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I don't appreciate you posting my work e-mail address on a public forum.
I'm only supposed to use it in work-related contexts - I'm supposed to
avoid giving the impression that I'm speaking in this forum as a
representative of my employer. Also, you've just significantly increased
the amount of spam I'll have to wade through.
> >> >> >> On Sat, 19 May 2001 11:04:48 -0400 "James Kuyper Jr."
>
> >> >> >> <kuy...@wizard.net> wrote:
>
> >> >> >> >Why do you keep posting this message on comp.std.c; as far
>
> >> >> >> >as I can tell, it's completely irrelevant to that newsgroup.
>
> >> >> >> >
>
> >> >> >> Big Bertha Thing reason
>
> >> >> >
>
> >> >> >I'm sorry; I can't make head nor tail of your "reason".
>
> >> >> Hi James,
Yes - I did indeed make the mistake of engage in an off-line
conversation with this guy to try and convince him to stop pestering us.
I was left with the impression that the annoyance is deliberate; that we
are being pestered as punishment because we're supposedly miscreants of
some horrible kind; however, his messages were sufficiently incoherent
that I can't even be sure of that.
> >> >> Your wizard address does not work, even though you use it on usenet.
As most of you who care to try it will discover, my home e-mail address
does indeed work. My home ISP's anti-spam filter may be the reason why
he couldn't get through, and had to use my work address instead (which I
didn't give him - I presume he found it through some search engine).
-----------------------------------------------
FREE! The World's Best Email Address @email.com
Reserve your name now at http://www.email.com
No, he didn't. I didn't either. *nbci* did it.
Now, they may have done it because I sent them documentation that
you were *spamming*.
As long as you are spamming, we will keep getting your accounts nuked. When
you put up a web page, and don't spam for it, you will get traffic and your
page will not get nuked.
>4. The opposition did it. (3rd Battle of Cyberspace)
>5. You do not believe the opposition exists.
There's lots of opposition, but we don't care what you're saying, we just
care where you're saying it.
>9. There is no problem my end.
Yes, there is. You're a spammer scumbag.
>10. A rocket scientist counts double.
>Thank you,
>Tony Lance
>tony...@email.com
[email.com: He's using this address as part of a campaign of regular spamming
of most of usenet.]
-s
--
Copyright 2001, all wrongs reversed. Peter Seebach / se...@plethora.net
C/Unix wizard, Pro-commerce radical, Spam fighter. Boycott Spamazon!
Consulting & Computers: http://www.plethora.net/
From Bibliography of Pastures.(Optional)
The preface from
An Elementary Treatment of Gyroscopes and Similar Spinning Tops
by Crabtree 1909
Classic Cartoon and animated cartoon of
Animal Farm
by George Orwell
There are many different support groups out there.
The most they need is a cardboard-cut-out person,
with a pair of ears attached. The work gives it flesh,
blood, lungs and air to breath, grow and mature,
to a well rounded individual.
Such as these do not sit in the councils of state,
but upon them is the city built and without them it cannot stand.
Thank you,
Please do it again Peter!
Cheers,
Herbert
--
Wer bist du, ungezaehltes Frauenzimmer? Du bist - bist du? - Die Leute sagen,
du waerest - lass sie sagen, sie wissen nicht, wie der Kirchturm steht. -- K.S.
-=-=- -=-=-=-
Herbert Martin Dietze -=-=-=- http://www.fh-wedel.de/~herbert -=-=-
Some people think that Big Bertha is less suitable for comp.std.c,
than for OUSA Classical Particle Conference.
Have they heard the long name for CP Conf?
High Energy Particle Physics Rock Hard Science With a Fringe
Perspective.
They think that is a better place to put Big Bertha.
They must be besides themselves, which proves the thing.
<BODY>
<H4>The Te Deum For the Victory at Lens</H4>
<P>
All that commotion which Queen Henrietta had observed,
and the cause of which she vainly sought, was occasioned by
the tidings of the victory of Lens, of which M. le Prince had
made the Duc de Chatillon the bearer. The Duke had distinguished
himself greatly in the affair; and he was, besides, ordered to
suspend from the ceiling of Notre Dame twenty-two standards
taken from the Lorrainers and the Spaniards.
<BR><BR>
This news was decisive, and at once determined the quarrel begun
with the Parliament in favour of the Court. All the imposts so
summarily registered, and which the Parliament had opposed, had
always been demanded for the ostensible purpose of upholding the
honour of France, and with the fortuitous hope of beating the
enemy. But since Nordlingen, the army had only met with reverses;
and the Parliament had therefore openly questioned Mazarin
respecting the victories so often promised, yet always
deferred. Now, however, the troops had at last been engaged;
they had triumphed and their triumph was complete. So everyone
understood that this was a double victory for the Court - a
victory in the interior as well as on the frontiers; so much so
that even the young King, on hearing the news, exclaimed:
"Ah! gentlemen of the Parliament, we shall see what you will say
now!"
<BR><BR>
Whereupon the Queen pressed to her bosom the royal child, whose
haughty and indomitable sentiments accorded so well with her
own. A council was held the same evening, to which Marshal de la
Meilleraie and M.de Villeroy had been summoned as adherants of
Mazarin; Chavigny and Serguier, because they hated the Parliament;
and Guitaut and Comminges, because of their devotion to the
Queen.
<BR><BR>
The decision of the council had not transpired. It was only
known that on the following Sunday a Te Deum would be chanted
at Notre Dame to celebrate the victory of Lens.
<BR><BR>
On the following Sunday, therefore, the Parisians awoke in high
spirits. A Te Deum was, at that time, a grand affair; this kind
of ceremony had not then been abused, and it was effective.
The sun seemed to share in the festival; it rose brilliantly
and gilded the dark towers of the metropolis, already filled
with an immense multitude of people; the most obscure streets
of the city had assumed a holiday air, and all along the quays,
endless throngs of citizens and artisans, of women and children,
were seen going towards Notre Dame, like a river rushing back
to its source.
<BR><BR>
The shops were deserted, the houses were shut; every one wished
to see the young King and his mother, and the famous Cardinal
Mazarin, whom they hated so much that no one liked to miss
seeing him.
<BR><BR>
Moreover, the greatest liberty reigned amid this vast assemblage.
Every tone of opinion was openly expressed, and, so to speak,
rang insurrection even as the thousand bells of the Parisian
churches rang for the Te Deum. The police being under the control
of the city itself, nothing disturbed the concert of universal
hatred, or froze bitter words in slanderous mouths.
</P>
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If you see someone slogging away, but doing it all wrong.
Please remember, a great effort, with no results,
is worth more than a great result with no effort.
The first is purchased at great cost and the latter,
in terms of cost, is worthless.
Tony Lance
tony...@email.com
If it is not broken, do not fix it.
Some parts of the project may need repairing.
If you cannot fix it, with a good suggestion,
then do not take it apart, in the first place,
with a bad one.
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