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Aug 13 2005 10:23pm

Rivian Na'Dolo
 - Student
Rivian Na'Dolo
ignore this >.>
_______________
What Do We Have To Learn From But Our Mistakes? All We Can Ask For Is Forgiveness. -Chaos~ [Master to Threat Na'Dolo and Trickster Na'Dolo][~Proud Friends~ Trooper,
Kensei, RoseRed, Kitmitsu, Gradius, Setementor, Tarpman, Liso Jowol ~]
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[Looking for unofficial Padawans To Train]Na'Dolo Site Here.

This post was edited by Rivian Na'Dolo on Aug 13 2005 10:33pm.

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Comments
Aug 19 2005 02:39am

DarthMike
 - Student
 DarthMike

Quote:
/me gives Smily a LobsterBot

>_>

<_<
wrong thread dumbass:P
_______________
"You can't get Windows on a Mac because the drivers are not compatible." --- Some dude from the Geek Squad
"So if you have quad-core, you have four times the RAM, right?" --- Some guy at Best Buy


Aug 18 2005 06:35pm

tarpman
 - The Tarped Avenger
 tarpman

/me gives Smily a LobsterBot

>_>

<_<
_______________
Saving the world, one kilobyte at a time.

Aug 17 2005 11:16pm

Raziel Anjelis
 - Student
 Raziel Anjelis

rofl. Methinks Bismarck is a bot, what say you?
_______________
Proud owner of El Vee For's 200th Comment, and Wicek's 2600th comment :D DaMi3N's 400th, Trad Redav's 666th. :D

Aug 17 2005 02:12pm

Raider
 - Student
 Raider

Quote:
Biology
Clawed lobsters should not be confused with spiny lobsters, which have no claws (chelae), and are not closely related. The closest relatives of clawed lobsters are the reef lobster Enoplometopus and the three families of freshwater crayfish.

Smaller varieties are sometimes called "lobsterettes". Lobsters are invertebrates, and have a tough exoskeleton, which protects them. Like all arthropods, lobsters must molt in order to grow, leaving them vulnerable during this time. Lobsters are considered a food delicacy around the world. In Europe, they are extremely expensive; in some parts of North America, much less so.

Lobsters live on rocky, sandy, or muddy bottoms from the shoreline to beyond the edge of the continental shelf. They generally live singly in crevices or in burrows under rocks.

Lobsters are primarily scavengers, feeding on mollusks and decaying animal matter, but will also eat live fish, dig for clams, and feed on algae and eel-grass. An average adult lobster is about nine inches (230 mm) long and weighs 1.5 to 2 pounds (700 to 900 g). Lobsters grow throughout their lives, though, and are long-lived. They can thus reach impressive sizes. According to the Guinness World Records, the largest lobster was caught in Nova Scotia, Canada and weighed 20.14 kg (44.4 lb).

The environmental conditions of the lobsters can vary from ocean to ocean, but the lobster's temperature environment does not fluctuate much since their home is large mass of water, the ocean.

Like all arthropods, lobsters are largely bilaterally symmetrical; clawed lobsters often possess unequal, specialized claws, like the stone crab. The anatomy of the lobster includes the cephalothorax which is the head fused with the thorax, both of which are covered by the carapace, and the abdomen. The lobster's head consists of antennae, antennules, mandibles, the first and second maxillae, and the first, second, and third maxillipeds. Because a lobster lives in a murky environment at the bottom of the ocean, its vision is poor and it mostly uses its antennae as sensors. The abdomen of the lobster includes swimmerets and its tail is composed of uropods and the telson.

[edit]
The lobster industry

Lobster boatMost lobster comes from the north-eastern coast of North America with the Canadian Maritimes and the U.S. state of Maine being the largest producers. They are caught using lobster traps. These devices made of shrimp mesh and wire (wooden traps, now obsolete, were traditionally used) are baited and lowered to the sea floor. They allow a lobster to enter, but make it impossible for the larger specimens to turn around and exit. This allows the creatures to be captured alive. The traps have a buoy, sometimes referred to as a "pot", floating on the surface and lobster fishermen check their traps daily. Studies have shown that the inefficient trap system—which permits small, juvenile lobsters to easily escape—has inadvertently prevented the lobster population from being overfished.

