Original artist: Beatles
Remake artist: Joe Cocker
Song: With A Little Help From my Friends
Posts by Erich
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63
The best REMAKE of all times....
by LDH inoriginal artist: the temptations.
remake artist: george michael.
song: papa was a rolling stone.
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Erich
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12
Hot Anti-Aging News!
by metatron inagain, get a subscription to life extension magazine!.
first, some important quotes:.
"human immortality is achievable" - dr. ronald katz,m.d.. president, american academy of anti-aging medicine.
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Erich
Yes, I think this is NO SCIENCE FICTION AT ALL.
My opinion is the bible`s prophecy could be fulfilled by scientific efforts without getting aware of the fact they are tools in God`s hand.
But the greatest problems are the following:
(and I tried in vain - desperately! - to put it in the minds of most of all forum-members here for months and weeks):
a) The proven view to achieve earthly IMMORTALITY (already the prospect! It did not happen yet! ) might DESTROY all kinds of RELIGIONS ("Babylon the Great")
There would be no additional need of any "UN-fight" against those religions - the prospect is sufficient...!
b) The proven prospect for earthly immortality DESTROYS the world economy TOTALLY. Why?
One reason is, that all pharmaceutic-, biotech- and gentech-companies will try to get the PATENT RIGHTS for the TECHNOLOGY providing endless life. If indeed one company has got the exclusive rights, they can call for the highest price for the "pill" you may imagine. A morderous fight for licenses, co-rights and franchises would begin, a tremendous swirl, that brings all other sort of business to a stillstand...
The other reason is, that only the RICH PART of mankind could utilize the "technology" (these are about 5 - 10%; not more). Most people have got no money to buy the "pill for immortality". These people would get an ENORMOUS HATRED against those part of mankind which would be able to pay the price. The terroristic efforts would increase dramatically - and the issue, finally, would be "HARMAGEDON. -
14
armageddon
by Realist inquick question: .
they say 1914 is the date when the end begins or something like that?
they also say that within the lifetime of that generation armageddon will come.
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Erich
realist:
Some scientists said the utmost life-time of presently living people is increasing permanently and exponentially. So they maybe could have got right with "the 1914-generation".... -
1
Greenhouse gas destroys the planet`s climate
by Erich ingreenhouse gas emission destroy the planet`s climate:.
from noaa magazine: .
november 2001 - january 2002 warmest on record in u.s.;.
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Erich
Greenhouse gas emission destroy the planet`s climate:
From NOAA magazine:
NOVEMBER 2001 - JANUARY 2002 WARMEST ON RECORD IN U.S.;
GLOBAL TEMPERATURES WARMEST ON RECORD IN JANUARYFebruary 21, 2002 — The contiguous United States experienced record warmth during the November 2001 through January 2002 three-month period, scientists at NOAA's National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C., said today. The January global temperature was the warmest in the 123-year surface record. Using the world's largest weather database, NOAA scientists calculated conditions for the past three months.
"Unusual warmth persisted across a large part of the contiguous United States during the past three months resulting in the warmest November through January since national records began in 1895," said Jay Lawrimore, chief of NOAA's Climate Monitoring Branch at the Asheville center. The preliminary nationally averaged temperature was 39.94 F (4.41 C), which was 4.3 F (2.4 C) above the 1895-2001 long-term mean. The previous record for the same three-month period was established in 1999-2000. Since 1976 the nationally averaged November-January temperature has risen at a rate of 1.2 F (0.7 C) per decade.
During the most recent three-month period, much above-average warmth stretched from as far west as Montana and Oklahoma to the East Coast. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Massachusetts and Vermont had their warmest November to January, and as many as 18 states from the Plains to the Northeast recorded their second warmest November-January.
In that region numerous daily high-temperature records were established and the warmth coincided with below-normal snowfall. A lack of snow cover contributed to short-term drought conditions in the northern Plains. Absence of snow has affected many winter festivals in the northern United States.
The three-month Residential Energy Demand Temperature Index (November-January) was the lowest on record, reflecting reduced energy demand due to the anomalously warm temperatures. This index, which has values from zero to 100, measures year-to-year fluctuations in residential energy demand that result from variations in temperature in the contiguous United States, especially those that occur in the most heavily populated areas. An index value of 100, the greatest temperature-related energy demand for the November-January period, occurred in 1976-77, while the past three months registered an index value of zero.
