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Grex > Agora56 > #2: General Announcements - Winter 2005/06 | |
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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 253 responses total. |
twenex
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response 93 of 253:
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Jan 30 18:26 UTC 2006 |
Todd is an Arab-hater.
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tod
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response 94 of 253:
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Jan 30 18:48 UTC 2006 |
re #92
why are
they attacking us?
The occupying forces are always going to be fair game if their first name
isn't "Amir". Here's an example for you: Why was Daniel Pearl beheaded?
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nharmon
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response 95 of 253:
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Jan 30 19:03 UTC 2006 |
Okay, so they're attacking us not for what we're doing, but for who we
are. So...why are they attacking Iraqi police?
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happyboy
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response 96 of 253:
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Jan 30 19:13 UTC 2006 |
to discourage them from joining.
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tod
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response 97 of 253:
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Jan 30 19:26 UTC 2006 |
re #95
You know..the power framework that is being greased which I referenced earlier
would probably include a police force of some kind. Another house of Saud
would make the Bush folks happy but it probably wont happen that way.
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sholmes
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response 98 of 253:
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Jan 31 03:11 UTC 2006 |
They are attacking the iraqi-police cos in all probablity they are seen as
traitors who have joined the foreign invaders.
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nharmon
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response 99 of 253:
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Jan 31 03:42 UTC 2006 |
Are the insurgents well organized?
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tod
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response 100 of 253:
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Jan 31 05:25 UTC 2006 |
They're in alphabetical order by date of birth
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albaugh
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response 101 of 253:
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Jan 31 17:55 UTC 2006 |
Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 07:30:39 -0500
From: CNN Breaking News <BreakingNews@MAIL.CNN.COM>
-- Coretta Scott King, wife of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
has died, a PR company for the King family says.
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tod
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response 102 of 253:
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Jan 31 18:25 UTC 2006 |
I didn't know she was still alive.
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albaugh
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response 103 of 253:
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Jan 31 18:28 UTC 2006 |
If a person dies that someone didn't know was still alive, did she really?
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tod
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response 104 of 253:
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Jan 31 18:36 UTC 2006 |
She stroked out like back in August. Was anybody really keeping tabs?
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rcurl
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response 105 of 253:
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Jan 31 19:28 UTC 2006 |
Probably, many people.
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furs
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response 106 of 253:
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Feb 1 02:17 UTC 2006 |
re 103: only if a tree falls.
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remmers
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response 107 of 253:
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Feb 2 12:01 UTC 2006 |
I wish to announce that as of January 26, 2006, Western Union has closed
its telegraph service. No more telegrams.
http://www.livescience.com/technology/060131_western_union.html
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nharmon
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response 108 of 253:
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Feb 2 12:59 UTC 2006 |
I wonder what Western Union's telegraph service consisted of on January
25th. Perhaps when you sent a telegram, the clerk took your message, and
then e-mailed it to another location, where they would print the message
and deliver.
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keesan
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response 109 of 253:
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Feb 2 15:27 UTC 2006 |
I thought they called and phoned the message to you.
In 1985 FedEX used to have a super-fast option in which they faxed material
to the local office then delivered it to you. They eliminated that. zip
mail?
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rcurl
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response 110 of 253:
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Feb 2 16:02 UTC 2006 |
What is available now for a person to send a written message
person-to-person within a couple of hours, when neither the sender or
recipient have any fax or computer access? Overnight FedEx isn't as fast
as was a telegram. Or is it just that the demand for that has become so
small that such a service is not sustainable?
There is a radio amateur message service that is still in operation, which
uses a format like telegrams, but public access to that is very difficult
except in emergency situations where amateurs have been enlisted to help.
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nharmon
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response 111 of 253:
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Feb 2 16:04 UTC 2006 |
Fax and computer access is hard not to have access to with public
libraries (computer access) and kinkos (fax access).
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jep
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response 112 of 253:
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Feb 2 16:06 UTC 2006 |
An article I saw said that Western Union delivered 20,000 telegrams at
$10 each last year. That's not much business for a company serving the
entire nation.
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rcurl
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response 113 of 253:
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Feb 2 16:44 UTC 2006 |
Re #11: tell us how two people living some distance apart, who do not have
computers or fax machines, can without prior arrangement get a written message
sent by one to the other within an hour or two? Public fax machines and
computers don't help in the delivery of the message.
It's jep's figures in #112 that explain the failure of telegraph service: most
people have better means, but this still leaves a few in the lurch. They will
just have to "get with the program" (literally and figuratively).
"Long distance" telephone service may become another victim. Since we now
have cell phones, and don't make international calls, we never use POTS
long-distance. Even POTS is under some threat. We dropped our second line
since we moved to cable internet. Our daughter doesn't have POTS at all,
relying solely on a cell phone.
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nharmon
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response 114 of 253:
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Feb 2 16:48 UTC 2006 |
How does telegraph work? You tell them the name you want to send to and
they magically know where it goes?
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gull
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response 115 of 253:
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Feb 2 16:57 UTC 2006 |
Re resp:113: Telephone service and Internet service are going to merge.
They already travel over the same circuits in many cases. With VoIP,
this is going to get carried right through to the end user. Cable TV
will take longer to merge, because of its huge bandwidth requirements,
but eventually all your information services are going to arrive on the
same pipe.
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keesan
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response 116 of 253:
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Feb 2 17:10 UTC 2006 |
In parts of the world where people don't all have telephones, telegraph
service is important. I got a few telegrams while living in Macedonia. The
dorm had one phone. The place where I rented a private room did not. Making
long distance calls required a long wait at the post office for the operator
to set it up. That has probably changed, but I doubt everyone has phone
service all over the world. Is there anyone in the US without phone service?
Telegrams were used as greeting cards, not for rapid communication, in the
US.
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marcvh
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response 117 of 253:
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Feb 2 17:13 UTC 2006 |
I would like to announce that there is a difference between a telegraph
and a telegram.
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