Saturday, November 26, 2005
Learning SPANISH is easy (Comped CD)
From: LanguageHelpers <rttsource@quite-eval.com>
Subject: Learning SPANISH is easy (Comped CD)
Date: Fri, 25 Nov 2005 20:19:57 CST
Dear Friends, If you cannot view the images in this message, enable images or visit here to see this newsletter.
![]()
![]()
By Jane Perrone / Blogs 04:00pmHarry of UK political blog Harry's Place has answered my call for details of other newspapers hosting blogs: The excellent little Italian centre-left newspaper Il Riformista, has been offering blogs to its readers and from its journalists for about two years now. They also, believe it or not, print a blog supplement in the paper once a month with the best material they have found on the sites. Thanks for that Harry ... more nominations of "blog friendly" papers from around the globe are welcome. Contemporaria This post was last changed at 04:00 PM, December 10 2004, at a time when the top headline on Guardian Unlimited was Plastics may harm unborn boys, and the top headline from the BBC was French EU vote battle nears end, and there were posts elsewhere tagged with these same keywords: The post was written by Jane Perrone. You can email the author at jane.perrone@guardian.co.uk Comments have been closed on this entry. We automatically close entries to new comments after 2 days to prevent comment spam, or we may have deemed this particular entry unsuitable for open comments. However, you can still make your opinion known by writing on your own weblog, and linking to this page: our system will pick it up.Storm warnings are posted despite two positive cosmic alignments happening in the afternoon and evening. Here's the low-down. The big problem is that the largest asteroid Ceres conjuncts the outermost planet Pluto in Sagittarius (5:24AM PST). Since Ceres has a lot to do with parent-child relationships, the need to nurture loved ones and elders, and productivity in work and labor, all of these areas are suspect and under ""attack"" for the entire day. Does a Ceres-Pluto union have to manifest as a disaster? Of course not! People have free will and the ability to keep optimistic despite setbacks, worries and hardships. However, it is wise to err on the side of caution here and be extra sensitive to all of those people - at home and work - who are near and dear to you. It wouldn't hurt to actually go out of your way to be extra kind and courteous. Be a good listener if an elder, shut-in, youngster or teenager has a major problem that needs to be explained. Adding complexity to the day is a void lunar cycle starting at 10:11AM PST and not ending until 10:59PM PST when the Moon shifts from Virgo to Libra. The good news arrives at 4:59PM PST (when Venus moves 72 degrees to Jupiter) and 8:58PM PST (while Pallas moves 60 degrees to Chiron). The Venus-Jupiter rapport is a blessing for anyone focused on arts, crafts, hobbies and educational endeavors. The Pallas-Chiron liaison is a goldmine for people working in the health, medical and spiritual fields. With the Moon in Virgo for most of the day and night, stock up on grains, cereals, seeds, nuts, herbs and vitamins. Make sure the little things in life are assisting you rather than becoming annoying roadblocks to success. you are at it. The bus has many cool items and features including: 15Kw Kubota generator 2500 watt inverter AquaHot for hot water and central heat with 3 thermostats 4 sinks Shower 3 low profile air conditioners aluminum wheels MC-9 front and rear cap 3 Televisions and VCRs How can I change my password? Question How can I change my password when I am logged into my Sportsline Account? Answer You can update or change your password I don't remember my Password, how do I retrieve it? Question Due to the security setup of our system, it is impossible to retrieve your current password as it is encrypted immediately after your account is updated. However, we can forward you a new password through our automated system by clicking here. Once you have received your automated password and wish to personalize or change it, then you may update your account through the website. Answer Due to the security setup of our system, it is impossible to retrieve your current password as it is encrypted immediately after your account is updated. However, we can forward you a new password through our automated system by clicking here. Once you have received your automated password and wish to personalize or change it, then you may update your account through the website. Need to make a reservation using Rapid Rewards Awards? Visit Rapid Rewards Awards Reservations. Need to make a reservation with a Rapid Rewards Companion Pass? Visit Rapid Rewards Companion Pass Reservations. UserName Password Forgot your password? Brooke, happy