have to
be part of an educational institute or company involved in rocketry.
Amatuer rocketry is another area. I'm not really familiar with this,
but it is an area where metal parts are allowed, along with liquid fuels
and what not. I don't know what kind of regulations are involved, but
I'm sure they are numerous.
High power rocketry is very exciting! If you are interested or have
more questions, there is a newsgroup rec.model.rockets.
| 14sci.space |
In article <20APR93.23565659.0109@VM1.MCGILL.CA>, B8HA000 <B8HA@MUSICB.MCGILL.CA> writes:
> In Re:Syria's Expansion, the author writes that the UN thought
> Zionism was Racism and that they were wrong. They were correct
> the first time, Zionism is Racism and thankfully, the McGill Daily
> (the student newspaper at McGill) was proud enough to print an article
> saying so. If you want a copy, send me mail.
>
> Steve
>
Was the article about zionism? or about something else. The majority
of people I heard emitting this ignorant statement, do not really
know what zionism is. They have just associated it with what they think
they know about the political situation in the middle east.
So Steve: Lets here, what IS zionism?
Michael
| 17talk.politics.mideast |
In article <1qkmkiINNep3@mojo.eng.umd.edu> sysmgr@king.eng.umd.edu (Doug
Mohney) writes:
>In article <1993Apr15.204210.26022@mksol.dseg.ti.com>,
pyron@skndiv.dseg.ti.com (Dillon Pyron) writes:
>>
>>There are actually only two of us. I do Henry, Fred, Tommy and Mary. Oh
yeah,
>>this isn't my real name, I'm a bald headed space baby.
>
>Damn! So it was YOU who was drinking beer with ROBERT McELWANE in the PARKING
>LOT of the K-MART!
> Software engineering? That's like military intelligence, isn't it?
> -- > SYSMGR@CADLAB.ENG.UMD.EDU < --
They just tore down the Kmart near my house (putting in a new suptermarket). I
heard that there is a beer drinking ghost who still haunts the place! 8-{)
Tom
I liked this one I read a while ago...
"Data sheet: HSN-3000 Nuclear Event Detector. The [NED] senses the gamma
radiation pulse [from a] nuclear weapon." As if we wouldn't notice...
| 14sci.space |
In article <1993Apr22.180630.18313@titan.tsd.arlut.utexas.edu> pearson@tsd.arlut.utexas.edu (N. Shirlene Pearson) writes:
>jpw@cbis.ece.drexel.edu (Joseph Wetstein) writes:
>
>
>>Hello. I am looking for a program (or algorithm) that can be used
>>to compute sunrise and sunset times.
>
>Would you mind posting the responses you get?
>I am also interested, and there may be others.
>
>Thanks,
>
>N. Shirlene Pearson
>pearson@titan.tsd.arlut.utexas.edu
There is an excellent software program called Astro.calc that does that and
much more. The latest address I have is
MMI Corporation
PO Box 19907
Baltimore, MD 21211
Phone (301) 366-1222
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Van E. Neie ven@maxwell.physics.purdue.edu
Purdue University neie@purccvm.bitnet
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 14sci.space |
In article <1993Apr20.143255.12711@mcs.kent.edu>, mhamilto@Nimitz.mcs.kent.edu (The Lawnmowerman) writes:
> > THIS IS GENOCIDAL MASS-SLAUGHTER OF INNOCENT PEOPLE, INCLUDING CHILDREN!
> Is this guy serious????
> If he would ever really pay attention to the news (oops I forgot that the media
> for the most part loves to jump right on top of a story before all the facts
> are known, as well as to manipulate what we see and thus what we believe).
> Besides, a majority of
> these children were children that he was supposed to have been the father of,
> this then makes them bastard children to a sacraligious zeloit (sp).
Oh, then, I guess that shooting THOSE kind of babies is all right.
You sick bastard.
--
cdt@rocket.sw.stratus.com --If you believe that I speak for my company,
OR cdt@vos.stratus.com write today for my special Investors' Packet...
| 16talk.politics.guns |
tkld@cogsci.ed.ac.uk (Kevin Davidson) writes:
>> In my opinion, a programming degree is still worth having.
> Yes, but a CS degree is *not* a programming degree. Does anybody know of
>a computing course where *programming* is taught ? Computer Science is
>a branch of maths (or the course I did was).
> I've also done a Software Engineering course - much more practical and likely
>to be the sort of thing an employer really wants, rather than what they think
>they want, but also did not teach programming. The ability to program was
>an entry requirement.
Try the 'M.Sc. Computing Science' course at the REAL Newcastle University.
It's a conversion course, but at least they teach REAL programming.
In the space of 9 months we were taught PASCAL, Simula, Prolog, Miranda.
Also, some basic low level stuff (68000) was covered as well.
They also did concurrent programming and operating systems, some software
engineering, plus quite a few optional units, including database theory,
and some stuff about comms.
The PASCAL is to be replaced by C/C++ I think next year - I learn't this (and
X Windows programming as well)
anyway via a good selection of project over the final three months - depending
on your tastes, the selection of skills learn't can be quite wide reaching.
The one critiscism I would level at the course, which I would have thought
invaluable, is the lack of an option to do the project period in industry -
this would probably need a slightly longer project period (say six months), but
would enhance the prestige and usefulness of an already excellent and thorough
course.
Yes, I know this sounds like a plug for the course, why not!
Mackem Ian.
| 5comp.windows.x |
In article <1993Apr23.035543.25060@ucsu.Colorado.EDU> koberg@spot.Colorado.EDU (Allen Koberg) writes:
> With Stacker, any changes to your config.sys
>or autoexec.bat meant rebooting twice so it could update those.
This is not necessary. All you have to do is modify the config.sys
on d:\ { or the real boot up partition/disk }. Then, you can manually
copy it to c:\ or allow stacker to do it on boot up.
Likewise with the autoexec.bat.
---
Private note to Jennifer Fakult.
"This post may contain one or more of the following:
sarcasm, cycnicism, irony, or humor. Please be aware
of this possibility and do not allow yourself to be
confused and/or thrown for a loop. If in doubt, assume
all of the above.
The owners of this account do not take any responsiblity
for your own confusion which may result from your inability
to recognize any of the above. Read at your own risk, Jennifer."
| 3comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware |
In <93104.173826U28037@uicvm.uic.edu> Jason Kratz <U28037@uicvm.uic.edu> writes:
[deleted]
>The University cops here (who are
>are state cops) are armed better than the Chicago police. It seems most
>state cops are. I don't know where you are originally from David but you live
>in Tennesse and I live in Chicago and see this crap everyday on the news
>and in the papers. I think the situation is just a tad different here
>than there.
Which crap, the ridiculous assertions that Uzis are mowing down cops
right and left? The assertions that dialing 911 should be the proper
and only option available to the law-abiding citizens?
A factoid:
56 cops were killed in the whole country last year. This is down from
around 100 in the early '80s. Wow, a real explosion in cop killings
there eh? :-)
--
"If everything had gone as planned, everything would have been perfect."
-BATF spokesperson on CNN 3/2/93, regarding failed raid attempt in TX.
| 16talk.politics.guns |
livesey@solntze.wpd.sgi.com (Jon Livesey) writes:
>> The probability that the "automobile system" will kill someone
>> innocent in an accident goes asymptotically close to 1, just
>> like the court system.
>However, anyone who doesn't like the "automobile system" can
>opt out, as I have.
This isn't true. Many people are forced to use the "automobile system."
I certainly don't use it by choice. If there were other ways of getting
around, I'd do it.
>Secondly, we do try to make the "automobile system" as safe
>as possible, because we *do* recognize the danger to the
>innocent, whereas the US - the current example - is not trying
>to make the "Court System" safer, which it could fairly easily
>do by replacing fatal punishments with non-fatal punishments.
But I think that the Court system has been refined--over hundreds of
years in the US, Britain, and other countries. We have tried to make
it as fair as possible. Can it be made better (without removing the
death penalty)? Besides, life imprisonment sounds like a fatal punishment
to me.
keith
| 0alt.atheism |
Orating with wild abandon, prange@nickel.ucs.indiana.edu (Henry Prange) offers:
%The grips on my GS are a wonderful thing in the winter and no problem
%in the summer. Vibration? BMW's don't vibrate. Everyone knows that.
I'd agree with Henry. The grips are really nice to have in winter,
and aren't noticably different from 'normal' grips in summer.
My only complaint is that the 'low' setting might as well be 'off'.
This has been complained about by every reviewer, official and
unofficial, that's ever talked about these grips. The 'high' setting
is often too high for use with lightweight summer gloves when things
just get a bit nippy, but since 'low' doesn't produce a noticable
effect, I end up turning the grips on and off to keep the temperature
about right. This generally isn't a problem when wearing thicker
winter gloves. When I asked the dealer if they could fix it, I
received a consoling pat on the back, and their sincere apologies for
the poor design (actually, I was told they worked just like they were
suppose to).
Vibration? What's that? I ride a BMW twin. You can barely tell if
the engine is fired up or not most of the time, smoother than silk
sheets.
--
Ken Wallich <wallich@ncd.com>
ken@wallich.com ~ kmw@al.org ~ [...]decwrl!vixie!amber!ken
| 8rec.motorcycles |
To go one step further, you could write Roland Slabon, Pres. of the
Vintage BMW Motorcycle Owners Ltd at P.O. box 67, Exeter, New Hampshire
03833 and he'll send you copy of the bimonthly rag with info as to where
to send your $12 bucks if ya want to join. As far as the price of '60's
Beemers, it varies wildly, from a low of around $1000 for an unrestored
bike that still runs (like an R50 or R60) to $4500 or so for a restored
R69S. Don't listen to that bull about the old bmw's not being "good
enough" to ride in todays world.. Hell, I'm riding my 1956 R26 Single
from Mississippi to the BMW MOA national rally in Oshkosh, Wisconsin
on the 22nd of July this year.
Sincerely,
Craig Vechorik
BMW MOA Ambassador #9462
BMW Vintage
Bulletin tech editor #1373
DOD #843
"REAL BMW's have ROUND tail lights and ROLLER cranks"
| 8rec.motorcycles |
In article <1rbpq0$ibg@horus.ap.mchp.sni.de>
frank@D012S658.uucp (Frank O'Dwyer) writes:
>
>In article <16BBACBC3.I3150101@dbstu1.rz.tu-bs.de> I3150101@dbstu1.rz.tu-bs.de (Benedikt Rosenau) writes:
>#By the way, that's why I consider you a theist:
>
>[7 points, consisting of rhetorical fallacy, unsupported claims, and
>demonstrable falsehoods deleted]
>
No wonder that we don't see any detail for this claim. It is good to
remember that you have answered the statement that you are a theist
by another correspondent with that you are not a member of a denomination.
It is either stupidity or an attempt at a trick answer. Not unlike the
rest of your arguments.
>Mr. Roseneau, I have little patience with people who tell me what I
>believe, and who call me a liar when I disagree. I'm in a position
>not only to know what it is that I believe, but to say so. I am an
>agnostic.
>
I am extremely wary of the way you use words. Like in this case, there
are broader definitions of gods used by persons who are considered by
themselves and others theists. I have pointed to that in my post. You
use one of them.
Your use of definitions seems to rest on the assumption: because my
moral is objective/absolute or the other buzz words you are so fond
of, everybody will know it, and there is no need to define it more
exactly.
And as a user has shown recently, the easiest way to dispell you is
to ask you for definitions.
>You are of course, free to speculate on my motives for objecting
>to seeming irrational bigotry if you wish, but the flaws which I
>point out in your arguments stand on their own merits.
Since you are the only one seeing them, and many correspondents
point to the flaws in your reasoning respectively discussing, I
can't say I am impressed.
Benedikt
| 0alt.atheism |
I am working on a project and am in need of information regarding the
currents (at the head) needed to write to a hard drive and the currents
produced when reading. If anyone has information it would be much
appreciated.
mcole@nmsu.edu
| 12sci.electronics |
In article <1993Apr5.123315.48837@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu> bennett@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu writes:
>How long does it take a smoker's lungs to clear of the tar after quitting?
>Does your chances of getting lung cancer decrease quickly or does it take
>a considerable amount of time for that to happen?
