Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Journals Moderated

RE: Yet more Starport wonkiness By mercedo at 4:19 PM, January 31st, 2006 (Tuesday), Comment #553
Yes, in my two JEs -How to Submit Diary & Try Hard, I didn't know I was unable to edit my JEs once posted, and would be moderated.

Anyway those two diaries were deprecated undoubtedly, so no problem.---Ancient Greek Philosophers - 18c Enlightenment Thinkers - Starport Users[Add Comment]

Your Haiku Is Great

RE: Haiku EBNFisms By mercedo at 3:55 PM, January 31st, 2006 (Tuesday), Comment #552
Your haiku reminds me of the former signature of elmegil.

He wrote,

your haiku is weak
your ancestors are ashamed
go write a limerick --Daiv Barr

Needless to say, that does not necessarily mean your haiku is weak. ---Ancient Greek Philosophers - 18c Enlightenment Thinkers - Starport Users[Add Comment]

Monday, January 30, 2006

Ordinary World

Ordinary world -this is where we live. For those who are extremely talented, it is very easy to be famous for something favourable. So naturally they started thinking of how not to be famous since it is the one that requires them to make an effort. On the other hands, some people who are less talented still feel it's paramount for them to be notorious -don't know how to achieve something meaningful, instead they think if they commit some wrondoing upon others who are famous, that makes him automatically notorious. That's the very reason why already famous people are so eager not to be in public.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Written Code & Custom Code

As to the forged document problem, has it something to do with 'the matter of deregulation'? - von_yosukeyan


Of course, not. You raised your question very appropriately.


This is not what administrative regulations being abolished or deregulated, but say ' being liberated to public sectors.'


Completely correct.


There's "no regulations to deregulate" in Japan's overall judicial system


But there are many regulations to deregulate in Japan's custom codes accumulated from empirical rules made by administrative body. So the most urgent task for us is to arrange the written law in brief.

No

I want to evaluate this decision as a means to govern the market. -von_yosukeyan


Very insightful, but as you let us know this decision was nothing but a mockery of fair trade. Market has to give all dealers a fair oppotunity to buy and sell their shares. Again as you suggested, we ought to expect version-up of TSE, though, I am very dubious about the future capability of the market.

--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters

Written Code & Custom Code

As to the forged document problem, has it something to do with 'the matter of deregulation'? - von_yosukeyan

Of course, not. You raised your question very appropriately.

This is not what administrative regulations being abolished or deregulated, but say ' being liberated to public sectors.'

Completely correct.

There's "no regulations to deregulate" in Japan's overall judicial system

But there are many regulations to deregulate in Japan's custom codes accumulated from empirical rules made by administrative body. So the most urgent task for us is to arrange the written law in brief.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Our Task

RE: Morality Of War By mercedo at 6:05 PM, January 26th, 2006 (Thursday), Comment #546
My conclusion as to the morality of war right now is that there's no morality in war. Once war started, all means would be justifiable to achieve the ends, that means the use of unmanned weaponry like this meets its demands completely. In war time the nature of morality changes. It will come to totally opposit to that of in the peace time.

War is nothing but a tragedy, we ought to make an greatest possible effort to avoid war. That's our task left for us who live in peace. ---Ancient Greek Philosophers - 18c Enlightenment Thinkers - Starport Users[Add Comment]

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

In Search Of New Energy

In Search Of New Energy (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.25 8:07 (#10715) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.25 7:20
I think there's a very different history, background behind what power plant we favour in Japan or Europe and USA. As was the same in the situations of other countries, Japanese government twenty years ago were very enthusiatic about building new nuclear power plants one after another. As a result of this policy, many new plants were built and planned. You see Japan is very populated in this tiny island, people were afraid of nuclear disaster as Chernobyl, and Three Miles Island. As we anticipated, a number of incidents occurred, fortunately none of them was as serious as Chernobyl, but some workers died and nuclear agency had to spend millions of tax to compensate them and clean the nuclear contamination as well.
Now governemnt as well as people are just fed up with building new facilities. That doesn't pay. Many new plans have been abandoned so far for these fifteen years.
Nuclear power was based on a revolutionary idea but nuclear power plant was based on an obsolete idea. The true nuclear power can be generated in a small chamber, not a factory. The key is 'E=MC2', one of good examples of utilising new energy is the recent development of fusion battery. We have to concentrate our wisdom on the issue.--
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Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Homo Belligerence

