3T's album

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Does anybody know when 3T's new album is coming out?

-- Jade Carroll (turkal@melbpc.prg.au), January 14, 1998

Answers

huh?

What the hell is 3T?

FWIW - 3D_Floyd stands for "the three degrees of Floyd" - further explanation - Floyd is a guy who lives in Greensboro, NC, USA and there is a theory that he is a friend of a friend of an acquaintance of virtual any human on the planet. This bulletin board is an attempt to document and prove/disprove that hypothesis.

-- d'albatross (dale.swanson@usa.net), February 05, 1998.


Subject: China Is Toast

Date: 1999/05/11

Author: fedinfo

Experts here warn that China could suffer everything from severe disruptions in power and water to lesser but still expensive glitches in telecommunications, banking, public health and transportation. And China's woes could spill over to Hong Kong, where banks, brokerage firms and shipping companies with close ties to the mainland are worried about lost cargo and missing payments. "China is very, very behind in Y2K contingency planning," said Joseph Sweeney, director of research at the Hong Kong office of Gartner Group, a research firm that specializes in the Year 2000 problem. "There's no way many of their organizations will come up to speed in time." Yet so little is known about the nature of the problem here that the experts are often reduced to a digital-age version of reading tea leaves as they scrounge for clues about how and where China will be affected. The dearth of data is compounded by China's computer network -- a mix of 1960s-era mainframe machines and pirated copies of the latest Windows software running on a variety of personal computers. Tim Shepheard-Walwyn, the chairman of the Global 2000 Coordinating Group, a consortium of 300 banks that monitors Year 2000 compliance, said he did not have enough information even to make a judgment about China. ============== It is an ABSURDITY to say that 'not enough is known' to make a decision about China. Patently ABSURD. From the SAME article: If the Chinese banks suffer computer malfunctions, it would paralyze hundreds of millions of dollars of settlements within days. One big problem is that an estimated 96 percent of the software in China is pirated. Software manufacturers generally refuse to repair products not sold under a license. Faced with buying a license to become Year 2000 compliant, many Chinese companies simply opt to leave their equipment alone. But Chen said there were potential trouble spots. The plant that supplies two-thirds of Beijing's water cannot be shut down for testing, and Chen said he did not know whether its computers were vulnerable. But Pollayannas will always assert that they do not have enough information. Even a letter from God would be insufficient. The fact of the matter is that China is about to dissolve taking a great deal of the rest of Asia with them, and by extension, the rest of the world.

Paul Milne If you live within five miles of a 7-11, you're toast.

-- a (a@a.a), May 11, 1999.


Subject: China Is Toast

Date: 1999/05/11

Author: fedinfo

Experts here warn that China could suffer everything from severe disruptions in power and water to lesser but still expensive glitches in telecommunications, banking, public health and transportation.

And China's woes could spill over to Hong Kong, where banks, brokerage firms and shipping companies with close ties to the mainland are worried about lost cargo and missing payments. "China is very, very behind in Y2K contingency planning," said Joseph Sweeney, director of research at the Hong Kong office of Gartner Group, a research firm that specializes in the Year 2000 problem. "There's no way many of their organizations will come up to speed in time." Yet so little is known about the nature of the problem here that the experts are often reduced to a digital-age version of reading tea leaves as they scrounge for clues about how and where China will be affected. The dearth of data is compounded by China's computer network -- a mix of 1960s-era mainframe machines and pirated copies of the latest Windows software running on a variety of personal computers. Tim Shepheard-Walwyn, the chairman of the Global 2000 Coordinating Group, a consortium of 300 banks that monitors Year 2000 compliance, said he did not have enough information even to make a judgment about China. ============== It is an ABSURDITY to say that 'not enough is known' to make a decision about China. Patently ABSURD. From the SAME article: If the Chinese banks suffer computer malfunctions, it would paralyze hundreds of millions of dollars of settlements within days. One big problem is that an estimated 96 percent of the software in China is pirated. Software manufacturers generally refuse to repair products not sold under a license. Faced with buying a license to become Year 2000 compliant, many Chinese companies simply opt to leave their equipment alone. But Chen said there were potential trouble spots. The plant that supplies two-thirds of Beijing's water cannot be shut down for testing, and Chen said he did not know whether its computers were vulnerable. But Pollayannas will always assert that they do not have enough information. Even a letter from God would be insufficient. The fact of the matter is that China is about to dissolve taking a great deal of the rest of Asia with them, and by extension, the rest of the world. http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/05/biztech/articles/11year.html

Paul Milne If you live within five miles of a 7-11, you're toast.

-- a (a@a.a), May 11, 1999.