Although precipitation was near normal nationwide from November to January, an area of below normal precipitation stretched from Florida to Maine, worsening drought conditions along the East Coast. Connecticut and Maine experienced their driest November-January on record and nine other states (New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, Virginia and South Carolina) were much drier than normal.
At the end of January, moderate to severe drought conditions were widespread from southern Georgia to Maine. Conservation was encouraged in New York City as reservoirs were filled to less than half of capacity. Drought continued in much of the Inter-Mountain West while abundant rain and snowfall along the West Coast alleviated drought in much of Washington, Oregon and Northern California. Severe to extreme drought covered approximately 18 percent of the contiguous United States at the end of January.
January 2002 ranked as the seventh warmest January in the 1895 to present record. The preliminary nationally averaged temperature was 35.40 F (1.89 C), which was 4.5 F (2.5 C) above the long-term mean. Above-average warmth occurred in all but eight of the 48 contiguous states, with near-normal temperatures occurring in Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Oregon and California. The nationally averaged precipitation total was near-normal with the most anomalously dry conditions in the Northern Plains and Southwest. Temperatures in Alaska were 11.21 F (6.23 C) above the 1961-1990 average in January, the ninth warmest January on record.
Global:
Anomalous warmth covered most land areas of the globe in January, with monthly mean temperatures more than 7 F (4 C) above average throughout large parts of North America and central Asia. The widespread nature, persistence and magnitude of the anomalies in the Northern Hemisphere contributed to an average land surface anomaly that was 2.43 F (1.35 C) above the 1880-2001 long-term mean (based on preliminary data), more than 0.6 F (0.3 C) greater than the previous record warm January.Warming in the equatorial waters of the central and eastern Pacific occurred in January, indicative of a likely transition from neutral to El Niño conditions. This contributed to the third warmest January for global sea surface temperatures, 0.74 F (0.41 C) above average. The warmest January occurred in 1998 during the most recent El Niño episode.
The combination of record warm land temperatures and near-record sea surface temperatures led to the warmest January on record for both land and ocean surfaces combined, which was 1.24 F (0.69 C) above average and 0.09 F (0.05 C) warmer than January 1998.
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11
Will Cloning Disprove the Resurrection?
by metatron inok, we take a skin cell from you.. we use its nucleus to create a clone - of you.. we train it in all your memories and abilities.
we use "false memory" techniques to convince the clone.
that its memories are real.. is it you?
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Erich
I repeat this in German, hoping J.J. is able to understand..;-)
Joseph Joachim schrieb:
es existiert kein "ich" außerhalb unserer neuronalen Verbindungen im Gehirn.
Absolut korrekt gedacht, J.J.(Ausnahme wäre: man könnte die biologischen neuronalen Verbindungen durch andere materielle oder immaterielle Gegenstücke ersetzen).
Auferstehung hat überhaupt nichts zu tun mit "Cloning".
Viel eher mit ZEITREISEN und mit "Springen von einem Universum in ein anderes Parallel-Universum"), siehe dazu tread:
http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/forum/thread.asp?id=21791&site=3Ich denke, dies wird in etwa 400 - 500 Jahren physikalisch und technologisch möglich sein...
mfg Erich
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11
Will Cloning Disprove the Resurrection?
by metatron inok, we take a skin cell from you.. we use its nucleus to create a clone - of you.. we train it in all your memories and abilities.
we use "false memory" techniques to convince the clone.
that its memories are real.. is it you?
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Erich
Joseph Joachim wrote:
There's no "you" appart from your neural connections.
Absolutely correct idea, J.J.
(Exception: if one could replace biological neuronal connections through other material or immaterial counterparts)
Cloning does not have anything to do with resurrection.Rather with TIME TRAVEL and with "jumping from one universe to another parallel universe", see
http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/forum/thread.asp?id=21791&site=3
Think will be physically and technically possible in about 400 - 500 years. -
13
Eternal Life on Earth?
by Flaming Seraphim inhey do you guys really believe that we are going to live on a paradise earth forever and ever?
if so, count me out.
there is no way i want to spend the rest of eternity confined in physical body on this planet!
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Erich
DazedAndConfused wrote:
Yet, the JW's state, "there is no Hell" but have no qualms about saying "If you do not do what God wants......you will not live forever in a Paradise Earth" ..What the f*** is the difference?
I think you should get the chance to find out what is the difference at least for one or two years... Ask some prisoners who survived Hitler`s concentration camps... Maybe they can give advice to you..Use your mind, man.