The answer to your first question is rather difficult to answer without
doing a lot of autopsies. The second question is something that's been
known for some time. It appears that within about 15 years of quitting
smoking a person's risk for developing lung cancer drops to that of the
person who never smoked (assuming you do not get lung cancer in the
interim!). The risk to someone who smoked the equivalent of a pack per
day for 40 years is around 20 times as high as a non-smoker. Still
rather low overall, but significant. Personally, I'd be more concerned
about heart disease secondary to smoking -- it's much more common, and
even a small increase in risk is significant there.
--
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-|-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
= Kenneth Gilbert __|__ University of Pittsburgh =
= General Internal Medicine | "...dammit, not a programmer! =
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-|-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
| 13sci.med |
In article <2745@snap>, paj@uk.co.gec-mrc (Paul Johnson) writes:
>
>I was having a look through a couple of components catalogues when I
>came across a range of Peltier Effect heat pumps intended for cooling
>components. For those who have not heard of this effect, you put a
>current through one of these devices, and it pumps heat from one side
>to the other. Reverse the current and you reverse the effect. I
>think a temperature difference can give you an EMF as well.
>
>Anyway, it struck me that you could make a nice cool/hot box for
>picnics with one of these, a power regulator, a thermostat and a
>couple of heat sinks. The biggest device can shift 60W with an
>efficiency of 80-90%, which ain't bad (although it would flatten my
>car battery in about half an hour).
>
So-Called Cool-Hot boxes have been advetised for several years. I recall
Damark advertising them in a recent catalog. Problem with the units is they do
a sh***y job of keeping food cold/warm. The peliter devices used just don't
seem to have enough punch to keep up. If you want something hot, you need to
heat it up before you put it in the box, and end up hours later with food thats
only moderately warm. Same goes for cold items.
>Unfortunately the catalogue didn't list anything more than the basic
>specs as a heat pump. I imagine that you would get a back-EMF as the
>temperature gradient across the device increases. If so, presumably
>its power decreases as the back-EMF increases, until eventually we
>have a steady state with no current being consumed (assuming no
>leakage). If so, then the final temperature difference between the
>two sides could be set by the supply voltage and nothing more
>(although that would be a lousy way to control it).
>
>What I would like to know is:
>
>1: Are the above guesses correct?
>
>2: What is the open-circuit thermal resistance of a typical device?
> (I just want to be sure that my coolbox is not going to get warm
> too fast when I unplug it)
You'de probably be better off getting a good Coleman(tm) cooler and stocking
up on "blue ice" blocks.
>
>3: How does a Peltier Effect heat pump actually work? It looks like
> magic!
>
>4: Why don't they use these things in domestic fridges/freezers?
>
Same as above. Not enough "punch" in them to keep/get things cold/hot.
>
>Thanks in advance,
>
>Paul.
>
>Paul Johnson (paj@gec-mrc.co.uk). | Tel: +44 245 73331 ext 3245
>--------------------------------------------+----------------------------------
>These ideas and others like them can be had | GEC-Marconi Research is not
>for $0.02 each from any reputable idealist. | responsible for my opinions
Mike Behnke | Senior Tech/Advisor | Quid est illuidin aqua??
Fermi Nat Accel Lab | Equipment Suuport |
Batavia, Il. | Computing Div | PISTRIX!! PISTRIX!!
BEHNKE@FNALF.FNAL.GOV | |
My opinions are my own, not of the lab. So, if you don't like them, call
1-800-UWH-INER
| 12sci.electronics |
by028@cleveland.freenet.edu (Gary V. Cavano) writes:
>...does anybody out there see the current emphasis on the
>environment being turned (unintentionally, of course) into
>pantheism?
>I've debated this quite a bit, and while I think a legitimate
>concern for the planet is a great thing, I can easily see it
>being perverted into something dangerous.
Many pagans are involved in environmentalism--this is only natural, since
respect for the earth is a fundamental tenet of all pagan denominations. This
doesn't mean that environmentalism is wrong, any more than supporting peace in
the Middle East is wrong because Jews and Muslims also work for it.
Nonetheless, paganism is certainly on the rise, and we as Christians should
address this and look at what draws people from paganism to Christianity. Like
it or not, pagan religions are addressing needs that Christianity should be,
and isn't.
I believe that paganism has hit upon some major truths that Christianity has
forgotten. This doesn't mean that paganism is right, but it does mean that we
have something to learn from the pagan movement.
First, paganism respects the feminine. Christianity has a long history of
oppressing women, and many (if not most) male Christians are still unable to
live in a non-sexist manner. The idea that God is sexless, or that Christ
could have been a women and still accomplished his mission, is met with a great
deal of resistance. This insistance on a male-dominated theology (and the
male-dominated society that goes with it) drives away many young women who have
had to put up with sexist attitudes in their churches.
Second, paganism respects the physical world. This is an idea with great
ramifications. One of these is environmentalism--respect for our surroundings
and our world. Another is integration of sexuality. Christianity has a long
tradition of calling ALL sexual feeelings sinful and urging people to suppress
and deny their sexuality. This is too much--sex is clearly a part of human
experience and attempting to remove it is simply not a feasible option.
Christianity has only begun to develop a workable sexual ethic, and paganism
is an attractive option.
I'm not advocating that Christian doctrines (no sex before marriage, etc.)
should be changed--just that Christians work toward a more moderate ethic of
sexuality. Denial of sexuality places as much emphasis on sex as unmoderated
sexuality, and neither one does much to bring us closer to God.
Alan Terlep "Incestuous vituperousness"
Oakland University, Rochester, MI
atterlep@vela.acs.oakland.edu --Melissa Eggertsen
Rushing in where angels fear to tread.
| 15soc.religion.christian |
Hi!
I need a Windows 3.1 driver for the Matrox PG-1281 CV
SVGA card.
At the moment Windows runs only in the 640x480 mode.
If you have a driver for this card, please send it
with the OEMSETUP.INF to
bockamp@Informatik.TU-Muenchen.DE
Thanks!
--
+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
| Florian Bockamp ''' |
| bockamp@informatik.tu-muenchen.de (o o) |
+---------------------------------------------oOO--( )--OOo-------+
| - |
| "It's not a bug, it's an undocumented feature!" |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
| 1comp.graphics |
In article <1r15rvINNh8p@ctron-news.ctron.com>, king@ctron.com (John E. King)
writes:
> "The modern theory of evolution is so inadequate that it deserves to be
> treated as a matter of faith." -- Francis Hitching
>
> Jack
"I used the theory of evolution yesterday morning and it worked great."
-Dan Ashlock
So what's your point? Are you a Tunnicate or can you expand that
quote into a well parsed argument?
Dan
Danwell@IASTATE.EDU
| 19talk.religion.misc |
In article <1993Apr15.190711.22190@walter.bellcore.com> jchen@ctt.bellcore.com writes:
>The funny thing is the personaly stories about reactions to MSG vary so
>greatly. Some said that their heart beat speeded up with flush face. Some
>claim their heart "skipped" beats once in a while.
Both of these symptoms are related - tachycardia. Getting a flushed
face is due to the heart pumping the blood faster than a regular
pulse. I suspect this is related to an increase in sodium levels in
the blood, since note *sodium chloride* monosodium glutamate. Both are
sodium compounds. Our bodies require sodium, but like everything else,
one can get too much of a good thing.
>Some reacted with headache,
Again, this could be related to increased blood flow from increased
heart rate, from the sodium in the MSG. Distended crainial arteries,
essentially. One of many causes of headaches. There is no discrepency
her, necessarily.
>some stomach ache.
Well stomache ache and vomiting tend to be related. Again, not
necessarily a discrepency. More likely a related reaction. Vomiting
occurs as a response to get rid of a noxious compound an organism has
eaten. If a person can't digest the stuff (entirely possible - the
list of stuff people are allergic to is quite long), and lacks an
enzyme to break it down, gastrointestinal distress (stomach or belly
ache) would be expected.
> Some had watery eyes or running nose,
These are respiratory reactions, and are now considered to be similar
to vomitting. They are a way for the body to dispose of noxious
compounds. They are adaptiove responses. Of course, it is possible
some other food or environmental compound could be responsible for the
symptoms. But it's important to remember that a lot opf these effets
can be additive, synergystic, subtractive, etc, etc. It would be
necessary to know exactly what was in a dish, and what else the person
was exposed to. Respiratory does sound suspicious BUT resopiration
and heart rate are connected. Things in the body are far from
simple...very inetractive place, the vertebrate body.
> some
>had itchy skin or rashes.
People respond in a myriad of ways to the same compound. It depends
upon what it is about the compound that "pisses off" their body.
Pollen, for example, of some plants aggrivates breathing in many
people, because, when inhaled, it sets of the immune system, and an
histamine attack is launched. The immune system goes overboard,
causing the allergic person a lot of misery. And someone with an
allergy to some pollens will have trouble with some herb teas that
contain pollens (Chamomile, linden, etc). Drinking the substance can
perturb that person's system as much as inhaling it.
>More serious accusations include respiration
>difficulty
See above. And don't think that heart rate changes, and circulatory
problems are not serious. They can be deadly.
and brain damage.
The area of the brain effected is the neuroendocrine system
controlling the release of gonadotropin, the supra-hormone controlling
the cyclical release of testosterone and estradiol, as well as somatostatin,
and other steroids. Testing for effective dose would be, uh, a wee bit unethical.
>Now here is a new one: vomiting. My guess is that MSG becomes the number one
>suspect of any problem. In this case. it might be just food
poisoning.
Absolutely. But it could also be some synergystic mess from eating ,
say, undetected shrimp or mushrooms (to which many are allergic), plus
too much alcohol, and inhaling too much diesel fumes biking home,
plus, let's say, having contracted flu from one's sig. other 3 days
before from drinking out of the same glass. Could be all sorts of
things.
But it might be the MSG.
>if you heard things about MSG, you may think it must be it.
If noone else got sick, its likely not food poisoning. Probably
stomach flu or an undetected thing the guy's allergic to.
Anyway, the human body's not a machine; people vary widely in their
responses, and a lot of reactions are due to combinations of things.
Dianne Murray wcsbeau@ccs.carleton.ca
| 13sci.med |
In article <19930419.155204.305@almaden.ibm.com>
ameline@vnet.IBM.COM (Ian Ameline) writes:
> I also believe that someone will reverse engineer the clipper chip,
>and knowlege of the algorithm will likely be fairly widespread.
The chip and algorithm are classified. If you reverse engineer it and
tell people, you are likely to go to jail.
Perhaps some foreign governments or corporations could help us out by
cracking the system outside the USA. The US government could probably
stop importation of clone hardware, but a software implementation
should be practical.
--
John Carr (jfc@athena.mit.edu)
| 11sci.crypt |
slacelle@gandalf.ca (Stephane Lacelle) writes:
>The Ottwawa Senators fired Mel Bridgman at 1:00 PM today.
>Randy Sexton is gonna replace him.
Trashy move from a trashy organization. After the front
office stated that nobody would lose their job over the
Sens. poor performance, Bridgeman is gone within 24 hours
of the teams final game.
Yes...I know he screwed up letting the King's grab Loach.
Sexton's qualifications (aside from being cheap)??
- he played some US college hockey,
- he's pals with club president Bruce Firestone.
Just the kind of experience you need when trying to build
an expansion franchise. He'll probably be in the Hall of
Fame next year! :-)
This continues a tradition of front office gaffs:
- Paul Anka and the arena deal
- Denis Potvin and the GM postion
- Mike Bossy and the scoring coach.
How do people in Ottawa feel about how the club is being run??
>Stephane Lacelle
Brian Down (bdown@vis.toronto.edu)
| 10rec.sport.hockey |
Well, I'm not going to quote the message, but anyhow...
Mail fraud is a FEDERAL OFFENCE! PUNNISHABLE BY TIME AND
>>> BIG <<<
> > > B I G < < <
F I N E S
! ! ! !
What you can do is contact the local authorities in Arizona
where this scammer resides, inform them of the situation (if you have
proof of the transaction, that would also help), and they should be able
to take it from there.
Yeah, this guy CAN get heavily penalized for this. Don't think
that just because you have never met he cannot be prosecuted.
!!! TAKE HIM > D O W N < !!!
... hope I'm not being too foreward?...