Homo Belligerence (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.24 10:28 (#10694) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.20 9:58
It has been thought to be a riddle for humans to be unable to find relatives of ourselves. In the case of many other animals, there are many kins around them. So some scientists tried to explain this mystery by assuming a missing link from humans to apes. -There must be a primate that hasn't found yet.
I am not particularly a proponent of this theory, though, I support a huge chasm in genetics between humans and apes. My supposition is that humans were so belligerent that they killed almost all kins genetically closer to humans. We were indeed homo belligerence.--
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Unmanned

Unmanned (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.24 6:29 (#10690) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.20 9:58
This news reminds me the deployment of unmanned battle vehicle [ubergizmo.com] in Iraq one year ago. It was experimental, so the number of the machines were few.
--
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Sunday, January 22, 2006

Logics

Re:In ancient America(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.23 0:00 (#14532487) (http://www.blogger.com/profile/11854854 Last Journal: 2006.01.22 2:51)
I agree any language is based on some grammatical order. Of course there's a grammer. I am saying English and Chinses are much more based upon gramatically logical order than Japanese. For example, in English you say 'This is not a pen'. Probably the most logical order must be 'This not is a pen.', since 'is' has to be negated beforehand.
In Japanese we say 'This a pen is not.' This verbal expression is against our logical order of conception. 'A', 'pen', 'is' have to be negated beforehand. Gramatically speaking many order of words are possible, but logics is based on a natural sequence of order of things or objects, incidents. So I said ther's no room for anyone to raise doubt in them.
English is easy to learn for non-native speakers like me because it is more simple and fundamental than other languages like Japanese, German, French, etc. Latin languages leave many paradigm changes in which English has already lost most of all. Thus I said English is no more reflexive (I mean inflexive), English is more analytical means there's no distinguished paradigm change in it, which is very similar to analytical language like Chinese. For non-native speakers the distinction of is/am/are/ doesn't matter, I be/You be/ He be/ all are fine.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters[ Reply to This Parent ]

Go Publish A Book

Re:Will You Tell Me A Little Bit About?(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.21 5:29 (#14521678) (http://www.blogger.com/profile/11854854 Last Journal: 2006.01.22 2:51)
Thanks for the link. I will try doing it soon.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters[ Reply to This Parent ]

Encouragement

Re:Will You Tell Me A Little Bit About?(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.21 4:50 (#14521299) (http://www.blogger.com/profile/11854854 Last Journal: 2006.01.22 2:51)
The main thing is, you got to be flexible. Got to have a good attitude, and you've got to meet people.
Just a full of words of encouragement. The aim of MH42 and I is completely different, though, the destination would be the same -that's a success in a field where we want to work. My life has been completely dedicated to writing.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters[ Reply to This Parent ]

Passion, Motivation, Determination

Re:Will You Tell Me A Little Bit About?(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.21 4:33 (#14521154) (http://www.blogger.com/profile/11854854 Last Journal: 2006.01.22 2:51)
But passion and motivation overcomes lack of education in the long run. -Eglamkowski


Determination is the key to success. When I was 21, I determined to be an English writer. This will be my life long trek, but I never give up.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters[ Reply to This Parent ]

Transfiguration

Transfiguration (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.22 4:06 (#10632) User #2554 Info http://www.blogger.com/profile/11854854 Last Journal: 2006.01.20 9:58
When Era of Tsin Dynasty, scholars from Europe demonstrated that the very complicated Chinese writing system (about 5000 ideograms) can be written in the combination of only 26 characters. Chinese ruler at that time was just amazed to see them.
Technically speaking, transliteration from very complicated ideograms into simplified phonetic characters is possible, but because of the tradition, we are still using that very clumsy writing system.
Again technically, English writing system can be transfigured into the combination of 0 and 1 as in computer. Morse signal is also based on this idea.
As to the logics of language, both English and Chinese are very logical language. That's why both find so many users.--
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Saturday, January 21, 2006