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Eternal Life on Earth?
by Flaming Seraphim inhey do you guys really believe that we are going to live on a paradise earth forever and ever?
if so, count me out.
there is no way i want to spend the rest of eternity confined in physical body on this planet!
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Erich
Flaming Seraphim wrote:
There is no way I want to spend the rest of eternity confined in physical body on this planet! How ghastly! How absolutely BORING!
A new world order, a new age where is ETERNAL LIFE given will take place on this planet independent of my will or your will or the will of the WTS or the will of any other part of human society.
It already get forced through scientific advance alone.And first of all, it is the will of a universal ruler called JHVH /YHWH.
In the new world order (what we are waiting for) we certainly have the possibility to find new extreme interesting technological skills nobody knows in the present.
e.g. think at what is discussed in
http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/forum/thread.asp?id=21791&site=3
Maybe we have the opportunity the undertake travels in space and time we cannot imagine at all.
If - in the new world system - you feel, that eternal life is too boring for you, then it is no problem at all to change your boring personal circumstances. -
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A Patent Desaster: British Telecom sues the whole
by Erich inbritish telecom sue the whole world .
british telecom (bt) now obviously goes ahead with their patent on "hyperlinks" they are claiming for themselves.
next monday begins the hearing of 16 us-internet-providers (mainly podigry) before the district court in white plains (n.y.).
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Erich
VM44:
I would be interested in seeing what the claims are in
the British patent.
United States Patent 4,873,662
Sargent October 10, 1989Information handling system and terminal apparatus therefor
Inventors: Sargent; Desmond J. (Felixstowe, GB2)
Assignee: The Post Office (GB)
Appl. No.: 178307
Filed: August 15, 1980What is claimed is:
1. A digital information storage, retrieval and display system comprising:
a central computer means in which plural blocks of information are stored at respectively corresponding locations, each of which locations is designated by a predetermined address therein by means of which a block can be selected, each of said blocks comprising a first portion containing information for display and a second portion containing information not for display but including the complete address for each of plural other blocks of information;
plural remote terminal means, each including (a) modem means for effecting input/output digital data communication with said central computer means via the telephone lines of a telephone network, (b) local memory for locally storing digital data representing at least the first portion of the selected block of information received via said modem means from the central computer, (c) display means for visually displaying such a locally stored first portion of a block of information and (d) key pad means connected to communicate data to at least said modem means for manual entry of keyed digital data; and
further memory means being provided as a part of said central computer means for receiving and storing said second portion of the block of information selected by a particular terminal means in response to the selection of the block and when its respective first portion is transmitted to that terminal means for display, said central computer means utilizing keyed digital data from that particular terminal means of less extent than any one of said complete addresses for another block of information but nevertheless uniquely indicative of one of the complete addresses contained in said portion of the block of information which contains the first portion then being displayed by that particular terminal means for selectively accessing the part of said further memory means associated with that particular terminal means and for supplying the complete address of the next block of information which is to be retrieved for that particular terminal means and utilized for display purposes at that terminal means.
2. A system as in claim 1 wherein the second part of a block of information includes a representation of the monetary charge to be made in respect of supplying such information for display from the central computer means which also includes means for accumulating charges derived from the second parts of such supplied blocks and for associating the charges with the terminal apparatus to which the first parts of such blocks were transmitted.
3. A digital information storage, retrieval and display system comprising:
a central computer means in which plural blocks of information are stored at respectively corresponding locations each of which locations is designated by a predetermined address therein by means of which a block can be selected, each of said blocks comprising a first portion containing information for display and a second portion containing information not for display but including the complete address for each of plural other blocks of information;
plural remote terminal means, each including (a) modem means for effecting input/output digital data communication with said central computer means via the telephone lines of a telephone network, (b) local memory means for locally storing digital data representing at least the first portion of the selected block of information received via said modem means from the central computer and for processing digital data, (c) display means for visually displaying such a locally stored first portion of a block of information and (d) keypad means connected to communicate data to at least said local memory means for manual entry of keyed digital data; and
further memory means being provided as a part of said local memory means at each of said remote terminal means for receiving and storing said second portion of the selected block of information in response to the selection of the block and when its respective first portion is transmitted thereto, said local memory means utilizing keyed digital data of less extent than any one of said complete addresses for another block of information but nevertheless uniquely indicative of one of the complete addresses contained in said second portion of the block of information which contains the first portion then being displayed for selectively accessing said further memory means and for supplying data to be transmitted by said modem means and indicative of the complete address of the next block of information which is to be retrieved and utilized for display purposes.