_________________________________________________
Inspiration | ___ |
comes to | \ o baden@sys6626.bison.mb.ca |
those who | ( ^ ) baden@inqmind.bison.mb.ca |
seek the | /-\ =] Baden de Bari [= |
unknown. | |
-------------------------------------------------
| 6misc.forsale |
In article <pat.734048757@fegmania.wustl.edu>, pat@fegmania (Patrick Niemeyer) writes:
|> ree88132@zach.fit.edu (Keith Ledig) writes:
|>
|> >was told by other people that it just takes a long time. I heard
|> >rumors that the HC11 is very hard to get these days and is being
|> >replaced by the 711 series. The sales person is trying to push
|> >the 711. Can someone please tell me what is going on with these
|> >microcontrollers. I can't seem to get a straight answer.
|>
|> I too had trouble finding hc11's when I looked for them a while back.
|> I'd be interesting in hearing if anyone knows about their availability now...
|>
|> Thanks,
|> Pat
The HC711 is an EPROM version of the HC11. Raw HC11 parts have factory set
ROM images, and as such are useless to the hobbyist. HC811 parts have
EEPROM, allowing for electrical erasure and reprogramming.
Some Motorola parts (such as the HC705K1) have EPROM, making them user
programmable, but come with options of either windowed or sealed. The
more expensive windowed packages allow multiple use, the plastic dip
varieties are one-time programmable, since there is no way of exposing
the EPROM array to light.
JohnH
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| _ |_ _ |_| _ _| _| Electronics Department
|_| (_) | | | | | | (_| (_| (_| \/ School of MPCE
---------------------------------/- Macquarie University
Sydney, AUSTRALIA 2109
Email: johnh@mpce.mq.edu.au, Ph: +61 2 805 8959, Fax: +61 2 805 8983
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 12sci.electronics |
In article <1993Apr20.174749.7149@asd.com>, scott@asd.com (Scott Barman) writes...
>In article <1993Apr19.022425.29145@Princeton.EDU> roger@astro.princeton.edu (Roger Lustig) writes:
>>In article <Psm82B2w164w@jwt.oau.org> bbs-comarow@jwt.oau.org writes:
>>>Dave Kingman is Jewish
>>
>>Sez who?
>
>Sez Dave Kingman when he used to take off for Rosh Hashanna and Yom
>Kippur on days they coincided with the season.
The only problem is, Dave Kingman was *always* taking off.
Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, Easter, the day Elvis died (8/16), the entire
spring training month of Ramadan, Purim, the 4th of July (both games
that day), my birthday (OK, during the World Series, he never had to
play there), Memorial day (both games that day), ...
Guys, help me out here. I've run fresh out of holidays that
coincide with the baseball season and I'm trying to catalogue all the
days in his career that Dave Kingman (or at least his bat) went AWOL.
A complete religious calendar detailing every holiday in every
extant religion in the Western Hemisphere would be appreciated. Only
then can we truly be certain that Dave Kingman observed every holiday
ever conceived...
:-), of course ...NOT!
>--
>scott barman | Mets Mailing List (feed the following into your shell):
>scott@asd.com | mail mets-request@asd.com <<!
> | subscribe
> Let's Go Mets! | !
Jason A. Miller
"some doctor guy"
Frank Tanana: 1 win?!?!?
| 9rec.sport.baseball |
This question came up in Sci. Med. Nutrition and I'm posting my answer
here. Only 22 medical schools in the U.S. teach courses on human
nutrition. We have already seen what a lack of nutrition education can do
when candida and kidney stones present themselves to the medical community.
I think that the best example of where U.S. medicine is really missing the
mark when it comes to a knowledge of nutrition is PMS. So many women(and
their husbands) suffer from this disorder that it is really criminal that
most physicians in the U.S. are not taught that PMS is primarily caused by
diet and diet changes can prevent it from ever happpening. Before shooting
your flames, read the entire article and then decide if flaming is
justified.
From A Poster In Sci. Medi. Nutrition:
> In a psychological anthropology course I am taking, we got
> sidetracked onto a short conversation about PMS. Some rumors shared
> by several of the students included ideas that vitamin levels, sugar
> intake, and caffeine intake might affect PMS symptoms.
> Is there any data on this, or is it just so much hooey?
>
> Many thanks,
>
> Michael, I've wanted to reply to this post ever since I saw it but I got
side-tracked with candida. PMS is a lot like Candida blooms, most
physicians don't recognize it as a specific "disease" entity. Here is
everything that you would ever want to know about PMS.
Premenstrual syndrome has been divided into four specific subgroups:
PMT-A(Anxiety) PMT-D(depression)
anxiety depression
irritability forgetfulness
insomnia confusion
depression lethargy
PMT-C(Craving) PMT-H(Hyperhydration)
craving for sweets weight gain
increased appetite breast congestion and tenderness
sugar ingestion causes: abdominal bloating and tenderness
1. headache edema of the face and extremities
2. palpitations
3. fatigue or fainting
PMT-A is characterized by elevated blood estrogen levels and low
progesterone levels during the luteal phase of a women's cycle.
PMT-C is caused by the ingestion of large amounts of refined simple
carbohydrates. During the luteal phase of a women's cycle, there is
increased glucose tolerance with a flat glucose curve after oral glucose
challenge. The metabolic findings believed to be responsible for PMT-C are
a low magnesium and a low prostaglandin E1. This condition of hypoglycemia
is not unique to PMS but there are a number of different causes of
hypoglycemia, magnesium and PGE1 seem to be specific to PMS hypoglycemia.
A. Am. J. Psychiatry 147(4):477-80(1990).
Unrefined complex carbohydrate should be substituted for sugar, magnesium
supplementation and alpha linoleic acid supplementation(increased to 5-6% of
the total calories) using safflower oil or evening primrose oil as sources
of alpha linoleic acid.
PMT-D is characterized by elevated progesterone levels during the midluteal
phase of a women's cycle. Another cause of PMT-D has been found to be lead
toxicity(in women without elevated progesterone levels during the midluteal
phase). "Effect of metal ions on the binding of estridol to human
endometrial cystol" Fertil. Steril. 28:312-18(1972).
PMT-H is associated with water and salt retention along with an elevated
serum aldosterone level. Salt restriction, B6, magnesium and vitamin E
for breast tenderness have all been effective in treating PMT-H
This general discussion of the PMS syndromes came form:
A. "Management of the premenstrual tension sundromes: Rational for
a nutritional approach". 1986, A Year in Nutritional Medicine.
J. Bland, Ed. Keats, Publishing, 1986.
B. "Nutritional factors in the etiology of premenstrual tension
syndromes", J. Reprod. Med.28(7):446-64(1983).
C. "Premenstrual tension", Prob. Obstet. Gynecol. 3(12):1-39(1980)
Treatment has traditionally involved progesterone administration if you can
find a doctor who will treat you for PMS(just about as hard as finding one
that will treat you for candida blooms). While progesterone will work,
supplementation with vitamins and minerals works even better. There really
has been an awful lot of research done on PMS(much more than candida
blooms). Many of these studies have been what are called experimental
controlled studies(the type of rigorous clinical studies that doctors like to
see done).
Here are a few of these studies:
CARBOHYDRATE: Experimental Controlled Study, "Effect of a low-fat,
high-carbohydrate diet on symptoms of cyclical mastopathy" Lancet
2:128-32(1988). 21 pts with severe persistent cyclical mastopathy
of at least 5 years duration were randomly selected to receive
specific training to reduce dietary fat to 15% of total calories
and increase complex carbohydrate ingestion or given general dietary
advise with no training. After 6 months, there was a significant
reduction in the severity of the breast swelling and tenderness in
the trained group as reported by self-reported symptoms as well as
physical exams which quantitated the degree of breast swelling,
tenderness and nodularity.
VITAMIN A: Experimental Controlled Study, "The use of Vitamin A in
premenstrual tension" Acta Obstet. Gynecol Scand. 39:586-92(1960).
218 pts with severe recurring PMS received 200,000 to 300,000IU
vitamin A daily or a placebo. Serum retinol levels were monitored
and high dose supplementation was discontinued when evidence of
toxicity occured(serum retinol above 450ug/ml). The intent of the
study was to load the liver up with vitamin A and get a normal pool
size(500,000IU to 1,000,000IU) and then see if this
normal vitamin A pool could prevent PMS. 48% getting the high dose
vitamin A had complete remission of the symptoms of PMS. Only 10%
getting the placebo reported getting complete relief of PMS sysmptoms.
10% of the vitamin A treated group reported no improvement in PMS
symptoms.
Experimental Controlled Study, "Premenstrual tension treated with
vitamin A" J. Clinical Endocrinology 10:1579-89(1950). 30 pts
received 200,000IU of vitamin A daily starting on day 15 of their
cycle with supplementation continuing until the onset of PMS symptoms.
After 2-6 months, all 30 pts reported a significant improvement in
PMS symptoms. Vitamin A supplementation was stopped once evidence of
toxicity was demonstrated and all 30 pts were followed for one year
after high dose vitamin A supplementation was stopped. PMS symptoms
did not reoccur in any of these 30 pts for upto one year after the
vitamin A supplementation was stopped.
Most Americans do not have a normal store of vitamin A in their liver.
These studies and several others were designed to see if getting a normal
store of vitamin A into the liver could eliminate PMS. Of all the vitamins
given for PMS(vitamin A, B6, and vitamin E), vitamin A has shown the best
single effect. This is probably because vitamin A is involved in steroid
(estrogen/progesterone) metabolism in the liver. Getting your liver full
of vitamin A seems to be one of the best things that you can do to prevent
the symptoms of PMS. But vitamin A is toxic and you don't want to be trying
to do this without being seen by a physician who can monitor you for vitamin
A toxicity.
VITAMIN B6: Experimental Double-blind Crossoverr Study, "Pyridoxine
(vitamin B6) and the premenstrual syndrome: A randomized crossover
trial"J.R. Coll. Gen. Pract. 39:364-68(1989). 32 women aged 18-49
with moderate to severe PMS randomly received 50mg B6 daily or placebo.
After 3 months the groups were switched and followed for another
3 months. B6 had a significant effect on the emotional aspects of
PMS(depression, irritability and tiredness). Other symptoms of PMS
were not significanttly affected by B6 supplementation.
Experimental Double-blind Study, "The efects of vitamin B6
supplementation on premenstrual sysmptoms" Obstet. Gynecol
70(2):145-49(1987). 55 pts with moderate to severe PMS received
150mg B6 daily or placebo for 2 months. Analysis of convergence
showed that B6 significantly improved premenstrual symptoms related
to the autonomic nervous system(dizziness and vomiting) as well as
behavior changes(poor mental performance, decreased social interaction)
Anxiety, depression and water retention were not improved by B6
supplementation.
Vitamin B6 is below the RDA for both American men and women. Birth control
pills and over 40 different drugs increase the B6 requirement in man.
Women on birth control pills should be supplemented with 10-15 mg of B6 per
day. The dose should be increased if symptoms of PMS appear. Dr. David R.
Rubinow who heads the biological psychiatry branch of NIMH was quoted in
Clin. Psychiatry News, December, 1987 as stating that B6 should be
considered the "first-line" drug for PMS(over progesterone) and if the
patient does not respond, then other treatments should be tried. Vitamin
B6 can be toxic(nerve damage) if consumed in doses of 500mg or more each
day.
VITAMIN E: Experimental Double-blind Study, "Efficacy of alpha-
tocopherol in the treatment of premenstrual syndrome" J. Reprod.
Med. 32(6):400-04(1987). 35 pts received 400IU vitamin E daily for 3
cycles or a placebo. Vitamin E treated pts had 33% who reported a
significant reduction in physical symptoms(weight gain and breast
tenderness) while the placebo group had 14% who reported a significant
reduction in physical symptoms. The vitamin E group reported that 38%
had a significant reduction in anxiety versus 12% for the placebo
group. For depression, the vitamin E group had 27% with a significant
decrease in depression compared with 8% for the placebo group.
Experimental Double-blind Study, "The effect of alpha-tocopherol on
premenstrual symptomalogy: A double blind study" J. Am. Coll. Nutr.
2(2):115-122(1983). 75pts with benign breast disease and PMT randomly
received vitamin E at 75IU, 150IU, or 300IU daily or placebo. After
2 months of supplementation, 150IU of vitamin E or higher significantly
improved PMT-A and PMT-C. The 300IU dose was needed to significantly
improve PMT-D. No dose of vitamin E significantly improved PMT-H
(other studies have shown that a higher vitamin E doses will relieve
PMT-H symptoms).
