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Nenad Milicevic

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Nov 2, 2007, 3:41:20 AM11/2/07
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Milenko Kindl

Chris Bergin and his brother, Ben, were jamming along to "Message in a
Bottle" on the videogame Guitar Hero 2 during a storm in June when a
bright light flashed and a thunderclap shook their house in Wilton,
Conn.

The lightning strike nearby triggered a power surge that snaked
through the house's electrical system to Mr. Bergin's PlayStation 2
then traveled through the wiring to the plastic guitar controller
pressed up against his stomach.

"I just remember falling to the ground and looking at my brother
'cause he was on the ground, too," says the 15-year-old Mr. Bergin.
The two brothers weren't hurt, but their PlayStation was fried, along
with their laptop computer, television set, cable and phone wiring and
ceiling fan.

More from The Wall Street Journal Online:

· Economists Fear Weak Demand for Homeownership Will Fester

· When It Takes a Miracle to Sell Your House

· Consumers Face Record Heating-Oil Bills

Lightning safety experts, endorsing common sense, have long advised
that indoors is the safest place to be during an electrical storm. The
National Weather Service recently adopted the slogan, "When thunder
roars, go indoors."

But the spread of high-tech devices, including laptops and videogames,
means there are new ways in which people can suffer injuries or
property losses, even in the relative safety of their homes. A
division of Sony Corp., Sony Computer Entertainment America, the maker
of PlayStation products, says it hadn't heard of incidents like this
and says its devices come with safety instructions about lightning.
Activision Inc., which makes the Guitar Hero game, advocates staying
off electronics during storms.

Mark Earley, chief electrical engineer at the National Fire Protection
Association, says the new lightning safety slogan should be modified
slightly: "When thunder roars, stay indoors -- and read a book."

rsai...@gmail.com

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Nov 2, 2007, 4:26:40 AM11/2/07
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On Nov 2, 12:41 pm, Nenad Milicevic <serbian_sswaf...@trashymail.com>
wrote:

send me tech. inform. and photos

Irish Mike

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Nov 2, 2007, 11:44:32 AM11/2/07
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I read your post twice and have one question . What the fuck are you talking
about? You sound like a first year student at the Russ G. school of twisted
grammar and mangled communication.

Irish Mike

"Nenad Milicevic" <serbian_...@trashymail.com> wrote in message
news:1193989280.2...@z24g2000prh.googlegroups.com...

Don Stockbauer

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Nov 2, 2007, 1:29:35 PM11/2/07
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On Nov 2, 9:44 am, "Irish Mike" <mjos...@ameritech.net> wrote:
> I read your post twice and have one question . What the fuck are you talking
> about? You sound like a first year student at the Russ G. school of twisted
> grammar and mangled communication.
>
> Irish Mike
>
> "Nenad Milicevic" <serbian_sswaf...@trashymail.com> wrote in message

He prolly listened to "Communication Breakdown" by Led Zeppelin a few
too many times.

Robert Lieblich

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Nov 2, 2007, 7:22:47 PM11/2/07
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Don Stockbauer wrote:
>
> On Nov 2, 9:44 am, "Irish Mike" <mjos...@ameritech.net> wrote:

> > I read your post twice and have one question . What the fuck are you talking
> > about? You sound like a first year student at the Russ G. school of twisted
> > grammar and mangled communication.

[ ... ]

> He prolly listened to "Communication Breakdown" by Led Zeppelin a few
> too many times.

Haven't you guys figured out the the OP is simply spamming random
newsgroups with stuff he takes from websites in violation of
copyright? He doesn't seem to be interested in replies, and he sure
as hell isn't going to answer you.

John Holmes

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Nov 3, 2007, 12:30:45 AM11/3/07
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Robert Lieblich wrote:
>
> Haven't you guys figured out the the OP is simply spamming random
> newsgroups with stuff he takes from websites in violation of
> copyright? He doesn't seem to be interested in replies, and he sure
> as hell isn't going to answer you.

What's even worse is that groups...@google.com doesn't accept
complaints about this stuff any more. If you forward one of those
messages as an attachment to an abuse complaint, they bounce it as spam.
And the bounce comes not from that address, but from
google.externa...@news.corp.google.com .

There ought to be some kind of law against running a news server without
a responsive abuse complaint address. And what has News Corp got to do
with it?

--
Regards
John
for mail: my initials plus a u e
at tpg dot com dot au


clams casino

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Nov 3, 2007, 5:53:23 AM11/3/07
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John Holmes wrote:

>
> What's even worse is that groups...@google.com doesn't accept
> complaints about this stuff any more. If you forward one of those
> messages as an attachment to an abuse complaint, they bounce it as
> spam. And the bounce comes not from that address, but from
> google.externa...@news.corp.google.com .
>
> There ought to be some kind of law against running a news server
> without a responsive abuse complaint address. And what has News Corp
> got to do with it?
>

How ironic. The primary vehicle of newsgroup spam refuses to hear about it.

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