4. A system as in claim 3 wherein the second part of a block of information includes a representation of the monetary charge to be made in respect of supplying such information for display from the central computer means which also includes means for accumulating charges derived from the second parts of such supplied blocks and for associating the charges with the terminal apparatus to which the first parts of such blocks were transmitted.
5. A terminal apparatus for use in a digital information storage, retrieval and display system having a central computer and a plurality of remote terminal apparatuses providing access via telephone lines to information stored in the central computer as plural blocks of information, each said block of information being stored at a respectively corresponding location designated by a predetermined unique address by means of which single address that complete block of information can be selected, each of said blocks comprising a first portion containing information for display at a remote terminal apparatus and a second portion containing information not for display but including the complete address for each of plural other stored blocks of information, said terminal apparatus comprising:
(a) modem means for effecting input/output digital data communications with said central computer via the telephone lines of a telephone network,
(b) local memory means linked to said modem means for locally storing digital data representing at least the first portion of the selected block of information received via said modem means from the central computer,
(c) display means coupled to said local memory means for visually displaying such a locally stored first portion of a block of information,
(d) keypad means coupled to at least one of said modem means and said local memory means for manual entry of keyed digital data,
(e) further memory means for receiving and storing said second portion of a selected block of information when its respective first portion is transmitted for display to the terminal means, and
(f) means coupled to said further memory means and to said keypad means for addressing such second portion stored in said further memory means using keypad digital data of less extent than any one of said complete addresses for another block of information to address a portion of the further memory means and cause a read-out portion of the further memory means to supply the complete address of the next block of information which is to be retrieved and utilized for display purposes, the thus obtained complete address being transmissible via the modem means to said central computer.
6. A terminal apparatus as in claim 5 including means responsive to information stored in the further memory means for modifying signals derived from the keypad means to produce the signals to be transmitted by the modem to a telephone line.
7. A terminal apparatus as in claim 5 including logic means responsive to data entered through the keypad means and the second portion then stored in the further memory means, the logic means having an output connected to the local memory means which logic and local memory means jointly cause the generation of a display dependent (a) on the data entered through the keypad means and (b) on the second portion then stored in the further memory means.
kind regards
erich -
4
A Patent Desaster: British Telecom sues the whole
by Erich inbritish telecom sue the whole world .
british telecom (bt) now obviously goes ahead with their patent on "hyperlinks" they are claiming for themselves.
next monday begins the hearing of 16 us-internet-providers (mainly podigry) before the district court in white plains (n.y.).
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Erich
British Telecom sue the whole world
British Telecom (BT) now obviously goes ahead with their patent on "Hyperlinks" they are claiming for themselves. Next Monday begins the hearing of 16 US-internet-providers (mainly Podigry) before the district court in White Plains (N.Y.). If BT wins the law suit, they possibly go to sue the whole world on patent infringements and compensations...You may ask: Who is the true inventor of the "Hypertext" : British Telecom... or ??
Here you have a classic case of total defection of the international patent policy:
British Telecom had a small employee (better said a "think-slave"), named Mr. D. Sargant. He invented HYPERTEXT during the 70ies. (Meanwhile he got retired). He went with his super-idea to his boss, the boss applied his invention for a patent, and the inventor did receive a fee of 1 Pound Sterling (the officially legally-permitted minimum-fee for inventions!). Years later, the patent got issued by some patent-offices. His bosses received the patent documents - but they forgot it in a drawer. Of course, they also forgot to ask the inventor, Mr. Sargant: what could we do with your invention? Where could we implement it? (They themselves were not enough competent to have an idea what to do with HYPERTEXT.. but to ask him: oh no, that would be very condescending...)
Now, the time went on, technology advanced too, and 10 years later in the brains of his bosses it began to dawn that this invention already got used in HTML-language for Internet. NOW they became very active and busy.. Like an elephant in a porcelain-store, they began to run to their lawyers. It was no miracle then, that after the first contact in the year 2000 many Internet-stocks came into troubles. This happened in May 2000 and was one of the triggers for the general decline of the NewEconomy stock market...
BUT DANGER !!! WITHOUT HYPERTEXT NO HTML-LANGUAGE, AND WITHOUT HTML NO MORE INTERNET… !