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Messages - Jalenharvey

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1246
Code: [Select]
Video Card:
    Driver:  Intel(R) 82865G Graphics Controller
    DirectX Driver Name:  ialmrnt5.dll
    Driver Version:  6.14.10.4396
    DirectX Driver Version:  6.14.10.4396
    Driver Date: 20 Sept 2005
    Desktop Color Depth: 32 bits per pixel
    Monitor Refresh Rate: 60 Hz
    DirectX Card: Intel(R) 82865G Graphics Controller
    VendorID:  0x8086
    DeviceID:  0x2572
    Number of Monitors:  1
    Number of Logical Video Cards:  1
    No SLI or Crossfire Detected
    Primary Display Resolution:  1024 x 768
    Desktop Resolution: 1024 x 768
    Primary Display Size: 12.60" x 9.45"  (15.75" diag)
                                            32.0cm x 24.0cm  (40.0cm diag)
    Primary Bus Type Not Detected
    Primary VRAM: 96 MB
    Supported MSAA Modes Not Detected
Procede to laugh at this fail video card

1247
Off Topic / Re: Post real life pictures of yourself.
« on: November 11, 2009, 04:32:05 PM »


dis is me

i don modle for jus any1 u no.

dis is jus 4 u guys

<33333
I thought you were a guy :l

1248
Off Topic / Re: Correct or Incorrect?
« on: November 10, 2009, 06:28:16 PM »

1249
Off Topic / Correct or Incorrect?
« on: November 10, 2009, 06:08:27 PM »
My answer:
incorrect
not saying it IS either of the answers. I heard of this at my school.

1251
Off Topic / Re: 2012
« on: November 10, 2009, 05:57:50 PM »
"With the turn of the new year, I found myself reflecting on the proximity of 2012, the end date of the Maya calendar. Discussion of this timing has been escalating rapidly for a number of years now, and not just in New Age circles. A great many internet sites and forums are dedicated to it. It is the main subject of Daniel Pinchbeck´s book, 2012 The Return of Quetzalcoatl (which I have yet to read), and a dozen other speculative tomes. Currently, John Major Jenkins and Carl Johan Calleman are slugging it out to see who will be the victorious visionary of the 2012 countdown.

This may be the apt moment for me to weigh in on this arcane subject. Apart from a tentative essay for phenomenamagazine.com, I´ve kept mum so far. More and more of late, friends are asking me what I think about the "endtime" and what others like Jenkins and Calleman are saying about it. Those who know something of my work in astral phylogenetics (Quest for the Zodiac), stellar mythology, the World Ages, and precessional timing (Dendera Decoded), are curious about my views. Having spent a good many years in the practice of skywatching and investigation into the Zodiacal timeframe and various schemes of long-term chronology—Hindu, Egyptian, Tibetan, Maya, Aztec, Persian, Mithraic, Gurdjieffian, theosophical, anthroposophical, and others I forget—I feel almost obliged to comment on this trendy topic.

I will dispense with a pungent Lashian overview of the World Ages (he says, barely restraining the urge to salivate heavily). What follows is a short description of the Maya Long Count, with some thoughts about what might be facing us in the countdown to the endtime." -Unknown


1252
Off Topic / Re: Cleverbot - Funniest freaking thing I've ever seen.
« on: November 10, 2009, 05:49:09 PM »
This one cracks me up.

User: *takes off your shirt, and we both land in bed*.


Cleverbot: That feels nice.


1253
Off Topic / Re: Cleverbot - Funniest freaking thing I've ever seen.
« on: November 10, 2009, 05:31:00 PM »
User: No, it's 30.


Cleverbot: Hell 37.


User: Why did they name you Cleverbot if you don't even know the simplest of math problems?


Cleverbot: My name isn't Cleverbot...


User: No. It isnt. Change subject please.


Cleverbot: Not OK. You asked me what should you sing, now start singing.

User: Do you like hot chicks?

Cleverbot: Of course.

User: Boobies.

Cleverbot: *screams and runs around*.


1254
Forum Games / Re: What is the person above you avatar saying?
« on: November 10, 2009, 04:51:30 PM »
coca cola

1255
Off Topic / Re: Thanksgiving Avatars?
« on: November 10, 2009, 04:48:42 PM »
Most stories of Thanksgiving history start with the harvest celebration of the pilgrims and the indians that took place in the autumn of 1621. Although they did have a three-day feast in celebration of a good harvest, and the local indians did participate, this "first Thanksgiving" was not a holiday, simply a gathering. There is little evidence that this feast of thanks led directly to our modern Thanksgiving Day holiday. Thanksgiving can, however, be traced back to 1863 when Pres. Lincoln became the first president to proclaim Thanksgiving Day. The holiday has been a fixture of late November ever since.