Subject: China Is Toast

Date: 1999/05/11

Author: fedinfo

Experts here warn that China could suffer everything from severe disruptions in power and water to lesser but still expensive glitches in telecommunications, banking, public health and transportation.

And China's woes could spill over to Hong Kong, where banks, brokerage firms and shipping companies with close ties to the mainland are worried about lost cargo and missing payments. "China is very, very behind in Y2K contingency planning," said Joseph Sweeney, director of research at the Hong Kong office of Gartner Group, a research firm that specializes in the Year 2000 problem. "There's no way many of their organizations will come up to speed in time." Yet so little is known about the nature of the problem here that the experts are often reduced to a digital-age version of reading tea leaves as they scrounge for clues about how and where China will be affected. The dearth of data is compounded by China's computer network -- a mix of 1960s-era mainframe machines and pirated copies of the latest Windows software running on a variety of personal computers. Tim Shepheard-Walwyn, the chairman of the Global 2000 Coordinating Group, a consortium of 300 banks that monitors Year 2000 compliance, said he did not have enough information even to make a judgment about China. ============== It is an ABSURDITY to say that 'not enough is known' to make a decision about China. Patently ABSURD. From the SAME article: If the Chinese banks suffer computer malfunctions, it would paralyze hundreds of millions of dollars of settlements within days. One big problem is that an estimated 96 percent of the software in China is pirated. Software manufacturers generally refuse to repair products not sold under a license. Faced with buying a license to become Year 2000 compliant, many Chinese companies simply opt to leave their equipment alone. But Chen said there were potential trouble spots. The plant that supplies two-thirds of Beijing's water cannot be shut down for testing, and Chen said he did not know whether its computers were vulnerable. But Pollayannas will always assert that they do not have enough information. Even a letter from God would be insufficient. The fact of the matter is that China is about to dissolve taking a great deal of the rest of Asia with them, and by extension, the rest of the world. http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/05/biztech/articles/11year.html

Paul Milne If you live within five miles of a 7-11, you're toast.

-- a (a@a.a), May 11, 1999.


Subject:China Is Toast
Date:1999/05/11
Author:fedinfo <fedinfo@hal ifax.com>
  Posting History

 
Post 
Reply

Experts here warn that China could suffer everything from severe disruptions in power and water to lesser but still expensive glitches in telecommunications, banking, public health and transportation.
 
And China's woes could spill over to Hong Kong, where banks,
brokerage firms and shipping companies with close ties to the mainland are worried about lost cargo and missing payments.
 
"China is very, very behind in Y2K contingency planning," said Joseph Sweeney, director of research at the Hong Kong office of Gartner Group, a research firm that specializes in the Year 2000 problem. "There's no way many of their organizations will come up to speed in time."
 
Yet so little is known about the nature of the problem here that the experts are often reduced to a digital-age version of reading tea leaves as they scrounge for clues about how and where China will be affected. The dearth of data is compounded by China's computer network -- a mix of 1960s-era mainframe machines and pirated
copies of the latest Windows software running on a variety of
personal computers.
 
Tim Shepheard-Walwyn, the chairman of the Global 2000
Coordinating Group, a consortium of 300 banks that monitors Year 2000 compliance, said he did not have enough information even to make a judgment about China.
 
 
 
 
==============
&n bsp;
 
It is an ABSURDITY to say that 'not enough is known' to make a decision about China.
 
Patently ABSURD.
 
From the SAME article:
 
If the Chinese banks suffer computer malfunctions, it would
paralyze hundreds of millions of dollars of settlements within days.
 
One big problem is that an estimated 96 percent of the software in China is pirated. Software manufacturers generally refuse to repair products not sold under a license. Faced with buying a license to become Year 2000 compliant, many Chinese companies simply opt
to leave their equipment alone.
 
But Chen said there were potential trouble spots. The plant that supplies two-thirds of Beijing's water cannot be shut down for testing, and Chen said he did not know whether its computers were
vulnerable.
 
 
But Pollayannas will always assert that they do not have enough
information. Even a letter from God would be insufficient.
 
The fact of the matter is that China is about to dissolve taking a great deal of the rest of Asia with them, and by extension, the rest of the world.
 
 
 
<http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/05/biztech/articl es/11year.html>
--
Paul Milne
If you live within five miles of a 7-11, you're toast.


--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.---



-- a (a@a.a), May 11, 1999.


poop
ouikfhyrbvggrtdr35466d88 skep03myv73

-- wuzz (nerk@wagga.co.putz), June 26, 2001.