MAGNESIUM: Experimental Double-blind Study, "Magnesium prophylaxis
of menstrual migraine: effects on itracellular magnesium" Headache
31:298-304(1991). 20 pts with perimenstrual headache received 360 mg
daily of magnesium as magnesium pyrrolidone carboxylic acid or a
placebo. Treatment was started on the 15th day of the cycle and
continued until menstruation. After 2 months, the Pain Total Index
was significantly lower in the magnesium group. Magnesium treatment
was also assocoiated with a significant reduction in the Menstrual
Distress Questionnaire scores. Pretreatment magnesium levels in
lymphocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocytes were significantly lower
in this group of 20 pts compared to control women who did not suffer
from PMS. After treatment, magnesium levels in these cells was raised
into the normal range.
Experimental Double-blind Study, "Oral Magnesium successfully
relieves premenstrual mood changes" Obstet. Gynecol 78(2):177-81(1991).
32pts aged 24-39 randomly received either magnesium carboxylic acid
360mg of Mg per day or a placebo from the 15th day of the cycle to the
onset of the menstrual flow. After 2 cycles, both groups received
magnesium. The Menstrual Distress Questionnaire score of the cluster
pain was significantly reduced during the second cycle(month) for the
magnesium treatment group as well as the placebo group once they were
switched to magnesium supplementation. In addition, the total score on
the Menstrual Distress Questionnaire was significantly decreased by
magnesium supplementation. The authors suggest that magnesium
supplemenation should become a routine treatment for the mood changes
that occur during PMS.
There are numerous observational studies that have been published in the
medical literature which also suggest that PMS is primarily a disorder
that arises out of a hormone imbalance that is dietary in nature. But
since observational studies are considered by most physicians in Sci. Med.
to be anecdotal in nature, I have not bothered to cite them. There are
also over a half dozen good experimental studies that have been done on
multivitamin and mineral supplementation to prevent PMS. I've chosen the
best specific studies on individual vitamins and minerals to try to point out
that PMS is primarily a nutritional disorder. But doctors don't recognize
nutritional disorders unless they can see clinical pathology(beri-beri,
pellagra, scruvy, etc.). PMS is probably the best reason why every doctor
being trained in the U.S. should get a good course on human nutrition. PMS
is really only the tip if the iceberg when it comes to nutritional
disorders. It's time that medicine woke up and smelled the roses.
Here's some studies which show the importance in multivitamin/mineral
supplementation and/or diet change in preventing PMS.
Experimental Study, "Effect of a nutritional programme on
premenstrual syndrome: a retrospective analysis", Complement. Med.
Res.5(1):8-11(1991). 200pts were given dietary instructions and
supplemented with Optivite(R) plus additional vitamin C, vitamin E,
magnesium, zinc and primrose oil. The dietary instructions were to
take the supplements and switch to a low fat, complex carbohydrate
diet. On a retrospective analysis, 96.5% of the 200pts reported an
improvement in their PMS symptoms with 30% of the sample stating that
they no longer suffered from PMS.
Experimental Double-blind Study, "Role of Nutrition in managing
premenstrual tension syndromes", J Reprod. Med. 32(6):405-22(1987).
A low fat, high complex carbohydrate diet along with Optivite
supplementation significantly decreased PMS scores compared with diet
change and placebo. After 6 months on the experimental program, the
vitamin/mineral supplementated group had significantly decreased
estradiol and increased progesterone in serum during the midlutel
phase of their cycle.
Experimental Double-blind Study, "Clinical and biochemical effects
of nutritional supplementation on the premenstrual syndrome", J.
Reprod. Med. 32(6):435-41(1987). 119pts randomly given Optivite(12
tablets per day) or a placebo. The treated groups showed a
significant decrease in PMS symptoms compared to the placebo. Another
group of 104pts got Optivite(4 tablets per day) or placebo. For this
second group of patients, no significant effect of supplementation on
PMS symptoms was observed.
Martin Banschbach, Ph.D.
Professor of Biochemistry and Chairman
Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology
OSU College of Osteopathic Medicine
1111 W. 17th St.
Tulsa, Ok 74107
"Without discourse, there is no remembering, without remembering, there is
no learning, without learning, there is only ignorance"
| 13sci.med |
kmr4@po.CWRU.edu (Keith M. Ryan) Pontificated:
>
>Q: How many Moslem men does it take to rape a woman?
>A: Five, one to commit the act, and four to witness the penetration.
>
>
>"A guilty verdict can be rendered only if there is a confession or if there
>are at least two male witnesses to the crime. Adultery and rape are proved
>only if four witnesses have seen the actual penetration, an occurrence that
>presumably does not happen often."
Is this from the Quran (or however it's spelled)?
/~~~(-: James T. Green :-)~~~~(-: jgreen@oboe.calpoly.edu :-)~~~\
| "At all times and in all nations, |
| the priest has been hostile to liberty." |
| <Thomas Jefferson> |
| 0alt.atheism |
In article <1993Apr19.213345.28299@freenet.carleton.ca> aa624@Freenet.carleton.
ca (Suat Kiniklioglu) [a.k.a. Kubilay Kultigin] wrote:
[KK] Bugunlerde "jewish jokes" muhabbetlerinden esinlenerek sunu
[KK] yazayim dedim.
[KK]
[KK] "Israel was able to divert the Jewish lobby from the Greeks,
[KK] for example, by persuading it that supporting the Armenian
[KK] resolution which came before the Senate in February 1990
[KK] could help sour Turco-Israeli relations. In addition, the
[KK] Israeli embassy in Washington was active in ensuring that the
[KK] resolution failed, for instance by assisting Turkish Jews to
[KK] travel to Wahington to underline the affinity between Israel
[KK] and Turkey.
[KK]
[KK] There was no doubt about the debt which Turkey felt it owed
[KK] to Israel over this matter. Even four months before the re-
[KK] solution came up for consideration, as enior member of the
[KK] Turkish Foreign Ministry said his country was "very grateful"
[KK] to Israel, the cooperation, in his view, refelecting the
[KK] maturity of the bilateral relationship. The experience over
[KK] the Armenian issue has convinced senior figures in Turkey
[KK] that the pro-Israel network in Washington can indeed deliver
[KK] the desired results.
[KK]
[KK] [Robins Philip, "Turkey and the Middle East" 1991 Chathm House
[KK] Papers. p.
[KK]
[KK] papers p.84]
[KK] got to go now
Not so fast! You have a rather warped sense of logic! You are telling us that
because Israel wishes to have good relations with Turkey even at the expense
of Armenians or Armenia, makes it bad for Turks to tell racist jokes against
Jews. Thus, we can infer, if Israel had poor relations with Turkey, it would
be alright to post such horrible jokes against Jews!
You impress nobody.
--
David Davidian dbd@urartu.sdpa.org | "How do we explain Turkish troops on
S.D.P.A. Center for Regional Studies | the Armenian border, when we can't
P.O. Box 382761 | even explain 1915?"
Cambridge, MA 02238 | Turkish MP, March 1992
| 17talk.politics.mideast |
In article <1993Apr16.212441.34125@rchland.ibm.com> ricardo@rchland.vnet.ibm.com (Ricardo Hernandez Muchado) writes:
>In article <1993Apr15.164940.11632@mercury.unt.edu>, Sean McMains <mcmains@unt.edu> writes:
>|> In article <1993Apr15.144843.19549@rchland.ibm.com> Ricardo Hernandez
>|> Muchado, ricardo@rchland.vnet.ibm.com writes:
>|> > And CD-I's CPU doesn't help much either. I understand it is
>|> >a 68070 (supposedly a variation of a 68000/68010) running at something
>|> >like 7Mhz. With this speed, you *truly* need sprites.
[snip]
(the 3DO is not a 68000!!!)
>|>
>|> Ricardo, the animation playback to which Lawrence was referring in an
>|> earlier post is plain old Quicktime 1.5 with the Compact Video codec.
>|> I've seen digitized video (some of Apple's early commercials, to be
>|> precise) running on a Centris 650 at about 30fps very nicely (16-bit
>|> color depth). I would expect that using the same algorithm, a RISC
>|> processor should be able to approach full-screen full-motion animation,
>|> though as you've implied, the processor will be taxed more with highly
>|> dynamic material.
[snip]
>booth there. I walked by, and they were showing real-time video capture
>using a (Radious or SuperMac?) card to digitize and make right on the spot
>quicktime movies. I think the quicktime they were using was the old one
>(1.5).
>
> They digitized a guy talking there in 160x2xx something. It played back quite
>nicely and in real time. The guy then expanded the window (resized) to 25x by
>3xx (320 in y I think) and the frame rate decreased enough to notice that it
>wasn't 30fps (or about 30fps) anymore. It dropped to like 15 fps. Then he
>increased it just a bit more, and it dropped to 10<->12 fps.
>
> Then I asked him what Mac he was using... He was using a Quadra (don't know
>what model, 900?) to do it, and he was telling the guys there that the Quicktime
>could play back at the same speed even on an LCII.
>
> Well, I spoiled his claim so to say, since a 68040 Quadra Mac was having
>a little bit of trouble. And this wasn't even from the hardisk! This was
>from memory!
>
> Could it be that you saw either a newer version of quicktime, or some
>hardware assisted Centris, or another software product running the
>animation (like supposedly MacroMind's Accelerator?)?
>
> Don't misunderstand me, I just want to clarify this.
>
The 3DO box is based on an ARM RISC processor, one or two custom graphics
chips, a DSP, a double-speed CDROM, and 2MB of RAM/VRAM. (I'm a little
fuzzy on the breakdown of the graphics chips and RAM/VRAM capacity).
It was demonstrated at a recent gathering at the Electronic Cafe in
Santa Monica, CA. From 3DO, RJ Mical (of Amiga/Lynx fame) and Hal
Josephson (sp?) were there to talk about the machine and their plan. We
got to see the unit displaying full-screen movies using the CompactVideo codec
(which was nice, very little blockiness showing clips from Jaws and Backdraft)
... and a very high frame rate to boot (like 30fps).
Note however that the 3DO's screen resolution is 320x240.
CompactVideo is pretty amazing... I also wanted to point out that QuickTime
does indeed slow down when one dynamically resizes material as was stated
above... I'm sure if the material had been compressed at the large size
then it would play back fine (I have a Q950 and do this quite a bit). The
price of generality... personally I don't use the dynamic sizing of movies
often, if ever. But playing back stuff at its original size is plenty quick
on the latest 040 machines.
I'm not sure how a Centris/20MHz 040 stacks up against the 25 MHz ARM in
the 3DO box. Obviously the ARM is faster, but how much?
Rob Barris
Quicksilver Software Inc.
rbarris@orion.oac.uci.edu
| 1comp.graphics |
In article <C5JrDE.M4z@news.cso.uiuc.edu> cobb@alexia.lis.uiuc.edu (Mike Cobb) writes:
>Theory of Creationism: MY theistic view of the theory of creationism, (there
>are many others) is stated in Genesis 1. In the beginning God created
>the heavens and the earth.
Wonderful, now try alittle imaginative thinking!
| 19talk.religion.misc |
In article <1993Apr19.144814.17736@aio.jsc.nasa.gov> mancus@sweetpea.jsc.nasa.gov (Keith Mancus) writes:
> I am unable to get my Gateway 486DX2/66 to run Windows
>in 1280x1024. I ordered a 2M ATI Ultra Pro, and I'm pretty
>sure the 2M is really there because I *can* select
>1024x768x65536. But no matter what I do with the Flex program
>in the ATI's program group, 1280x1024 remains ghosted out.
>I have Windows 3.1, build 59 of the drivers, DOS 5.0. The
>drivers were installed by Gateway, not by me, so perhaps there's
>a file missing from the hard drive. It runs 1024x768 just fine.
> I did go into the Desktop window and select 1280x1024. Sometimes
>it refuses (ghosted out), other time it accepts it, but when I hit
>OK and re-enter Desktop, it's back to 1024x768. At no time does
>it unghost 1280x1024 in the main Flex window. Help!
Maybe you need to go into \mach32\install and set a refresh rate for
1280x1024. You might need to use custom monitor option.