Money Game

Money Game (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.21 7:13 (#10606) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.20 9:58
Under the current internet stock dealing, if you have $10, you can buy up to $100 worthy of shares. If the stock you bought rose up to $2000, that is 20 times as much as you invested, you can get $2000. As opposed to this success example, if you lost $100, you would end up owing $100 in debt.
He succeeded this money game. He came to be very rich through making the most of this strange system. This speculative game might have produced millions of fortunes, only in figure. Still many business people believe figure is everything. Probably figure (flow economy) reflects part of the truth but not all. What percent? Depending on who you are.--
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No Elixir

No Elixir (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.21 6:38 (#10605) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.20 9:58
Aspirin is a very common drug, and more and more the drug turns out to be one of the most applicable drugs to many other diseases. However, always careful clinical trials by patients as many as possible is required, since there's no elixir in our world.--
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Analytic, Inflexive, Agglutinative

Re:In ancient America(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.21 18:02 (#14525254) (http://slashdot.org/~mercedo/journal/109855 Last Journal: 2006.01.21 6:35)
Apart from the superficial resemblance in lots of loan words from China, Korean and Japanese languages are different in their basic terms, but happened to be similar in syntax -how to order the words, both languages would be agglutinative, not reflexive. They both use post position instead of preposition, so when it comes to superficial syntax, the similarlity of two languages are apparent.
But that similarlity doesn't tell at all that two languages have one common parent language long long ago.
As to the superficial similarity in syntax, English and Chinese are astonishingly similar. But nobody claims that two languages are derived from one common parent language. Two languages -English &Chinese happened to acquire similar syntax because their syntax is based on more logical order than others. The more the number of the speaker of the languages increase, the more they are likely to acquire more logical syntax. Logic is based on mathematics, inclusion within a concept, exclusion from the concept are strictly followed by mathematical order, there's no room for others to raise doubt in them.
Latin is more inflective than English, English is more like Chinese analytic, yet Latin and English have two common parent language. Despite many similarities, Korean and Japanese are two different, isolated languages as Basque or Ainu, proposed Altaic language family is illusory.

Geography

Re:Soh Cah Toa? (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.20 12:39 (#10591) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.20 9:58
They are asking how we pronounce the word 'tomato'. I guess many Americans pronounce like toe may toe. In my country toe mah toe. Main pronounciation differs according to the region we live, so geography in title.--
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Friday, January 20, 2006

Some Paradigms Are Unnecessary

Some Paradigms Are Unnecessary (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.20 9:32 (#10580) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.19 10:16
Mike, go home. Mike goes home. Since there are two meanings here, we need to define verbs, one is for order, and the other is for ordinary.
But how about these, -He goes home, since 'he' is used as the third person, we don't have to use -es to define as ordinary sentence. He go home/He goes home both means the same.
We use "isn't/ aren't/ don't/ doesn't/ hasn't/ haven't" according to the subject we used, but "ain't" can replace all these negations, is "ain't" enough to use instead?
Or the most logical word order might be like 'He not go to the zoo.', the negation word 'not' has to be placed before verb so like 'I not have written journals for two days since I was busy.'
--
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Revolutionary Idea

Revolutionary Idea (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.20 9:02 (#10577) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.19 10:16
Poison to poison, chaos to oscillating movement.
Nono world is ruled by completely different physics -as quantum theory tells - as if it were both wave and molecule, it is such a hard thing to grasp the notion there in nano world.
The same applied to macrocosm. Space where lightyear rules, completely different physics -they say theory of relativism - works.
Oscillating movements lead to taming chaos is a revolutionary idea, I hope it does work.--
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Direction Of Wind

Direction Of Wind (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.20 7:04 (#10571) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.19 10:16
I don't think he's particularly violating laws, he's a master of conducting legal deed through loopholes of law, which is yet to be arranged in current circumstances of the Internet society.
His misdeed was he hasn't shared part of his huge profit with shareholders. As if he forgot that his success was supported by millions of individual investors.
He has to not only read between the lines of stockmarket, but direction of wind in a society.--
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Thursday, January 19, 2006

Will You Tell Me A Little Bit About?

Will You Tell Me A Little Bit About?(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.20 3:42 (#14511522) (http://slashdot.org/~mercedo/journal/109855 Last Journal: 2006.01.16 1:43)
As I progress through my life, I learn new things. I'm slowly coming to the idea that socialism cannot be imposed from above and work- and that capitalism must be imposed from above to work -Marxist Hacker 42
How come you come up with this idea? From what experience you had?
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters

Cancer Is A Natural Result

Cancer Is A Natural Result
2006.01.19 10:16

Cancer is formed from the consistent accumulation of carcinogen in parts of their body. Any carcinogen is so toxic to humans, unless it is formed later as cancer, it might directly cause their immediate death. Instead of their instant death, they will be formed to cancer and kill them whichever.
Cancer is a natural result of maximum resistance of their body to accumulate and concentrate venoms in parts of their body.

