From: Bungalow Bill on 31 Mar 2010 22:33 On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 17:32:27 -0700 (PDT), brent <bulegoge(a)columbus.rr.com> wrote: snip > >I have engaged in discussion with D from BC before. He is not >intellectually honest in his arguments even though he would like you >to believe that his liberation from belief in God has made him >intellectually superior to Christians. > And *that* is actually the funniest part... about D from BC.
From: Dr. Heywood R. Floyd on 31 Mar 2010 22:39 On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 19:41:20 -0500, "krw(a)att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz" <krw(a)att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz> wrote: > >Someone (likely a suit) thinks. Last I heard they were going to get help >(cooking the books?) from NASA. You do realize that NASA were the pioneers in catastrophic event scene forensics. There were quite a large number of launch vehicle failures before one was ever arrived at that they put a man on top of. The fuel tanks on the Saturn 5 booster stage have numerous sensors inside. cameras even. And that was way back then. What they will find out is if there is a piece of software (firmware?) that Toyota has running the accelerator hardware that controls it from zero to fully depressed. If such a control exists, so too can fault(s). Cars are going to have to have position sensors in the near future. I can see it now. Many already do. The Corvette has had a chrono event recorder that runs on it since the late eighties.
From: Archimedes' Lever on 31 Mar 2010 22:41 On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 17:43:34 -0700 (PDT), brent <bulegoge(a)columbus.rr.com> wrote: >P C Board passes are pretty inexpensive these days and they can be >turned quickly. A six by six inch board with about 40 or more BGA chips on it? Maybe your little two layer designs can.
From: D from BC on 31 Mar 2010 23:12 In article <26r7r5l3bhlaeuhn98o6lkshhba6e1e8ip(a)4ax.com>, OneBigLever(a)InfiniteSeries.Org says... > > On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 07:27:39 -0700, John Larkin > <jjlarkin(a)highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote: > > >It's not certainty to me, but it's sure suspicious that Earth is such > >an improbably beautiful place, and that we are alive now. The > >probability of those things happening is so close to zero that it > >doesn't matter. > > Or that we are positioned in our solar system in such a way as to have > the right mix of weather, and Jupiter does a good job of keeping the > debris left over from the solar system construction away from us. What > would this planet have been like without a large, massive orb out there > to sweep up the mess? > > Do the atheists call that "dumb luck"? Think big picture... It'll certainly look like dumb luck when it's discovered that there's no life anywhere in the universe. Only when dead planets(galactic) vs live planets(galactic) data becomes available can one say 'dumb luck'. I will agree that it's 'dumb luck' we're still alive. It's more probable a asteroid will wipe out all life again before the Sun burns the earth before the Sun explodes. There's asteroids everywhere and stars are limited. Fluke in ...fluke out.. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/99942_Apophis Close.. -- D from BC British Columbia
From: D from BC on 31 Mar 2010 23:26
In article <kfr7r5pi82rlo8a27dvb7u4nm2hgmupcal(a)4ax.com>, OneBigLever(a)InfiniteSeries.Org says... > > On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 11:35:02 -0700, D from BC <myrealaddress(a)comic.com> > wrote: > > >btw.... Jesus should have turned water into freshly squeezed orange > >juice. This is vastly more impressive since oranges are not native in > >the middle east. > > > He would have, were they having deficiency issues at the time. > > You are a loser, boy. You just won't find out for a while. Not only that but iirc..Jesus did the water to alcohol (Jesus the alcoholic?) conversion at the last supper not the last breakfast. If Jesus turned water into Coca Cola, that would be impressive. 'And the lord turned the water into a chilled brown sweet fizzing liquid that he called Cola...' -- D from BC British Columbia |