Dan
--
Daniel Matthew Coleman | Internet: dcoleman@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu
-----------------------------------+---------- : dcoleman@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu
The University of Texas at Austin | DECnet: UTXVMS::DCOLEMAN
Electrical/Computer Engineering | BITNET: DCOLEMAN@UTXVMS [.BITNET]
-----------------------------------+------------------------------------------
| 3comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware |
markw@pspmf3.gpsemi.com (Mark Wilkinson - Ext 3443) writes:
>Hi All,
> This is the first time I've posted to the net, so I hope this is
>going to the right people.
> I'm looking for software packages that run on an IBM PC clone that
>allows me to display Openlook and motif windows on the PC.
> The idea is to use the PC as a cheap X windows terminal for use by
>process Engineers at work.
If you already own all the "clone" equipment then there are lots of such
programs (see a current copy of Unix World Magazine).
*BUT* your performance WILL suck lemons running an Xserver on a clone.
(From experience). You would be much better off with an Xterminal if this
is a new install. The performance will be at least four times better.
In addition it would be MUCH easier to install and use. On top of that
they will cost about the same (price a clone with 4MB RAM, ethernet card,
very high performance graphics card, GOOD monitor, server software, TCP/IP
for clone software, mouse, keyboard, etc, etc, etc.... you spend a whole
lot of $$$$).
I can get 15" Tektronix XP11 terminals for under $900, and the performance
is over 80000 Xstones.....
--
/--------------------------------------------------------------------------\
| Mark A. Davis | Lake Taylor Hospital | Norfolk, VA (804)-461-5001x431 |
| Sys.Administrator| Computer Services | mark@taylor / mark@taylor.UUCP |
\--------------------------------------------------------------------------/
| 5comp.windows.x |
In article <1rd1g0$ckb@access.digex.net> prb@access.digex.com (Pat) writes:
>How will said re-boost be done?
>Grapple, HST, stow it in Cargo bay, do OMS burn to high altitude,
>unstow HST, repair gyros, costar install, fix solar arrays,
>then return to earth?
Actually, the reboost will probably be done last, so that there is a fuel
reserve during the EVAs (in case they have to chase down an adrift
astronaut or something like that). But yes, you've got the idea -- the
reboost is done by taking the whole shuttle up.
>My guess is why bother with usingthe shuttle to reboost?
>why not grapple, do all said fixes, bolt a small liquid fueled
>thruster module to HST, then let it make the re-boost...
Somebody has to build that thruster module; it's not an off-the-shelf
item. Nor is it a trivial piece of hardware, since it has to include
attitude control (HST's own is not strong enough to compensate for things
like thruster imbalance), guidance (there is no provision to feed gyro
data from HST's own gyros to an external device), and separation (you
don't want it left attached afterward, if only to avoid possible
contamination after the telescope lid is opened again). You also get
to worry about whether the lid is going to open after the reboost is
done and HST is inaccessible to the shuttle (the lid stays closed for
the duration of all of this to prevent mirror contamination from
thrusters and the like).
The original plan was to use the Orbital Maneuvering Vehicle to do the
reboost. The OMV was planned to be a sort of small space tug, well
suited to precisely this sort of job. Unfortunately, it was costing
a lot to develop and the list of definitely-known applications was
relatively short, so it got cancelled.
--
SVR4 resembles a high-speed collision | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
between SVR3 and SunOS. - Dick Dunn | henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry
| 14sci.space |
In article <37147@scicom.AlphaCDC.COM> wats@scicom.AlphaCDC.COM (Bruce Watson) writes:
>+
>Pageos and two Echo balloons were inflated with a substance
>which expanded in vacuum.
Called "gas".
>Once inflated the substance was no longer
>needed since there is nothing to cause the balloon to collapse.
>This inflatable structure could suffer multiple holes with no
>disastrous deflation.
The balloons were in sufficiently low orbit that they experienced
some air resistance. When they were finally punctured, this
preasure (and the internal preasure that was needed to maintain
a spherical shape against this resistance) caused them to
catastrophically deflated. The large silvered shards
that remained were easily visible for some time before
reentry, though no longer useful as a passive transponder.
The billboard should pop like a dime store balloon.
| 14sci.space |
No. Do this.
Have the DC-X1, make an unscheduled landing at teh 50 yard
line during the halftime show of This years Superbowl.
ABC will have more reporters there for that, then at
any news event.
pat
| 14sci.space |
Looking for a VIDEO in and OUT Video card for the IBM. One that will
allow you to watch TV (coax) or video IN, and will do Video out,
digitize pictures. and if I am in Windows, and would like to be able to
look the RCA out for the card to my TV and have it display on there, as
well as DOS apps.
I heard of these SNES and Genesis copiers, that will copy any games, are
those for real?
----
Message was posted at outlan.ersys.edmonton.ab.ca
#403-478-4010 HST and v.32bis Try it, you'll like it!
| 6misc.forsale |
> Anyway, don't expect it soon. Windows 4 and DOS 7 are supposed to
^^^^^
My understanding was that Chicago **was** DOS 7.
>be >released next year (read: see it in 95), so I expect that Chicogo won't
>be out >til '96.
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
| Dominic Drohan EMAIL: drohand@cad.gmeds.com |
| Electronic Data Systems PHONE: (313) 696-6315 |
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
| "If you'd like to talk for hours . . just go ahead now" |
| - The Spin Doctors |
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
| NOTE: The views and opinions expressed herein are mine, |
| and DO NOT reflect those of Electronic Data Systems Corp. |
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
| 2comp.os.ms-windows.misc |
Anybody for carpeting in Bosnia/Serbia? I mean like, carpet bombing
of Serbian positions?
| 18talk.politics.misc |
In article <1993Apr16.160228.24945@sol.UVic.CA> gballent@hudson.UVic.CA writes:
>
>In article 9088@blue.cis.pitt.edu, jrmst8+@pitt.edu (Joseph R Mcdonald) writes:
>
>>Jagr has a higher +/-, but Francis has had more points. And take it from
>>an informed observer, Ronnie Francis has had a *much* better season than
>>Jaromir Jagr. This is not to take anything away from Jaro, who had a
>>decent year (although it didn't live up to the expectations of some).
>
>Bowman tended to overplay Francis at times because he is a Bowman-style
>player. He plays hard at all times, doesn't disregard his defensive
>responsibilities and is a good leader. Bowman rewarded him be increasing his
>ice time.
>
>Jagr can be very arrogant and juvenile and display a "me first" attitude.
>This rubbed Bowman the wrong way and caused him to lose some ice time.
>
>Throughout the year, Francis consistently recieved more ice time than
>Jagr. Althouhg I have never seen stats on this subject, I am pretty
>sure that Jagr had more points per minute played that Francis. When
>you add to that Jagr's better +/- rating, I think it becomes evident
>that Jagr had a better season- not that Francis had a bad one.
>
Actually, what I think has become more evident, is that you are determined to
flaunt your ignorance at all cost. Jagr did not have a better season than
Francis ... to suggest otherwise is an insult to those with a modicum of
hockey knowledge. Save your almost maniacal devotion to the almighty
plus/minus ... it is the most misleading hockey stat available.
Until the NHL publishes a more useful quantifiable statistic including ice
time per game and some measure of its "quality" (i.e., is the player put out
in key situations like protecting a lead late in the game; is he matched up
against the other team's top one or two lines; short-handed, etc), I would
much rather see the +/- disappear altogether instead of having its dubious
merits trumpeted by those with little understanding of its implications.
Brad
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brad K. Gibson INTERNET: gibson@geop.ubc.ca
Dept. of Geophysics & Astronomy
#129-2219 Main Mall PHONE: (604)822-6722
University of British Columbia FAX: (604)822-6047
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
V6T 1Z4
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 10rec.sport.hockey |
In a previous article, nuet_ke@pts.mot.com (KEITH NUETZMAN X3153 P7625) says:
>
>HELP!!!
>my wife has informed me that she wants a convertible for her next car.
>We live in South Fla., so we are definitely in the right are for one.
>My wife has mentioned the Miata, but I think it is too small.
>I would like to wait for the new Mustangs ( Dec. '93 I think).
>Anyone have any opinions on any/all convertibles in a reasonable price range.
>
> Thanx
>
Geo Metro LSi
:-)
DREW
| 7rec.autos |
In article <27988.2BD32F3F@zeus.ieee.org> Arthur Greene,
Arthur.Greene@p6.f204.n2603.z1.fidonet.org writes:
>Can anyone tell me what the difference is between a 256K DRAM chip and a
>256K SIMM? I need the former (I think) to add memory to my Laserwriter
>LS. Someone is offering to sell me 256K SIMMS he removed from an SE, but
>I have a feeling this may not be the correct form of memory. The sockets
>in the Laserwriter look like they want the spidery-shaped chips (there
>are 4 sockets, each with, as I recall, 20 pins, arranged in two rows of
10).
>Believe it or not, I've never actually seen a SIMM. Help appreciated.
A 256K DRAM chip is a 256 kilobit chip whereas a 256K SIMM is a 256
kilobyte memory module. The SIMM is a PCB with a 30 pin connector edge
and on the SIMM are 8 256 kilobit DRAM chips (making the total memory 256
KBytes.
You are correct assuming that SIMMs will not fit into a LaserWriter.
Apple printers either require 64 pin SIMMs like those in the Mac IIfx or
special memory chips. Contact your Apple dealer to find out exactly what
kind of chips you need.
Peter Hansen
Bell Northern Research
pgmoffc@BNR.ca
| 4comp.sys.mac.hardware |
Object-Oriented Programming Survey
This survey is a meant to find the current relationship between
programmers and Object-Oriented Programming. Please return this survey
before May 5, 1993. Return to rustad@mhd.moorhead.msus.edu
Would you like a copy of the published statistics? (yes/no) _______
Your Occupation:
__________________________________________________________________________
Years of Programming Experience:
__________________________________
Programming Languages you're associated with:
__________________________________________________________________________
Years of OOP experience:
__________________________________
Your preferred OOP language:
__________________________________________________________________________
Is there an advantage to OOP (yes/no) _________
Is OOP coding faster than traditional programming (yes/no) _________
Is OOP maintenance quicker and easier than traditional (yes/no or opinion):
__________________________________________________________________________
Comments: (pros & cons with Object-Oriented Programming)
| 2comp.os.ms-windows.misc |
From the article "What's New" Apr-16-93 in sci.physics.research:
........
WHAT'S NEW (in my opinion), Friday, 16 April 1993 Washington, DC
1. SPACE BILLBOARDS! IS THIS ONE THE "SPINOFFS" WE WERE PROMISED?
In 1950, science fiction writer Robert Heinlein published "The
Man Who Sold the Moon," which involved a dispute over the sale of
rights to the Moon for use as billboard. NASA has taken the firsteps toward this
hideous vision of the future. Observers were
startled this spring when a NASA launch vehicle arrived at the
pad with "SCHWARZENEGGER" painted in huge block letters on the
side of the booster rockets. Space Marketing Inc. had arranged
for the ad to promote Arnold's latest movie. Now, Space Marketing
is working with University of Colorado and Livermore engineers on
a plan to place a mile-long inflatable billboard in low-earth
orbit. NASA would provide contractual launch services. However,
since NASA bases its charge on seriously flawed cost estimates
(WN 26 Mar 93) the taxpayers would bear most of the expense. This
may look like environmental vandalism, but Mike Lawson, CEO of
Space Marketing, told us yesterday that the real purpose of the
project is to help the environment! The platform will carry ozone
monitors he explained--advertising is just to help defray costs.
..........
What do you think of this revolting and hideous attempt to vandalize
the night sky? It is not even April 1 anymore.
What about light pollution in observations? (I read somewhere else that
it might even be visible during the day, leave alone at night).
Is NASA really supporting this junk?
Are protesting groups being organized in the States?
Really, really depressed.