Single Dominant vs Diversified Scarce

Single Dominant vs Diversified Scarce (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.19 8:40 (#10554) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.18 17:55
Remember the role of bacteria is different from that of plants and animals. Main role of bacteria is to decompose corpse of those lives, so in order to decompose as quickly as possible, they don't need to diversify the kinds of their species, but they need a semi-single large quantity of bacteria. So in an area like the Amazon, single dominant species tend to flourish.
In an area like desert, the plants and animals are so adjusting to particular environment specifically, and their corpses are so hard to be decomposed under such severe circumstances. The kinds of bacteria tend to diversify according to the particular body they work, but the number of bacteria remains to be tremendously lower.
Rememer they are talking about the number of the kinds, not the entire quantity. Obviously the number of bacteria is by far exceeding in the Amazon than in desert. Whether it's relevant to talking about pH is questionable. I'm afraid that's a result, not a cause.--
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Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Re:True!

Re:True! (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.18 18:44 (#10544) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.18 17:55
Thank you for finding my comment. I wanted to make a comment this directly to the article, though, I felt it slightly off topic, so I posted here. Seemed nobody's reading my journal, your comment encourages me much.--
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Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Money Means Nothing

Re:My Notes on Capitalism(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.18 0:11 (#14490361) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.16 1:43)
Money can only fulfill our short-term demand. If we were in desert, we would spend a lot of money to acquire a drop of water. But if we had a lot of rain, we would spend a lot of money just for a ray of sunshine. Water, sunshine cannot value their importance of their own. Only money can tell their relative value under particular circumstances.
I just wonder how we spend money just for fulfilling our short-time demand. Before we eat dinner, we spend some money for it, but after we ate it, we wouldn't spend the same money for it.
Also the value of same amount of money differs between haves and have-nots. In one dollar, some can buy only one beer, while others can buy ten beers, depending on where-which country you live.
In general, money means nothing, let alone it's nothing to with truth, justice, freedom.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters

Market

Re:I thought Capitalism's essence(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.17 23:48 (#14490190) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.16 1:43)
Oh, you shed light on the market in feature of capitalism, there are so many demands, thus so many supplies. Because there is a difference in value between seller and buyer, the difference generates the viablility.
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Friday, January 13, 2006

Noah's Ark

Noah's Ark (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.13 19:07 (#10478) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.13 8:49
This will be the Noah's Ark in our times. Noah had to keep all female & male animals and plants in a form as they are in his ark. Thanks to the recent biochemical achievement, the portion will be reduced greatly, but remember however developed our technology is, we would be unable to store all the spieces in a storehouse.
The most important thing is to keep our planet as our Noah's Ark. We ought to make an every possible effort to evade such catastrophy instead.--
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Nihilism Of Europe

'Those who rule Europe will rule the world. It is undoubted, but I don't think Hitler is trying to do so. ' -Stalin

As a matter of fact, two world wars were fought along with the border of Europe, at that time everybody had admitted that Europe was the centre of the world. But after the World War II, the Cold War, USA emerged as the No.1 country in the world. Now USA is the only Super Power. It is not a matter of hegemony, though, as long as USA keeps on exporting freedom and democracy, the liberation of knowledge will continue to be spread every nook and cranny. People in other region will try to develop another search engine inevitably.

Hitler was trying to prevail nihilism in Europe. The attempt was completely failed, though, the tradition of nihilism still remains strongly everywhere in Europe, they will show another alternative especially when they overcome its nihilism in the near future.

USA is superior to any other country in many respects, but not everything, USA is not the same as the world, and vice versa. There are many countries and regions other than USA. We ourselves have to form common knowledge not just from USA, EU, or any other region. The world doesn't need a centre of something. The world ought to be from unilateral image to multilateral one.

