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|
| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 207 responses total. |
bookworm
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response 125 of 207:
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Mar 12 07:11 UTC 1999 |
coolness!
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jazz
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response 126 of 207:
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Mar 13 16:31 UTC 1999 |
Re #124: Specifically, her writings and her life.
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orinoco
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response 127 of 207:
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Mar 20 19:51 UTC 1999 |
I didn't know HIldegard von Bingen wrote either...interesting...
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aphalea
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response 128 of 207:
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Apr 22 13:28 UTC 1999 |
hello all,
can somebody help me in finding a goos beginner's book fro java..
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bookworm
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response 129 of 207:
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Apr 23 22:30 UTC 1999 |
Consider visiting a bookstore such as B. Daltons or Waldenbooks. You
might also consider asking your local computer sales person to
recommend a good book.
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lilmo
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response 130 of 207:
|
May 19 21:51 UTC 1999 |
Bookworm, have you read any Frank Perretti? "The Oath" is very dark, almost
depressing, but his "Darkness" series, is, ironically, much lighter and more
accessible. If the characters don't always know what's going on, at least
the reader does, most of the time. :-)
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bookworm
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response 131 of 207:
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Jun 4 17:06 UTC 1999 |
No, I can't say as I have. Not much time for that with Finals coming
up.
Hey you guys. My husband and I will be coming up to visit a week from
tomorrow. Looking forward to meeting all of you.
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lilmo
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response 132 of 207:
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Jun 28 23:50 UTC 1999 |
Wow, that's quite a trip from Washington; how did it go?
Anybody getting into the summer reading swing?
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omni
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response 133 of 207:
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Jun 29 05:03 UTC 1999 |
I picked up "The Street Lawyer" which is something I began last year. I've
been reading on the average of a chapter a day. I plan on getting through "The
Black Dahlia" By James Ellroy and "Bag of Bones" by Stephen King before the
summer is out. Hopefully I can clear those 3 by the end of July. I would like
to finish all of my books (8) by the end of August so that I can begin a new
crop.
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bookworm
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response 134 of 207:
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Jun 30 17:59 UTC 1999 |
resp:132 It went all right. Been too busy to read much of anything
lately. =P
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lilmo
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response 135 of 207:
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Jul 8 20:33 UTC 1999 |
I read "Strategy" by B.H. Liddell Hart. He analyzes every decisive military
campaign in European history about which reliable information can be found
up to about 100 years ago. He focuses, of course, on strategy, but does not
avoid the occasional foray into either tactics or grand strategy. Having made
the case that a wide survey is necessary if local conditions are to be
factored out of general propositions, he then shows how virtually every
decisive campaign depended upon some form of indirect approach. This
established, he commences a thorough analysis of WWI strategy, which concluded
the first edition, published in the 1920's. This edition also contains a
detailed analysis of WWII strategy and grand strategy, in light of his earlier
conclusions. (Some key generals even attribute their successful choices in
strategy to having read the earlier edition.)
The first edition contained a prediction that mechanized forces would become
more and more important in future wars. (WWII proved him right).
The 1950's edition predicted that the existence of the H-bomb would not
preclude low-level and guerilla warfare. (Vietnam, Angola, Guatemala,
Nicaraugua, etc, etc).
I was impressed.
|
i
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response 136 of 207:
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Jul 9 00:27 UTC 1999 |
Hart's _Strategy_ is cool. (I've got the 1967 edition.) My impression
is that he's considered one of the top military thinkers of the century
(certainly to be studied by all prospective generals).
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lilmo
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response 137 of 207:
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Jul 9 22:20 UTC 1999 |
I believe that is the edition I have. My understanding is that each edition
actually has a slightly different title, so it might be even harder to mix
them up. ("Have" used loosely: it's from the library.)
|
suvro
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response 138 of 207:
|
Oct 24 14:01 UTC 1999 |
is there anybody already present in the conference.I am not getting the hang
of it can anyone help me out on the various systems that this cyberspace.org
thing seems to have.
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md
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response 139 of 207:
|
Oct 24 19:50 UTC 1999 |
Picture each conference as a room.
Each room is filled with scrolls. These are the
"items" in the conference.
Each scroll is labeled with an item topic ("Why
books?" in this case.)
If you open up the scroll (ie., read the item), you
will see that many people have written comments in
it, over a span of time ranging from a few days to
many years. These are the "responses." Each of the
comments on the scroll is numbered, dated and signed.
If you see something in a scroll that makes you want
to add a comment of your own, you may do so. This is
"entering a response"
The next time you come back to look at the scroll,
others might have come into the room and added more
comments underneath yours on the scroll. Their responses
might be addressed to you or to other people. New
responses might be added to the scroll within minutes of
the comment you added. Sometimes days will pass before
you find a new comnent when you open the scroll.
Sometimes years. Sometimes, sadly, never at all.
And sometimes (here is where the scroll analogy breaks
down) the item topic is so interesting or controversial
that many people add responses in a very short time,
with the result that an invisible person will add a
comment to the scroll while you are in the process of
writing your own comment! The scroll-keeper, who sees
all, will then alert you to this fact and ask if you
still want to add your comment as written. At that
point you might want to add something to the efect that
"md slipped in."
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lilmo
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response 140 of 207:
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Oct 26 18:17 UTC 1999 |
Cool analogy! I never thought of it quite that way! :-)
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remmers
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response 141 of 207:
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Nov 6 23:19 UTC 1999 |
Very cool indeed. I like it!
To patch up the scroll analogy, imagine that you are writing your
response on a scrap of parchment that you obtain from the scroll-keeper.
When you hand your completed response to the scroll-keeper, he either
copies it to the scroll, or hands it back if other scraps of parchment
have been copied to the scroll since he gave you your scrap.
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mcnally
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response 142 of 207:
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Nov 7 06:08 UTC 1999 |
I was under the impression that he pasted it on the end anyway, but let you
know that someone else had added something first..
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remmers
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response 143 of 207:
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Nov 19 19:32 UTC 1999 |
(Depends on whether you're using Picospan or Backtalk.)
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orinoco
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response 144 of 207:
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Nov 20 16:14 UTC 1999 |
Yeah, I like it too. Does a much better job of explaining how a bbs works
than the usual "bulletin board" analogy.
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splungo
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response 145 of 207:
|
Dec 15 00:39 UTC 1999 |
Hi
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lilmo
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response 146 of 207:
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Dec 17 22:36 UTC 1999 |
Welcome to grex, splungo! :-)
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fiveball
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response 147 of 207:
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Feb 21 01:45 UTC 2000 |
I don't know about anyone else in here, but i love to read John Grisham and
Tom Clancy.
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spifff
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response 148 of 207:
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Apr 24 05:59 UTC 2000 |
has anyone read fountainhead ?
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jazz
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response 149 of 207:
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Apr 24 14:33 UTC 2000 |
The Fountainhead, by Ayn Rand?
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