Enzo
--
Vincenzo Liguori | enzo@research.canon.oz.au
Canon Information Systems Research Australia | Phone +61 2 805 2983
PO Box 313 NORTH RYDE NSW 2113 | Fax +61 2 805 2929
| 14sci.space |
Dave (david@c-cat.UUCP) wrote:
: vazzag@vccnw13.its.rpi.edu (Gregory Anthony Vazzana) writes:
: {>
: {> Howdy,
: {>
: {> The other day I was using Norton's SpeedDisk to optimize my Seagate(125MB) h
: {> problem persisted. I backed up all essential data and decided to reformat
: {> my hard drive. When I attempted this it got to the 279th clylinder 8th
: {> head and gave me an error message saying that it "Could not find the sector"
: {> I have tried everything I can think of. Now I can't even access my hard driv
: {> to write information to it. I tried to boot up with my MS-DOS disks but MS-D
: {> tries to reformat my hard drive and gets 29% of the way through to say "Error
: {> formatting hard drive. Press f3 to exit" I tried to scan my hard drive
: {> for viruses but I can;t access it and I get a message (When I try to do a dir
: {> saying "Error INT 24" Can anyone Help me? I have no idea what to do.
: {>
: {> Thanks in advance for any help!
: {>
: {> Greg
: try a bios level format via the debug command.
: -G=xxxx:5 where xxxx is the Hex address of the hd controller bios
: location.
: if this will not work, a last resort would be to take a large magnet
: to the hard disk, but this has to be done properly or you will cause
: or could cause more damage than has been done already.
: disclaimer: I am not responsible for your actions by directly applying
: a large magnet to your hard disk.
: if done correctly the magnet trick will wipe out everything on the
: hard disk _COMPLETELY_ and a low level BIOS format might succeed
: -David
: =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
: China Cat BBS c-cat!david@sed.csc.com
: (301)604-5976 1200-14,400 8N1 ...uunet!mimsy!anagld!c-cat!david
: =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
| 3comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware |
Anyone have any info. on the video/sound card from SIGMA designs.
It is called WIN STORM PC.
They also have another card called the legend 24lx
any info would be appreciated, incuding performance, pricing and
availability.
thanks
srini
| 2comp.os.ms-windows.misc |
i am in need of a motif-based graphing package to integrate into a large
software package under development for distribution to universities. it
can be either public domain or commercial, although a commercial package
can't have royalties required for binary only distribution. we need 2-d
graphing capabilities at a minimum, but 3-d would be nice. any info would
be appreciated and i will summarize if there is interest.
thanks,
mitch
--
_______________________________________________________________________________
Mitchell S. Baltuch Unidata Program Center
mitch@unidata.ucar.edu UCAR, PO Box 3000
303/497-8652 Boulder, CO 80307-3000
| 5comp.windows.x |
In article <C61H4H.8D4@dcs.ed.ac.uk> pdc@dcs.ed.ac.uk (Paul Crowley) writes:
>Quoting schnitzi@eustis.cs.ucf.edu (Mark Schnitzius) in article <schnitzi.735603785@eustis>:
>>I'm sure all the religious types would get in a snit due
>>to Asimov's atheism.
>Can someone confirm this? Someone told me that Asimov converted to
>Christianity at some point, or something. Does anyone have any good
>quotes?
What? Absolutely not. No way. Asimov was a lifelong atheist, and
said so many times, right until his death. Judging from the many
stories he told about his own life, he felt culturally closest to
Judaism, which makes sense. He was born Jewish.
Ed
ed@wente.llnl.gov
| 0alt.atheism |
In article <C5prv8.5nI@news.cso.uiuc.edu> cobb@alexia.lis.uiuc.edu (Mike Cobb) writes:
>I'll yield the discussion on absolute morality until I can think of another way
>to discuss it. If you're interested in a change, here's an idea.
Do you believe in absolute morality? And do you have absolute
knowledge? Mere mortal you? And if you claim that your God has absolute
knowledge, then you have have absolute knowledge of that?
If you read the Bible and claim that it is the Word of God, and
in it is contained the absolute moral code you ascribe to, but the prophets,
no matter how divinely inspired are not gods but mere fallable mortals,
then how can you be absolutely sure that they having heard the Word of
God, have got it right? Also, you read their words in translation which
invariably introduces errors of nuance and usage, and then how do you
know that you got the right message? I assert that you do not, and that
you do not have absolute knowledge of anything, including absolute morals.
The only way you can assert such things is through appeal to
prejudice via appeal by force of authority through yourself or a group
you have aligned yourself to.
>If morals come from what is societally accepted, why follow that?
Because social pressure is the most powerful force known to
man. How can you disprove a contention that the richeousness of
established religion is anything other than social convention? One
way is to assert that there are moral universals. But that is not
the same thing as asserting that these universials owe their origen
to trancendance or the supernatural or to dieties.
>What right do
>we have to expect others to follow our notion of societally mandated morality?
We expect empathy from our fellow man. We expect to raise each
generation with values that we live by, those which assure that mistakes
we have made are not repeated. Do you think that mere authority checks
all tendancies which are disruptive of civilized life? I think not! In fact
authority is power, and power corrupts. The most powerful tend to think
that they are above the law that applies to everybody else. Religious
authority, theocarcy, has not mitigated this any better than other
power structures on this score and it seems that because there are no
checks on power concentrated in clergy or nobility that the abuses
recorded by history are greater.
We live and teach morals by setting an example, starting in
the home. This does not come from books or authority figures in
soceity. If people are weak or confused at the present time it is
not because the breakup of the family has been precipitated by some
mysterious moral decidance that redidication to traditional formulas
will repair. That is but magical and simplistic thinking. We need to
look at forces in the way we live, even the good things that happen
in our present culture, that are weakening the family as the primary
means we have to teach children values. Of course people are trying
to have the community do things that once were done in the family
alone. This may not be as effective. We need to look at this.
>Pardon the extremism, but couldn't I murder your "brother" and say
> that I was
>exercising my rights as I saw them, was doing what felt good, didn't want
>anyone forcing their morality on me, or I don't follow your "morality" ?
Laying down the law, and with teeth, doesn't stop the crazy
man from murdering your brother despite the morality or the law. It
may help you with dealing promptly with him after the fact, but it
may not be very effective for preventing mental illness or cracy people
from murduring.
It is quite interesting how ineffective moral authoritarianism
is in fact. It may work best in societies that are already sonmewhat
isolated, that do not experience change, and have long standing
traditions. In a basic way moral codes decrease the number of decisions
people have to make everyday. In a real sense thay allow people to not
have to think. That is OK when things are stable, but it becomes a
problem when conditions change. This leads me to think that morals are
not sumething fundemental, at least most of them, recalling that there
are values all people seem to agree on, but mutate in response to outside
political, economic, technical, and cultural influiences.
Lately, I have come to regard people who speak like you
with great suspicion, especially when they include the pharse "for
the children.". I think that such people are more of an imparative to
want to control what others do and think than other more nobil pursuits,
such as of the truth.
Bruce Salem
| 19talk.religion.misc |
In article <C5w7CA.M3s@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> tbrent@ecn.purdue.edu (Timothy J Brent) writes:
>
>If you check the news today, (AP) the "authorities also found a state-of-the-art
>automatic machine gun that investigators did not know was in the cult's arsenal."
>[Carl Stern, Justice Department]
Yeah. In a fire that reportedly burned hotter than 1000 degrees-- hot
enough to make the bodies still unidentifiable-- the authorities found
a gun that was recognizably fully-automatic and state of the art.
Isn't that CONVEEEENIENT?
--
Matthew T. Russotto russotto@eng.umd.edu russotto@wam.umd.edu
Some news readers expect "Disclaimer:" here.
Just say NO to police searches and seizures. Make them use force.
(not responsible for bodily harm resulting from following above advice)
| 19talk.religion.misc |
In article <1993Apr19.145238.9561@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu> bqueiser@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu (Brian J Queiser) writes:
>anything if he hadn't emptied his gun into the asshole. Texas--it's
>whole other country.
That reminds me of one of Texas's ads...you hear a guy speaking in
French (like it's a letter home), then the French moves to the
background, and a French-accented voice come to the foreground, talking
about how he went walking on the beach, and it felt so much like
home that he decided to take his shoes off...and the rest of his
clothes. It ended with "please send bail." :-)
>On an rec.autos note, does anyone carry a gun on them or keep one in
>their car (which is bad idea, isn't it?) if you work in a bad part of
>town (or regularly go through one)? Is this a loaded question? :^)
I normally have an unloaded Colt Delta in my glove box with a loaded
magazine handy (which is perfectly legal in Oklahoma). For those
times that I'm travelling inter-state, I keep an unloaded
S&W .44 Magnum revolver in the glove box, with a speed-loader
in my pocket (which is legal everywhere, under Federal law, Illinois
State Police be hanged).
As I've said before, this is stricly for defense; my insurance
will pay to replace my car, but I only have one life...
James
James P. Callison Microcomputer Coordinator, U of Oklahoma Law Center
Callison@uokmax.ecn.uoknor.edu /\ Callison@aardvark.ucs.uoknor.edu
DISCLAIMER: I'm not an engineer, but I play one at work...
The forecast calls for Thunder...'89 T-Bird SC
"It's a hell of a thing, killing a man. You take away all he has
and all he's ever gonna have."
--Will Munny, "Unforgiven"
| 7rec.autos |
In article <1993Apr27.174622.1@stsci.edu> hathaway@stsci.edu writes:
>In article <C65LJ5.5Az@fs7.ece.cmu.edu>, loss@fs7.ECE.CMU.EDU (Doug Loss) writes:
>> I didn't want to quote all the stuff that's been said recently, I
>> just wanted to add a point.
>>
>..
>> then enforces those rights for them. Here in the U.S., the constitution
>> provides a "Bill of Rights" from which most if not all legal rights are
>> considered to derive. I'm sure that most other countries have
>
>These seem hardly like the groups to discuss this in, but HUH???
>All legitimate power to enforce these rights derives from the consent
>of the governed, not from no steenkin' piece of paper.
>
We don't disagree on this. All I said was that a right is whatever
you or somebody acting for you can enforce. The Bill of Rights didn't
come into effect until it was ratified by the states (and indirectly,
the people); from that point it defined legal rights. "Common law"
rights are vague and situational; that's why the people insisted on a
Bill of Rights in the Constitution, spelling out exactly what they
demanded from the government. Legitimate or illegitimate, power is
power. That's why the federal government can force states to grant
their citizens rights they don't wish to: In a slugging match, the feds
win. Period.
And you're right, this doesn't belong in sci.space. I've said my
peace. No more frome me on rights (at least not here).
>Most gracious regards,
>WHH
Doug Loss
loss@husky.bloomu.edu
| 14sci.space |
nwcs@utkvx.utk.edu (Schizophrenia means never being alone) writes:
>Does anyone know how to open up the Apple Ergo-Mouse (ADB Mouse II)?
>Mine lives near a cat (true, really...) and picks up her fur. From what
>I can tell, it looks like Apple welded it shut.
You must not have tried very hard. I just opend mine in about 2
seconds. Take a look on the bottom, it has a dial that turns to open
much like the older ADB mouses used to have. It's a bit harder to turn
at first but it is quite simple to open.
>Also, does anyone know about installing FPUs in a Mac LC III? I've heard some
>people saying it has fried the motherboard of the LC III.
Well, if you don't match up the pins correctly you will have some
problems. A close look at the socket should give you an idea of the
proper orientation of the chip.
-Hades
| 4comp.sys.mac.hardware |
RE: Midwest Micro,
Article #61200 (61302 is last):
>Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware,misc.consumers
From: wilson@schaefer.math.wisc.edu (Bob Wilson)
Subject: Re: *** CONSUMER WARNING *** MidWest Micro (Ohio)
Date: Thu Apr 22 15:12:28 1993
I posted almost the same bad experience with Midwest Micro but our
%^*^&*^&* news program only sent one paragraph out of the middle. In
addition to the facts that:
(a) the modems (I had ordered two) wouldn't work as documented
and
(b) the tech person had NO CLUE as to how it should work,
it also turned out that:
(c) one of the two modems they sent was clearly USED but the techs
thought that was standard practice and
(d) the modems made all three of my floppy drives quit working and
my CMS250 tape drive start running away.
That they are incompetent is one thing, but that they sell used stuff
as new and won't even apologize for it is another. Stay away from
these crooks!
Bob Wilson
Shown 97%, press <SPACE> for more, 'q' to quit, or 'h' for help
wilson@math.wisc.edu
End of File, Press RETURN to quit
Bob,
I have walked into Micro Center here in the Cleveland area and bought
a new track ball and picked the only one that was sealed in plastic
rap. Only to get it home and oped it up to find a good year old USED
dirty old track ball with a warranty card for some software package.