>From: Damien Youth >Reply-To: psychedelica@yahoogroups.com >To: psychedelica@yahoogroups.com >Subject: Re: [psychedelica] DMT and Owsley >Date: Sat, 17 Nov 2001 15:48:31 -0600 > >Considering there must have been a time when human's had to take the >laboratory >approach to finding out what is & isn't fit for human consumption, I >suspect such >natural hallucinogen's must have been ingested & could well have been the >recipe >of the conception of god's. The question becomes, "Am I seeing things that >are >not there because I am on a drug? or am I seeing things that have always >been >there thanks to this drug?" > >I am fascinated by breaking out of the hypnotic trance of consciousness & >experiencing the higher levels of consciousness & awareness. And we know we >have >various levels of awareness. Have you ever closed your eye right before the >bug >ran into your lid? You didn't think "Hey here comes a bug, I think it's >coming >towards my eye, I'll close my eye to keep that from happening" You just >closed >your eye & then realized, only after, why you closed your eye. I strongly >believe >there is some part of the mind that is so mathematically precise that it >can >deduce the out come of a situation before it takes place, the future! If it >realizes it strongly enough, in a way, it has already been there. I believe >this >could be one of the explanations for dejavu. If I stack ten dominoes next >to each >other, then you watch as I tap the first domino, you watch as it falls into >the >second domino, I believe, even if you turn away, your minds eye saw the >last >domino fall. But that is our minds deduction abilities at it's most >simplistic. I >believe there are more complex areas of the mind that can deduce an >"effect" >before the conscious mind is even aware of the "cause". Like the bug & the >eye >lid thing. > >I feel like I have consciously been through the crawl space that leads to >the >other levels of consciousness & I have seen the peripheral residents & >yes, in >my adult life I have done this by ingesting certain elements of this earth >;-) > >Though I must say, Mushrooms only made me laugh my ass off & then I had an >allergic reaction & had to go to the emergency room to have my stomach >pumped!!! >The emergency ward is the worst place to have a trip! I remember seeing a >burn >victim being rushed by on a big bed & people running up to surround him. I >would >have sworn that they had just cooked him, the bed was really a trey, the >medical >staff were really a kitchen staff & they were preparing the man for dinner! >The >worst part was my stomach started to growl!!!! So I don't do mushrooms >anymore >:-) > > > > Personal choice is personal choice, but I've got to wonder why anyone >would > > take such a risk with themselves. > >I'm quite sure natural hallucinogenic plants must have been consumed before >one >of us gathered up the courage to be the first person to eat an egg. >(Choice: >Cute little green plant on the side of the hill top? or Hard white object >with >slimy insides that fell from a chickens ass.) I think people take greater >risk >experimenting with new fad diet pills or even joining in with indulging in >things >that have proven themselves to be dangerous. > > > I don't see much difference between this > > experience and that of walking into my kitchen, randomly pulling out a >bottle > > of cleaner or disinfectant, taking a slug and waiting to see what >happens ... > >And with thoughts like that, you should definitely not do hallucinogen's! > > > > > will I get a buzz, find myself kissing the porcelean goddess, or >something > > far worse ... > > > >If you drink too much cheap hooch you will :-) > > > > > Not to second guess anyone (and spiritual growth is a wonderful >concept), but > > this sure seems like a dumb way to try to attain such growth. Go for a > > strenuous outdoor hike, climb a local hill and enjoy the view, put your >young > > kids to bed at night - all provide an enjoyable experience that has to >be as > > good as DMT ... > > > >I really respect what you are saying here.... But! if there is no danger in >DMT >why exclude it from the other enjoyable experiences? > >Side note: One of the most radical mind states I have ever been in was >brought on >by sleep deprivation. I was driving back from a gig in florida one night, >totally >sober! I felt like I wasn't going to be able to stay awake, my guitar >player was >already sleeping in the passenger seat. I decided I should pull off at the >next >convenient store I come upon. I spotted one & started to pull off, my >guitar >player jumped up & started yelling & grabbing the wheel! THERE WAS NO >CONVENIENT >STORE!!!!!!!! It was a cow field! Later I thought, what if my guitar player >had >woken up a few minutes later, would he have awoken to me standing in a cow >field >trying to purchase a candy bar? & god forbid what I may have been carrying >up to >the counter in place of an actual candy bar! And god forbid even further if >I had >successfully checked out & began eating the supposed candy bar as I climbed >back >into the truck!..... OKAY! I'll stop! > >luv, >dy > > >------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~--> >StartMeUp jump starts your car's battery >using only the cigarette lighter. >$24.95 at Youcansave.com >http://us.click.yahoo.com/ELP6ED/LTTDAA/ySSFAA/fnJolB/TM >--------------------------------------------------------------------- ~-> > > > >Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ > >



-- debora (deebee@asdic.org), November 19, 2001.




-- (deebee@asdic.org), February 12, 2003.



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