However, since most school children are taught that the first Thanksgiving was held in 1621 with the pilgrims and indians, let us take a closer look at just what took place leading up to that event, and then what happened in the centuries afterward that finally gave us our modern Thanksgiving.

The Pilgrims who sailed to this country aboard the Mayflower were originally members of the English Separatist Church (a Puritan sect). They had earlier fled their home in England and sailed to Holland (The Netherlands) to escape religious persecution. There, they enjoyed more religious tolerance, but they eventually became disenchanted with the Dutch way of life, thinking it ungodly. Seeking a better life, the Separatists negotiated with a London stock company to finance a pilgrimage to America. Most of those making the trip aboard the Mayflower were non-Separatists, but were hired to protect the company's interests. Only about one-third of the original colonists were Separatists.
The Pilgrims set ground at Plymouth Rock on December 11, 1620. Their first winter was devastating. At the beginning of the following fall, they had lost 46 of the original 102 who sailed on the Mayflower. But the harvest of 1621 was a bountiful one. And the remaining colonists decided to celebrate with a feast -- including 91 Indians who had helped the Pilgrims survive their first year. It is believed that the Pilgrims would not have made it through the year without the help of the natives. The feast was more of a traditional English harvest festival than a true "thanksgiving" observance. It lasted three days.

Governor William Bradford sent "four men fowling" after wild ducks and geese. It is not certain that wild turkey was part of their feast. However, it is certain that they had venison. The term "turkey" was used by the Pilgrims to mean any sort of wild fowl. 

Another modern staple at almost every Thanksgiving table is pumpkin pie. But it is unlikely that the first feast included that treat. The supply of flour had been long diminished, so there was no bread or pastries of any kind. However, they did eat boiled pumpkin, and they produced a type of fried bread from their corn crop. There was also no milk, cider, potatoes, or butter. There was no domestic cattle for dairy products, and the newly-discovered potato was still considered by many Europeans to be poisonous. But the feast did include fish, berries, watercress, lobster, dried fruit, clams, venison, and plums.

This "thanksgiving" feast was not repeated the following year. Many years passed before the event was repeated. It wasn't until June of 1676 that another Day of thanksgiving was proclaimed. On June 20 of that year the governing council of Charlestown, Massachusetts, held a meeting to determine how best to express thanks for the good fortune that had seen their community securely established. By unanimous vote they instructed Edward Rawson, the clerk, to proclaim June 29 as a day of thanksgiving. It is notable that this thanksgiving celebration probably did not include the Indians, as the celebration was meant partly to be in recognition of the colonists' recent victory over the "heathen natives," (see the proclamation).

 A hundred years later, in October of 1777 all 13 colonies joined in a thanksgiving celebration. It also commemorated the patriotic victory over the British at Saratoga. But it was a one-time affair.

George Washington proclaimed a National Day of Thanksgiving in 1789, although some were opposed to it. There was discord among the colonies, many feeling the hardships of a few pilgrims did not warrant a national holiday. And later, President Thomas Jefferson opposed the idea of having a day of thanksgiving.

It was Sarah Josepha Hale, a magazine editor, whose efforts eventually led to what we recognize as Thanksgiving. Hale wrote many editorials championing her cause in her Boston Ladies' Magazine, and later, in Godey's Lady's Book. Finally, after a 40-year campaign of writing editorials and letters to governors and presidents, Hale's obsession became a reality when, in 1863, President Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November as a national day of Thanksgiving.

 Thanksgiving was proclaimed by every president after Lincoln. The date was changed a couple of times, most recently by Franklin Roosevelt, who set it up one week to the next-to-last Thursday in order to create a longer Christmas shopping season. Public uproar against this decision caused the president to move Thanksgiving back to its original date two years later. And in 1941, Thanksgiving was finally sanctioned by Congress as a legal holiday, as the fourth Thursday in November.

 

1256
Off Topic / Re: Thanksgiving Avatars?
« on: November 10, 2009, 04:43:22 PM »
get ready for a story kids /Double toast.

1257
Off Topic / Re: Thanksgiving Avatars?
« on: November 10, 2009, 04:39:17 PM »
Done with mine, after Thanksgiving i'll switch back. i have my old one saved still.

1258
Off Topic / Re: Cleverbot - Funniest freaking thing I've ever seen.
« on: November 10, 2009, 04:29:48 PM »
Lol mine cracked me up so hard



1259
Off Topic / Re: You laugh, you lose V.2.1 (NEW)
« on: November 03, 2009, 05:15:24 PM »
double toast

1260
Off Topic / Re: You laugh, you lose V.2.1 (NEW)
« on: November 03, 2009, 04:52:25 PM »

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