I would never even think of installing anything that looked like
it was used at all. You should of called Medwest Micro
and made them do a PUS PULL TAG on it. They would of picked it up
and sent you out a ner one the same day.
Things get better in knowing how to but equipment after the FIRST try!
--
Gosh..I think I just installed a virus..It was called MS DOS6...
Don't copy that floppy..BURN IT...I just love Windows...CRASH...
| 3comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware |
David.Bernard@central.sun.com (Dave Bernard) writes:
>>I also don't see the _necessity_ of saying the Holy Parents were some-
>>how sanctified beyond normal humanity: it sounds like our own inability
>>to grasp the immensity of God's grace in being incarnated through an or-
>>dinary human being.
>When Elizabeth greeted Mary, Elizabeth said something to the effect that
>Mary, out of all women, was blessed. If so, it appears that this
>exactly places Mary beyond
Whoa, dude I don't see the jump you made.
She was blessed, I'll give you that much.
What do you mean, she was placed "beyond"
the sanctification of normal humanity.
--
Mohammad R. Khan / khan0095@nova.gmi.edu
After July '93, please send mail to mkhan@nyx.cs.du.edu
If responses to this letter/post bounce, e-mail me at the nyx account.
| 15soc.religion.christian |
In Article <1r16ja$dpa@news.ysu.edu> "ak296@yfn.ysu.edu (John R. Daker)" says:
>
> In a previous article, xlyx@vax5.cit.cornell.edu () says:
>
> Mike Terry asks:
>
> >Is it possible to do a "wheelie" on a motorcycle with shaft-drive?
> >
> No Mike. It is imposible due to the shaft effect. The centripital effects
> of the rotating shaft counteract any tendency for the front wheel to lift
> off the ground.
> --
> DoD #650<----------------------------------------------------------->DarkMan
Well my last two motorcycles have been shaft driven and they will wheelie.
The rear gear does climb the ring gear and lift the rear which gives an
odd feel, but it still wheelies.
| 8rec.motorcycles |
In article <C5p26B.A3x@world.std.com>, artc@world.std.com (Art Campbell)
wrote:
>
> OK -- so we've got a hotly contested BMWOA election and some inept
> leadership.
>
> My question is the history of the BMW organization that lead to the
> formation of the BMWRA. Was there something going on in the OA years
> ago that precipitated the formation of two competing owner's groups?
Yep. Both were started (nominally) simultaneously. Splitsville from the
start (ie, if my sources are correct, one guy was involved in the start of
both groups. true?)
tom coradeschi <+> tcora@pica.army.mil
"Usenet is like a herd of performing elephants with diarrhea -- massive,
difficult to redirect, awe-inspiring, entertaining, and a source of mind-
boggling amounts of excrement when you least expect it."
--gene spafford, 1992
| 8rec.motorcycles |
In article <1993Apr2.182216.28603@walter.bellcore.com>, deaddio@ski.bellcore.com (Michael DeAddio) writes:
|> |> Question 2:
|> |>
|> |> If I am right about the doppler(if I spell it different every time,
|> |> maybe one will be right) effect, how does the radar get an accurate reading
|> |> when the car containing it is moving?? It would seem to me ( for all thats
|> |> worth) that it would need to be calibrated with the speedometer of the car
|> |> containing it?? I am fairly sure this isn't the case, so whats the deal??
|>
|> Essentially, this is actually how it is done. The radar gun is tied into
|> the speedometer of the car.
No, it is independent of the speedometer. The gun processes two doppler
returns--the speed of the car relative to the pavement and the speed
of the target, taking the difference between the two. Some guns with
a "moving mode" actually have a split beam with one beam aimed
preferentially at the pavement.
Car and Driver had a good article on traffic radar, but it was back in
1985. I used its contents and references to defend myself against a bogus
radar-measured ticket. It detailed "moving mode," which is easier to
defend against because of the increased amount of variables.
--
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Dave Medin Phone: (205) 730-3169 (w)
SSD--Networking (205) 837-1174 (h)
Intergraph Corp.
M/S GD3004 Internet: dtmedin@catbyte.b30.ingr.com
Huntsville, AL 35894 UUCP: ...uunet!ingr!b30!catbyte!dtmedin
******* Everywhere You Look (at least around my office) *******
* The opinions expressed here are mine (or those of my machine)
| 12sci.electronics |
What is the real story here? Can I hook up any PC SVGA Montitor to the
Centris internal video? Do I need to make my own cable if it doesn't not
come with one? Has apple released a Tech note with the pinouts for doing
such? The reasoj I ask is that it seems the prices for SVGA are lower than
that of their mac counterparts...
--mike
| 4comp.sys.mac.hardware |
In article <bakerlj.27.735422537@augustana.edu> bakerlj@augustana.edu (LLOYD BAKER) writes:
>What I want is a response
>giving me the pros and cons of Metaphorical religious language. Could an
>atheist accept this view without giving up the foundamentals of what he
>believes in?
Could an atheist accept a usage in which religious literature or
tradition is viewed in a metaphorical way? Of course: this is
essentially what we do with Homer, or with other concepts such as
fate, luck, free will ;-)... However, there remains the question of
whether the religious literature of -- say -- Christianity is a
particularly *good* set of metaphors for the world today. It's also
entirely unclear, and to me quite unlikely, that one could take a
contemporary religion like that and divorce the metaphoric potential
from the literalism and absolutism it carries now in many cases.
--
Jim Perry perry@dsinc.com Decision Support, Inc., Matthews NC
These are my opinions. For a nominal fee, they can be yours.
| 0alt.atheism |
In article <1993May14.210055.25497@klaava.Helsinki.FI> jliukkon@klaava.Helsinki.FI (Juha-Matti Liukkonen) writes:
>
>Let me pose a question: how many MS-DOS users are out there who have no
>access to the net, but would probably find this feature useful, too?
>Ie., your suggestion implies that Microsoft is relying on the shareware
>or PD products to fill the gaps on DOS. Or did I misunderstand your
>statement?
It's called the free enterprize system. I suggests that those who wish to
enhance DOS, do it, an sell it, or give it away. Microsoft can't be
everything to everyone! period!
| 2comp.os.ms-windows.misc |
Hi from Australia,
I am a car enthusiast in Australia.
I am particularly interested in American Muscle cars of the
1960s and 1970s. ALL MAKES: AMC, Ford, Chrysler/Mopar, GM.
I will be in the USA for 6 weeks from May 2nd to -June 14 1993.
Chicago: Sun May 2 -Thursday May 6
Denver: Friday May 7 - Sunday May 9
Austin, Texas: Monday May 10- Friday May 21
Oklahoma City: Friday May 21 - Monday May 24
Anaheim, California: Tuesday May 25-Thursday May 27
Las Vegas, Nevada: Friday May 28- Sunday May 30
Grand Canion, Monday May 31 - Tuesday June 1
Las Angeles, San Diego and vicinity: Wednesday June 3-Sunday June 6 June
South Lake Tahoe, Cal: Sunday June 6 - Wednesday June 9
Reno: Thursday June 10
San Fransisco: Thursday June 10 - Sunday June 13
I was wondering if anyone could send me any information of
car shows, swap meets, drag meets, model car shows etc. during this period.
Can anybody tell me when the Pomona Swap meet is on this year?
Also, any places to visit (eg. car museums, private collections,
your collection? etc. Any bit of information is appreciated!
I am also interested in finding some model cars (scale Models).
I am intersted in 1968-1974 AMC cars. Of particular interest is:
1968-1970 AMX
1968-1974 Javelin
1969 SCRAMBLER
1970 Rebel Machine
and others
If you have any kits, plastics, diecast etc and are interested in selling them,
tell me, I will be interested.
I can also send/bring you models of Australian High performance cars if
you are interested.
Please reply by email to: johnt@spri.levels.unisa.edu.au
Thanks,
John Tsimbinos
| 7rec.autos |
>[All of Roger Maynard's drivel deleted]
>--
>
>cordially, as always, maynard@ramsey.cs.laurentian.ca
> "So many morons...
>rm ...and so little time."
Can't we just stick this guy in the FAQ and stop responding to him,
guys? The last several flame-wars with him have been pretty much identical.
Could someone just collect all the articles from this one, and simply
re-post the entire block whenever he tries to start one? It'd be simpler.
Roger apparently is one of those embarassing specimens who enjoys flames.
Why give him what he wants?
Oh, Roger.. You're dull.. very dull... You should get a new act.
Tom
| 9rec.sport.baseball |
In article <1993Apr19.215342.16930@sco.com> evanh@sco.COM (Evan Hunt) writes:
>In article <1993Apr13.201942.26058@iscnvx.lmsc.lockheed.com> sharen@iscnvx.lmsc.lockheed.com (Sharen A. Rund) writes:
>>restaurants advertize "No MSG") - many restaurants that feature salad
>>bars use MSG to "keep" the veggies looking fresh longer, also, a number
>This brings up an important question for me - could pre-made salads, the
>kind sold in supermarkets, have MSG added without mentioning it? Legally,
>I mean - anyone know what the law is in this area?
Steve Dyer points out that Sharen was probably thinking of Sulfites. But
the question still stands.
--
Evan Hunt, Asst. Editor, THE WEB
For more information about THE WEB, e-mail to evanh@sco.COM.
| 13sci.med |
pky@fmg.bt.co.uk (Pete Young) writes:
>Nick Pettefar (npet@bnr.ca) wrote:
>: Tsk, tsk, tsk. Another newbie bites the dust, eh? They'll learn.
>Newbie. Sorry to disappoint you, but as far as the Internet goes I was
>in Baghdad while you were still in your dads bag.
>Based on your previous postings, apparently devoid of humour, sarcasm,
>wit, or the apparent capacity to walk and chew gum at the same time, I
>assumed you were serious. Mea culpa.
You cannot be serious!! Personally I think Nick's postings are the
best thing on wreck.moto.
| 8rec.motorcycles |
In article <mjs.735395430@zen.sys.uea.ac.uk>, mjs@sys.uea.ac.uk (Mike Sixsmith) writes:
> lotto@husc4.harvard.edu (Jerry Lotto) writes:
>
> >The understanding and ability to swerve was essentially absent among
> >the accident-involved riders in the Hurt study.
>
> >The "average rider" does not identify that countersteering alone
> >provides the primary input to effect motorcycle lean by themselves,
> >even after many years of practice.
>
> I would agree entirely with these three paragraphs. But did the Hurt
> study make any distinction between an *ability* to swerve and a *failure*
> to swerve? In most of the accidents and near accidents that I've seen, riders
> will almost always stand on the brakes as hard as they dare, simply because
> the instinct to brake in the face of danger is so strong that it over-rides
> everything else. Hard braking and swerving tend to be mutually exclusive
> manouvres - did Hurt draw any conclusions on which one is generally preferable?
Apparently the instinct to brake in the face of danger isn't as strong
as the instinct to freeze up and do nothing in the face of danger. Hurt
found that a surprising number of accident-involved motorcyclists hadn't
used their brakes at all prior to impact.
I think the only way you'll ever use countersteering reliably and correctly in
a crisis is to make it the only conscious method of directional control you
ever use, and to practice it constantly, even when you have no need to do
any turning. If you follow me down a long straight, and I seem to be
wiggling back and forth randomly or suddenly without obvious need, it's because
I'm practicing countersteering and avoiding imaginary obstacles directly in
my path. All of this practice may indeed be futile, but if I have even
milliseconds to react, the most *familiar* tactic available (and hopefully
the most automatic) will be countersteering. The same logic applies to braking
with the front brake, of course.
Chuck Rogers
car377@torreys.att.com
| 8rec.motorcycles |
>snm6394@ultb.isc.rit.edu (S.N. Mozumder ) writes:
> More horrible deaths resulted from atheism than anything else.
>
LIST OF KILLINGS IN THE NAME OF RELIGION
1. Iran-Iraq War: 1,000,000
2. Civil War in Sudan: 1,000,000
3, Riots in India-Pakistan in 1947: 1,000,000
4. Massacares in Bangladesh in 1971: 1,000,000
5. Inquistions in America in 1500s: x million (x=??)
6. Crusades: ??
I am sure that people can add a lot more to the list.
I wonder what Bobby has to say about the above.
