From: Jamie on 21 Oct 2006 20:59 Eeyore wrote: > > jmfbahciv(a)aol.com wrote: > > >>Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations(a)hotmail.com> wrote: >> > > > You're clueless. > > Graham > Did we catch you talking to your self in the mirror again? -- "I am never wrong, once i thought i was, but i was mistaken" Real Programmers Do things like this. http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
From: Jamie on 21 Oct 2006 21:02 Eeyore wrote: > > jmfbahciv(a)aol.com wrote: > > >>I know I do not write clear enough for all values of IQs. > > > Mine's 152. > > What's yours ? > > Graham > "An eye brow turns up, as this statement is being herd." -- "I am never wrong, once i thought i was, but i was mistaken" Real Programmers Do things like this. http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
From: Eeyore on 21 Oct 2006 18:13 Jamie wrote: > Eeyore wrote: > > > > > jmfbahciv(a)aol.com wrote: > > > > > >>Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations(a)hotmail.com> wrote: > >> > >>>jmfbahciv(a)aol.com wrote: > >>> > >>> > >>>>Yes. The history we (US kids) learned in elementary school seems > >>>>to have been a lot of myth. What a waste of learning time. > >>> > >>>Now stop to think what else might be based on popular myths ? > >> > >>One of them is that Europe doesn't teach history their kids any > >>better than the US. > > > > > > Eh ? I assume English isn't your first language. > > > > Graham > > > Graham, lost for comment? is that the best you can do ? > > I like viewing debates posted by intellectual people, it > > makes for better reading. Statements like that tend > > to bore me to no end. > > Can't you be more created ? My neck is sore from falling asleep > > due to all the boring bile you're spewing out, your last statement > > only shows more of your true nature. > > -------------------------------------------------------- > My views and comments, are directed to the very few that have > been posting here lately. I hope the wrong parties don't take offense > to my statement. The one's guilty of this, know who they are. > > Born, raised, taught in the USA and proud of it! :) NITWIT
From: Jamie on 21 Oct 2006 21:35 Eeyore wrote: > > Jamie wrote: > > >>Eeyore wrote: >> >> >>>jmfbahciv(a)aol.com wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>>Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations(a)hotmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>>jmfbahciv(a)aol.com wrote: >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>>Yes. The history we (US kids) learned in elementary school seems >>>>>>to have been a lot of myth. What a waste of learning time. >>>>> >>>>>Now stop to think what else might be based on popular myths ? >>>> >>>>One of them is that Europe doesn't teach history their kids any >>>>better than the US. >>> >>> >>>Eh ? I assume English isn't your first language. >>> >>>Graham >>> >> >>Graham, lost for comment? is that the best you can do ? >> >> I like viewing debates posted by intellectual people, it >> >>makes for better reading. Statements like that tend >> >>to bore me to no end. >> >> Can't you be more created ? My neck is sore from falling asleep >> >> due to all the boring bile you're spewing out, your last statement >> >>only shows more of your true nature. >> >> -------------------------------------------------------- >> My views and comments, are directed to the very few that have >>been posting here lately. I hope the wrong parties don't take offense >>to my statement. The one's guilty of this, know who they are. >> >> Born, raised, taught in the USA and proud of it! :) > > > NITWIT > Typical answer. why would i expect any other? But, i must say, your improving! your becoming more American like, than you want to admit! :) -- "I am never wrong, once i thought i was, but i was mistaken" Real Programmers Do things like this. http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5
From: John Fields on 21 Oct 2006 19:19
>My particular interest is understanding where ideas come from, and why >some of them get squashed. When Townes was trying to get his first >maser to work, his department head was convinced it was a waste of >time. Townes broke the idea to a Nobel laureat who promptly told him >that the maser couldn't work because it violated the rules of >thermodynamics. He later reconsidered. --- I haven't run into that mindset myself, much, except here, but maybe it's because my heroes don't need to aggrandize their positions by quashing ideas. Case in point, it struck me that the putative "Big Bang" could just as easily have been a 'big bubble', where the bubble cavitated out of a big block of, for want of a better description, Swiss cheese. Outgassing from the "infinite" cheese into our bubble at the moment of cavitation and maybe a little bit after that would have put all of the matter into our universe which was there at the beginning into the space of the bubble. And maybe a little bit extra until the wall of the bubble got more or less stable and started drawing the matter which had been exuded into the space of the bubble back into the cheese. So far, we've found that we have a two-tiered gravitational system. We're currently being blue-shifted into our Great Attractor, while the Great Attractor is being red shifted into the wall. Comments? -- John Fields Professional Circuit Designer |