Thanksgiving. Yes, the reservations are at PF Changs for 8pm. Amanda is doing the decorations. And I have the cake all set, so I think we are good. I will give you a call this afternoon. I am busy busy busy cookin right now. What are you plans for today? Call me and if you want to come over for turkey and the rest of it. ----- Original Message ----- To: Elisa Peyton [elisapeyton @aol.com] From: Brooke Lucas [brookelucas22 @yahoo.com] Date: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 8:47 PM Subject: Kimberly 22nd Birthday Party Elisa, Good morning! Here is the finalized list of additional attendees, for Kims 22nd birthday party. Cant wait!! Let me know if you need any help with decorations or anthing else. 1. Savannah Harris 2. Leslie Brewer 3. Pam Nellis 4. Nancy Burke 5. Holly Vicks Cheers. See you Saturday night. The restaurant where we have reservations is PF Changs in Winter Park, right? Talk to you later, Brooke May 5 Thurs. Lincolnton, GA Elijah Clark State Park Bluegrass Festival 13 Fri. Rocky Mount, VA Tripple Creek Music Park Bluegrass Festival 20-21 Otto, AR Lester Flatt Memorial Park Gospel Festival 27-29 Fri-Sun. Grapeland, TX Salmon Lake Park Gospel Festival June 17-18 Fri-Sat. Bloomfield, MO Holly Ridge Ranch (Cowtown) Bluegrass Festival 19 Sun. Cape Girardeau, MO Fellowship Baptist Church 24-25 Fri-Sat. Norwich, NY Chenango Valley Fairgrounds Bluegrass Festival 30 Thurs. Conway, MO Starvey Creek Bluegrass Festival July 1 Fri. Conway, MO Starvey Creek Bluegrass Festival 3 Sun. Denton, NC Denton Farm Park Southeast Old Time Thresher Reunion 8-9 Fri.-Sat. Salemburg, NC Laruel Lakes Campground and Music Park Bluegrass Festival 28 Thurs. Antigo, WI Langlade Co. Fairgrounds August 5-6 Fr.-Sat Grand Haven, MI Christian Ref. Conference Grounds 7PM 12-13 Fri-Sat. Grassy, MO Twin Bridges RV Park Bluegrass Festival 18 Thurs. Sheldon, MO Sheldon Old Settlers Picnic 7PM 27 Sat. Somerset, KY Center for Rural Development Evening Concert During a 30+ year career at GE, Bill Gutzwiller made substantial contributions to the field of power semiconductor applications and devices, especially the silicon controlled rectifier (SCR) and the Triac. You�ll learn all about the development of these historic devices from Bill�s firsthand experiences and recollections. If you�ve designed an SCR or Triac circuit, studied these devices at school, or marveled at the wealth of material contained in any of the numerous volumes of the famous GE SCR manuals, then you�ve benefited from Bill�s work. Homer Coonce joined Bell Labs in 1952, just at the time when the newly invented transistor was made available for research and development. He worked for many years at Bell Labs, developing transistor logic and switching circuits. Most notable was Homer�s work on the Flyable TRADIC computer, beginning in 1954. The TRADIC project spanned most of the decade of the 1950s and is credited with establishing the transistor computer as a viable product. In this Oral History, Homer recounts his work on two historic Bell Labs/Western Electric transistor computer applications � Flyable TRADIC and the Nike Zeus missile system. MORE NOTABLE GE TRANSISTOR HISTORY: Carl David Todd has been involved with transistor engineering since the earliest days of this technology. Carl�s first exposure to transistors was in 1949 as a high school student when he built a working point contact transistor. He entered and won a prize in the 1954 Raytheon CK722 Transistor Applications Contest, and was personally involved in the development of the famous 2N107 hobbyist transistor when he worked for GE in the mid 1950s. Read Carl�s Oral History for a first hand account of his historic work with the first transistors. ********** Germanium Transistor Audio Amplifier Historic Construction Project. Based on a 1956 Design by Paul Penfield Jr. (Germanium Transistor Audio MiniAmp) Sylvania 1N34A and Raytheon CK705/1N66 Point Contact Germanium Diodes. Experiment with 1950s Hobbyist Technology. Sylvania 1N34A & Raytheon CK705/1N66 1950s Hobbyist Germanium Diodes The Museum�s most popular exhibit. Here you�ll find photographs and descriptions of unique and historic devices or applications relating to semiconductor history from the last century. Visit this exhibit to confirm identity of devices you have found or just spend a rainy afternoon browsing in the Gallery. The transistor was invented at Bell Labs in 1947 by John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley. No other discovery in the last century has had such a profound impact on our modern lives. Initially viewed as a lab curiosity, transistor technology literally exploded in the 1950s and 1960s, generating billions of dollars in revenue and producing devices and applications which contribute in fundamental ways to modern society. Here are a few �basic numbers� which help to illustrate the importance of transistors: There are over 50 million transistors on a single current microprocessor chip.