Standard Excuses will not be accepted.
-- Naren
All standard disclaimers apply
| 0alt.atheism |
"Paul Hager" <hagerp@cs.indiana.edu> writes:
>>The 2nd Amendment does say "keep and bear." If "bear" is defined to
>>mean "carry," then most people are physically unable to carry a several
>>hundred pound nuclear device.
>As I understand it, sub-kiloton nuclear demolitions are man-portable
>and carried in a backpack.
As I recall, in the 60's the Kennedy Administration had sub-kiloton
nuclear weapons withdrawn from Europe and destroyed. They were man-
portable and made for use in shoulder-mount rocket launchers. The
smallest nuclear test I've seen data for was a .1 (yes, one-tenth)
kiloton weapon tested either in the late 40's or early 50's.
aaron
arc@cco.caltech.edu
| 16talk.politics.guns |
Has anyone experienced problems formatting a system floppy in the File
Manager under DOS 6? I get a formatted disk but when I boot with it,
my hard drive isn't recognized. I did install DoubleSpace. Also, I
*was* able to make a good-working system floppy from the DOS 6 command
shell (no Windows).
Let me know if you've had this problem too and if you've heard what's
going on.
--
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Craig Silver Computer Science at Simon Fraser University
silver@sfu.ca (Internet) Burnaby, B.C., Canada
| 2comp.os.ms-windows.misc |
Does anyone have a pair of Sega 3-d glasses they're willing
to part with? Or know of anywhere to acquire a pair, as they don't have
them around here!!!
Thanks.
_________________________________________________
Inspiration | ___ |
comes to | \ o baden@sys6626.bison.mb.ca |
those who | ( ^ ) baden@inqmind.bison.mb.ca |
seek the | /-\ =] Baden de Bari [= |
unknown. | |
-------------------------------------------------
| 6misc.forsale |
cdash@moet.cs.colorado.edu (Charles Shub) writes:
>Tuesday, and the isles/caps game is going into overtime.
>what does ESPN do.....
>
>Tom Mees says, "we are obligated to bring you baseball"
We're probably stuck, as Mike Burger pointed out that the baseball
deal was made far in advance of the NHL contract. WABC did the same
thing; they were thankful that the Devils were wiped out by 9:30,
because they had to switch over to Yankees baseball. The proof of
the reasons for this is left to the reader ...
It's too bad, but I wonder if ESPN is stuck with other US local team
coverage for their alternate games? We got NESN's coverage of the
Bruins-Sabres with the Boston homers ... they were awful!!! I've read
that Derek Sanderson is the colour analyst ... I wonder if he spent
his early years after hockey as an intern at PRAVDA before landing
this job? *Everything* had to be twisted into something good to say
about the Bruin(s) involved ... not even Bill Wirtz's shills on SC
Chicago (Pat Foley, Dale Tallon) were this bad. And just to be fair,
SC used to take their feed from ESN (Empire Sports Network), the Sabre
homers and they were horrible too ... but they were spacy.
From the CNN highlights, I hear Chris Cuthbert's voice from the CBC
coverage of the Habs-Nords series. Too bad that we couldn't get it
on ESPN, with all due respect to the Sabres and the Bruins.
Mike Emrick is substituting on the Devils SCNY team for Gary Thorne.
Mike was the original Devils TV play-by-play announcer, by the way.
gld
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Je me souviens ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gary L. Dare
> gld@columbia.EDU GO Winnipeg Jets GO!!!
> gld@cunixc.BITNET Selanne + Domi ==> Stanley
| 10rec.sport.hockey |
In article <C5133A.Gzx@news.cso.uiuc.edu> jbh55289@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (Josh Hopkins) writes:
>>>Titan IV launches ain't cheap
>>Granted. But that's because titan IV's are bought by the governemnt. Titan
>>III is actually the cheapest way to put a pound in space of all US expendable
>>launchers.
>
>In that case it's rather ironic that they are doing so poorly on the commercial
>market. Is there a single Titan III on order?
The problem with Commercial Titan is that MM has made little or no attempt
to market it. They're basically happy with their government business and
don't want to have to learn how to sell commercially.
A secondary problem is that it is a bit big. They'd need to go after
multi-satellite launches, a la Ariane, and that complicates the marketing
task quite significantly.
They also had some problems with launch facilities at just the wrong time
to get them started properly. If memory serves, the pad used for the Mars
Observer launch had just come out of heavy refurbishment work that had
prevented launches from it for a year or so.
There have been a few CT launches. Mars Observer was one of them. So
was that stranded Intelsat, and at least one of its brothers that reached
orbit properly.
--
All work is one man's work. | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
- Kipling | henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry
| 14sci.space |
>I have had my Q700 running with a 66.666 MHz osc for a few months. I have a
>number of SCSI devices connected (Quantum LP52, Maxtor 213, Toshiba MK156F via
>Emulex adapter, Pioneer DRM-600) and have had no trouble.
Is this being done with the motherboard's SCSI interface? If this is possible
then a bit of experimenting with just plain old clock oscillators may be
in order. Give us some more details please.
The Mad Clock Chipper in Seattle
<guykuo@u.washington.edu>
| 4comp.sys.mac.hardware |
In article <viking.735378520@ponderous.cc.iastate.edu> viking@iastate.edu (Dan Sorenson) writes:
>dfo@vttoulu.tko.vtt.fi (Foxvog Douglas) writes:
>>You believe that individuals should have the right to own weapons of
>>mass destruction? I find it hard to believe that you would support a
>>neighbor's right to keep nuclear weapons, biological weapons, and nerve
>>gas on his/her property.
> That really depends upon where you draw the line while defining
>these weapons,
This means you would support a ban if it were narrow enough. Good.
>and also on if you intend the law to be reflective of
>modern practice five months or five centuries down the road.
I would hope so. Let's define a nuclear weapon as an explosive weapon
whose majority of energy comes from fission and/or fusion of atomic
nuclei. Let's define a biological weapon as live organisms or viruses
in such state, quantity, and with such a vector that they could cause
death or serious disease [further defined] to a significant number of
people if released in a city, similarly populated area, resevoir, or
cropland.
Nerve gas and mustard gas are well defined. Other poisonous
gasses should be individually banned only if it can be shown that there
is no use not related to weaponry. Licenses should be available for
research purposes on such chemicals.
I am not a lawyer, but these ideas could certainly be a basis for
definitions.
>I'll give
>you a little hint: see that manure pile in the farmer's field down the
>road? In the USA, that is a weapon of mass destruction,
Nope. It is not considered a weapon.
>biological in
>nature, because if it gets washed into an open well it will contaminate
>the aquifers that supply thousands of cities with drinking water. So,
>where do *you* draw the line? In the USA, the EPA has ruled that
>a pile of scrap iron is illegal. Care to draw a thinner line this time?
It is not defined as a weapon of mass destruction. Many things are
banned for other reasons.
>< Dan Sorenson, DoD #1066 z1dan@exnet.iastate.edu viking@iastate.edu >
>< ISU only censors what I read, not what I say. Don't blame them. >
--
doug foxvog
douglas.foxvog@vtt.fi
| 16talk.politics.guns |
This morning a truck that had been within my sight (and I within
his) for about 3 miles suddenly forgot that I existed and pulled
over right on me -- my front wheel was about even with the back
edge of his front passenger door as I was accelerating past him.
It was trivial enough for me to tap the brakes and slide behind him
as he slewed over (with no signal, of course) on top of me, with
my little horn blaring (damn, I need Fiamms!), but the satisfaction
of being aware of my surroundings and thus surviving was not enough,
especially when I later pulled up alongside the bastard and he made
no apologetic wave or anything.
Is there some way that I can memorize the license plate of an
offending vehicle and get the name and address of the owner?
I'm not going to firebomb houses or anything, I'd just like to
write a consciousness-raising letter or two. I think that it would
be good for BDI cagers to know that We Know Where They Live.
Maybe they'd use 4 or 5 brain cells while driving instead of the
usual 3.
--
Curtis Jackson cjackson@mv.us.adobe.com '91 Hawk GT '81 Maxim 650
DoD#0721 KotB '91 Black Lab mix "Studley Doright" '92 Collie/Golden "George"
"There is no justification for taking away individuals' freedom
in the guise of public safety." -- Thomas Jefferson
| 8rec.motorcycles |
In article <Apr.10.05.31.46.1993.14368@athos.rutgers.edu>, luomat@alleg.edu (Timothy J. Luoma) writes:
> In article <Apr.9.01.11.16.1993.16937@athos.rutgers.edu>
>
> "Suppose you were part of the `Christian consipracy' which was going to
> tell people that Christ had risen. Never mind the stoning, the being
> burned alive, the possible crucifixion ... let's just talk about a
> scourging. The whip that would be used would have broken pottery, metal,
> bone, and anything else that they could find attached to it. You would be
> stood facing a wall, with nothing to protect you. ...
> scream out in agony that your raw back was being torn at again. You would
> say to yourself: `All this for a lie?' And you had 37 more coming.
>
> "At the third hit you would scream out that it was all a lie, beg for them
> to stop, and tell them that you would swear on your life that it had all
> been a lie, if they would only stop...."
No one was ever flogged, beaten, burned, fed to the lions, or killed in any
other way because of a belief in the resurrection - sorry to disappoint you.
The idea of resurrection is one which can be found in a host of different
forms in the religions of antiquity. The problem was not the resurrection
which was a mediorce issue for a tiny fragment of the Jewish population
(the Saducees) but was a non issues for everyone else. The real problem was
that Christians were pacifist and preached there was only one god. When the
state operates by a system of divinitation of the emperor - monotheism
becomes a capital offense. The Jews were able to get exemption from this,
and were also not evangelistic. Christians were far more vocal, and gentile,
and hence dangerous and were therefore targets of persecution. Also since
Christians were a relatively powerless group, they made good scapegoats as is
seen by Nero's blaming them for the burning of Rome. Let's not cloud the
issues with the resurrection.
randy
[I agree with you that Christians were not persecuted specifically
because they believed in resurrection. However the beliefs that did
cause trouble were dependent on belief in the resurrection of Jesus.
Of course the problem with it is that there are alternatives other
than a great conspiracy. The most common theory among non-Christians
scholars seems to be that the resurrection was a subjective event --
in effect, a delusion. --clh]
| 15soc.religion.christian |
[this is posted for a friend, please reply to dschick@holonet.net]
1990 BMW K75RT FOR SALE
Asking 5900.00 or best offer.
This bike has a full faring and is great for touring or commuting. It has
about 30k miles and has been well cared for. The bike comes with one hard
saddle bag (the left one; the right side bag was stolen), a Harro tank bag
(the large one), and an Ungo Box alarm. Interested? Then Please drop me a
line.
DAS
| 8rec.motorcycles |
In article <15442@optilink.COM>, cramer@optilink.COM (Clayton Cramer) writes:
|> The Walz monster above, however, was past 40 when he molested these
|> kids, as he says above.
Hehehe! Dontcha just love these carefully constructed arguements?
Clayton, babe, please define the word `molest`. Are you using a legal
term or a proper dictionary term? Molest, as far as I can remember, means
`to do damage to person(s)`. My mate, Mike, was lured into a woman's parlour
when he was 14. Is that molestation? A number of my friends (straight) lost
their virginity before that. Were they 'molested'? They told me that they
thoroughly enjoyed the experience. I see no damage.
Please stop pushing your objective morality on others. If you push, people won't
fall over and say 'Ye gads, you're right!', they'll just push back.
Have you signed up for that logic course yet?
|> --
|> Clayton E. Cramer {uunet,pyramid}!optilink!cramer My opinions, all mine!
|> Relations between people to be by mutual consent, or not at all.
--
+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
| Adda Wainwright | Does dim atal y llanw! 8o) |
| eczcaw@mips.nott.ac.uk | 8o) Mae .sig 'ma ar werth! |
+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
| 18talk.politics.misc |
Posting for a friend. Reply to him, not to me.
For Sale: Micro Soft DOS v. 5.0
Micro Soft DOS v. 5.0
Release date: 11/11/91
3 1/2" diskettes
manual in perfect conditioni
best offer accepted (I pay shippinig)
Contact Randall at:
Randall_Clark@byu.edu
(801) 222-0834 (home)
(801) 378-2722 (work)
| 6misc.forsale |
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