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Fitontid

Fitontid (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.12 10:03 (#10442) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.11 9:06
Trees have powers called 'fitontid'. This is a combination of alkaloid, multiple lactose, organic acid and tannin, usually found in the form of evaporation in the woods and existing in the air of woods one out of a hundred million to one billion, however according to the estimate some scholar made, all quantity on the earth is 175 million tons, that is 6 times as large as all exhaust gas and smoke from cars &factories. This material helps make us all minus-ionised (a little bit mystic though). Russian scholar Dr Kieton, professor at the University of St. Petersburg named it. Here is the link [wakando.jp] that I was able to find only in Japanese.--
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A Memory Of Monosodium Glutamate

A Memory Of Monosodium Glutamate (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.12 9:02 (#10440) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.11 9:06
When I was a kid, I used to lick monosodium glutamate every time I saw the small container since we were told that monosodium glutamate makes us smart. Now I knew glutamate works as a neurotransmittant, so in part the theory was confirmed.
I thougt too much, I read too many, I wrote tens of scribles when I was a minor, so I don't have to worry about having glutamate excessively since all taken were completely consumed.--
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Wednesday, January 11, 2006

My Advice

My Advice(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.12 2:45 (#14446877) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.10 2:07)
Please don't be impatient. And read as many books as you can.
By the way thanks for befriending me.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters

One Viewpoint

From One Viewpoint(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.12 2:29 (#14446761) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.10 2:07)
Interesting aricle. I enjoyed it.
--Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters

Sunday, January 08, 2006

About Metamoderation

Certainly(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.09 3:03 (#14422243) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.09 1:58)
I don't know it's bad or wrong, though, it is certainly difficult to assess the evaluations other moderator already did. When we were nominated as a moderator, we just spend many hours to mod, since it depends on our evaluations too. When it comes to meta-moderations, we've got too many things that we cannot judge from what we just see from someone's comment and its moderation.
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Separation Of Powers

Re:Powers(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.09 2:36 (#14422120) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.09 1:58)
I think you are right. Your comment gets to the point.
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Re:Powers by mercedo (Score:1)

Saturday, January 07, 2006

Counter Insurgency

Re:Questions For Contributer (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.07 6:46 (#10326) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.06 7:23
There ought not to be a national border in criminal case. All the more when it comes to the Internet activities where virtually no national borders exist. Spamming is like pouring poison in the international river.
It was good to be able to arrest him beyond the limit of nations.--
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Thursday, January 05, 2006

Gas Eruption In Sago Coal Mine

Re:Unknown(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.06 2:03 (#14401295) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.05 2:57)
Recently I've got curious about such eruptions. Whatever the direct cause might be, natural gases like methane ought not to erupt in the coal mine shaft. I wonder whether the incident might have something to do with activities inside the Earth.
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Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Questions For Contributer

Questions For Contributer (Score:1)
by mercedo on 2006.01.04 9:09 (#10280) User #2554 Info http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.04 8:32
Were the Norwegian sending spams in India? And were Norwegian authorities able to arrest their nationals like him living in India and put him under the custody of Norwegian embasy in India because of the violation of criminal code in Norway? Was he taken into custody while he was in Norwegian Embasy? It might be illegal to send spams in Norway but is it illegal in India? Police must be local Indian police and is it possible for them to force Norwegian nationals to obey Norwegian law in India or in Norwegian embasy?--
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Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Public Language In Japan

Re:i find it ironic...(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2006.01.04 2:33 (#14385296) (http://mercedo-the-eve.blogspot.com/ Last Journal: 2006.01.02 5:56)
More than 2000 years ago, we didn't have characters to literate our national language, and later when Chinese characters were introduced people started adopting them to transliterate our language. The atttempt never succeeded, and later it was succeeded partialy when we invented two phonetic characters.
Roman alphabet was introduced 16 century. I must say still it is very difficult to transliterate our language all in Roman alphabet, but definitely a lot of adaptations of phonetic words from English has been in progress.
I must say it will take another 30 years to replace majority of vocaburary in our language into English words, and by then public language in Japan is likely to be English.
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Sunday, January 01, 2006

Variation In Colours

"Abstract"
2 Comments -

Show Original Post


mercedo said...
This one is particularly fantastic, especially impressive in how to use colours.
12:39 PM

New Encounter

1 Comment -

Show Original Post

mercedo said...
A Happy New Year. Nice to meet you, I appreciated your blog and pictures, expecting to see your next ones. Thanks.