(The Intel� P4 has 55 million transistors) PS The transistor was invented around 1923, by physicist Dr. J. Edgar Lilienfeld, the father of the modern electrolytic capacitor. WHAT?!!! But everyone knows that it was invented at Bell Labs in 1945. Nope. The original transistor was a 1920s thin-film device deposited on glass. The base region was a clever idea: crack a piece of glass, put it back together with metal foil clamped in the crack, then slice off the extra foil to make a flat surface that goes: glass, metal, glass. Deposit a thin layer of semiconductor and heat the device, and the thin metal line will "dope" that part of the semiconductor layer. Simple! But Dr. Lilienfeld unfortunately didn't have a solid theory to explain how his invention worked, so it was ignored. Some hobbyist should try making a home-built transistor. Lilienfeld's patent numbers are: # 1,745,175 Method and Apparatus for Controlling Electric Currents # 1,877,140 Amplifier for Electric Current # 1,900,018 Device for Controlling Electric Current [Go to IMAGES button to view them.] These patents caused Bardeen, Brattain, and Shockley some grief, and caused the US Patent Office to disallow the Bell Labs FET patents in later years. Also: T. L. Thomas, Twenty Lost Years of Solid State Physics, Analog (magazine) March 1965 PPS It is possible to make a transistor using Galena (lead sulfide, PbS). Galena is often available from rock shops and science museum stores. You can even make your own by melting sulfur and lead powder over a flame. Look up keywords such as "cat's whisker diode" and "crystal radio" to find out more. The trick to making a transistor is to use a hyper-clean, freshly-cleaved crystal face, to sharpen your cat's-whisker contacts by dissolving the tips using electrolysis, and then to put the tips within 0.05mm of each other (or preferably within 0.01mm). Obviously the latter is the hardest part. Better use a microscope! The authors of the following article found that the base/emitter junction was critical: it HAD to act as a good rectifier. The base/collector junction wasn't as important. They got some power gain, but their beta was in the single digits. Others have mentioned that if you break open a 1N34 glass diode to expose the Germanium chip, you can make a crude transistor with a similar procedure. Crystal Triode Action in Lead Sulphide, P. C. Banbury, H.A. Gebbie, C. A. Hogarth, pp78-86. SEMI-CONDUCTING MATERIALS, Conference proceedings, H.K. Henisch (ed), 1951 Butterworth's scientific publications LTD 1951. luned� 21 novembre 2005 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Domenica. Pomeriggio al cinema con famiglia. Betta organizza, si vedr� un non meglio specificato film sui pinguini. Ammetto che non � molto furbo delegare completamente e non informarsi, ma i film di animazione sono pi� o meno tutti piacevoli da vedere, e i bambini che ridono sono comunque un bello spettacolo. Arriviamo al cinema Medusa in perfetto orario, ma il film ritarda perch� c'� da vedere la pi� lunga serie di pubblicit� che abbia mai visto. Almeno venti minuti di automobili, profumi, ancora automobili, bevande pi� o meno alcoliche, automobili, banche costruite intorno a te. Tutta roba che ora odio e comprer� solo in caso di assenza di alternative. Almeno una volta al cinema c'era la pubblicit� di quello che ti fa mettere il collarino per truffare l'assicurazione, che nel suo surrealismo era artistica. Prima di tornare in quel cinema, che purtroppo � l'unico in cui si parcheggia facilmente, passer� un bel pezzo. Comunque comincia il film e mi accorgo, tragicamente (immaginate stia usando la voce fuori campo di Fantozzi) che � un documentario di novanta minuti sul Pinguino Imperatore. Io, come tutti naturalmente, conosco l'Aptenodytes forsteri e le sue abitudini riproduttive alla perfezione. Ci hanno frullato i maroni con questa bestiaccia da quando esistono i documentari. Gi� nel 1997 Michele Serra esternava la sua antipatia in questa maldestra imitazione di Danny de Vito, e non c'era ancora Sky. Almeno i bambini si fossero divertiti. Alla scena in cui una foca leopardo (Hydrurga leptonyx) sbrana la mamma pinguina che Fiorello si era tanto prodigato ad umanizzare, Federico � scoppiato in lacrime. Quando un'Albatros (sottospecie incerta) ha ammazzato a beccate un cucciolo, met� dei cinquenni della sala ululava apertamente. Tornando in macchina, mentre Fede singhiozzava "poveri pinguini" ho inchiodato il coperchio sulla bara del film: "Bella fotografia, comunque". http://quite-eval.com/kmmr29774.htm
![]()










