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By JAMES RISEN
ASHINGTON, Jan. 4 Ñ President Clinton has issued an order reorganizing the
government's counterintelligence efforts, creating a new czar with a broad mandate to
identify potential security threats and vulnerabilities, administration officials said
today.
The directive, signe
On Thu, 4 Jan 2001, Bill Stewart wrote:
> More of the real documentation is hidden in the
> parent project's pages -
> http://endeavour.cs.berkeley.edu/presentations.html
> has Microsoft Powerpoint presentations with the good stuff.
The list of Project People only has one person on "cr
At 12:50 PM 1/4/01 -0500, sunder wrote:
>http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/15779.html
>
>
>NSA runs best fab in world
Commercial fabs are enormously constrained by profitability:
you could build huge chips except the yield drops, because a single
error usually trashes the chip. The NSA doe
Title: Gasoline
REDUCE
GASOLINE & DIESEL COSTS
Take a bite out of high
gasoline and diesel prices. Paying less at the pump is every consumer's dream.
This is not an additive that you have to keep buying or a club that you
must join!
We can't lower the cost
of gasoline and diesel but
>Jim Choate <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>>http://slashdot.org (it's a vector to Forbes).
At 09:14 AM 1/3/01 -0500, Roy Silvernail wrote:
>
> No, that's Slashdot.
Yup. It's the URL for the front page, and articles roll off
the bottom as new ones are posted, as Jim knows.
However, the project ha
At 01:08 PM 1/4/01 -0500, Trei, Peter wrote:
>2. The 'storage heater'. The CEGB (central electricity
>generating board) rates were far lower at night
>than during the day or evening.
Interestingly, this time-dependency has also forced other technology.
Some years ago, the fuzzy logic people we
At 05:29 AM 1/4/01 -0500, Ken Brown wrote:
>I *guess* "kitchen"
sharp lad
>because in the UK "stove" is an old-fashioned name
>for a cooking device, stuff we used before the invention of gas and
>electric cookers (in fact, before the invention of the cast-iron
>range).
Yes, artifact to cook
At 06:46 AM 1/4/01 -0500, Steve Mynott wrote:
>
>I think "furnace" is "boiler" in English.
>
A modern furnace might burn oil or natural gas and pump hot air into rooms.
An electric -> thermal device might be called a heater.
A boiler implies a working liquid, doesn't it?
Anyway these were Americ
At 11:48 PM 1/3/01 -0500, graham compton,Jr. wrote:
> my dog was poisoned by ricin. do you know the antidote? Thanks, GSC Jr
There isn't one. His ribosomes have ceased functioning. No more protein
synthesis. Bummer.
Original Message
Subject: End-2000 Alert: John Ashcroft, Clemencies, Hemp Regs
Date: Thu, 28 Dec 2000 13:43:09 -0500
X-Loop: openpgp.net
From: DRCNet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*
Craig McKie wrote:
>
> Americans do not have electric kettles within the intended British
> meaning. They tend not to know what you are talking about. The product
> is absent from the shelves at Target and Walmart.
>
Really? I bought my electric kettle at Target, although I bought
my son'
Obligatory cypher tie-in: Remember the Lava Lamp used to create
random numbers? Bubbles in a boiling liquid might also be suitable.
Electric kettles are common in the UK and Canada. Black and Decker
makes a model (in 1/2 quart and 1-1/2 quart sizes) available in
some department stores, kitchen
On Thu, 4 Jan 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Great Topic!
>
> Steve Mynott wrote:
>
> > Ken Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > On a tangent a friend claimed Americans didn't have electric kettles
> > for boiling water.
> >
> > Can anyone confirm whether this is true?
> >
> I have never
Great Topic!
Steve Mynott wrote:
> Ken Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> On a tangent a friend claimed Americans didn't have electric kettles
> for boiling water.
>
> Can anyone confirm whether this is true?
>
I have never seen an electric kettle for boiling water for tea.
Why boil water f
Central heating did not develop until well after
the US and Britain split. There was little
technology transfer, so it's not too suprising that
the terminology is different.
When I moved to Britain in the late 60's, central
heating was still rare enough that it was noted in
real estate listin
On Thu, 4 Jan 2001, Steve Mynott wrote:
>Ken Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>On a tangent a friend claimed Americans didn't have electric kettles
>for boiling water.
>
>Can anyone confirm whether this is true?
sigh. Americans tend not to call something a "kettle" unless it's
large, at
Steve Mynott wrote:
> Ken Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> On a tangent a friend claimed Americans didn't have electric kettles
> for boiling water.
>
> Can anyone confirm whether this is true?
>
We have. I do.
>
> > electric cookers (in fact, before the invention of the cast-iron
> >
Ken Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> were American. But, not being American I still have no real idea what
> the expected answer to
>
> > furnace:basement::stove:__
I had no idea either.
> I *guess* "kitchen" because in the UK "stove" is an old-fashioned name
> for a cooking devi
I read. I even read American stuff sometimes. In the last week I've
read all or some of 5 books about architecture & housing. Two of them
were American. But, not being American I still have no real idea what
the expected answer to
> furnace:basement::stove:__
is.
I *guess* "kitchen
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