[edit]
As food
Prior to the 20th century, lobster wasn't popular as food. In the Maritimes, eating lobster was considered a mark of poverty. In some parts of the Maritime provinces of Canada, lobster was used as a fertilizer for farmers' fields. Outside of the rural outports lobster was sold canned, losing much of its flavour.

The reputation of lobster changed with the development of the modern transportation industry that allowed live lobsters to be shipped from the outports to large urban centres. Fresh lobster quickly became a luxury food and a tourist attraction for the Maritimes and Maine and an export to Europe and Japan where it is especially expensive.

Lobster is most commonly cooked by placing a live whole lobster in a pot of boiling water. Some consider this method cruel, and more humane ways of killing them include inserting a knife into the back of their head and slicing downward, and freezing them for 15 minutes before boiling [1]. The apparent cruelty of boiling lobsters alive was challenged in a Norwegian study released in February of 2005, which determined that lobsters cannot feel pain due to their diminished central nervous system capacity. [2]

Lobster is best eaten fresh, and they are normally purchased live. Restaurants that serve lobster keep a tank of the live creatures, often allowing patrons to pick their own. The shell of the lobster makes eating them a slow process, requiring a number of implements. The majority of the meat is in the tail and the two front claws, but smaller quantities can be found in the legs and torso. Lobsters are often eaten plain or with butter or white vinegar. Lobster can also be cut up and used in a wide array of dishes. One popular way of serving lobster was to combine it with steak in what became known by the 1960s as surf and turf.

In Canada, Shediac, New Brunswick promotes itself as the "Lobster Capital of the World".

"Lobster Newberg. Also "lobster a la Newburg"...The dish was made famous at Delmonico's Restaurant in New York in 1876 when the recipe was brought to chef Charles Ranhofer by a West Indies sea captain named Ben Wenberg. It was an immediate hit, especially for after-theater suppers, and owner Charles Delmonico honored the capatain by naming the dish "lobster a la Wenberg." But later Wenberg and Delmonico had a falling-out, and the restauranteur took the dish off the menu, restoring it only by popular demand by renaming it "lobster a la Newberg," reversing the first three letters of the captain's name. Chef Ranhofer also called it "lobster a la Delmonico," but the appelation "Newberg" (by 1897 it was better known under the spelling "Newburg";) stuck, and the dish became a standard in hotel dining rooms in the United States. It is still quite popular and is found in French cookbooks, where it is sometimes referred to as "Homard saute a la creme."...The first printed recipe appeared in 1895.”—Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani. New York: Lebhar-Friedman, 1999. Pages 187–8.
In the Indian subcontinent, especially in West Bengal and Bangladesh, a delicacy of lobsters is called "Golda Chingrir Malai Curry" and is cooked with coconut milk and spices.

[edit]
Types of lobster
Lobster species include:

Atlantic deep-sea lobster (Acanthacaris caeca)
Prickly deep-sea lobster (Acanthacaris tenuimana)
Red lobster (Eunephrops bairdii)
Sculptured lobster (Eunephrops cadenasi)
Banded lobster (Eunephrops manningi)
American lobster (Homarus americanus)
Cape lobster (Homarus capensis)
European lobster (Homarus gammarus)
Andaman lobster (Metanephrops andamanicus)
Arafura lobster (Metanephrops arafurensis)
Armored lobster (Metanephrops armatus)
Northwest lobster (Metanephrops australensis)
Caribbean lobsterette (Metanephrops binghami)
New Zealand lobster (Metanephrops challengeri)
Formosa lobster (Metanephrops formosanus)
Japanese lobster (Metanephrops japonicus)
African lobster (Metanephrops mozambicus)
Neptune lobster (Metanephrops neptunus)
Urugavian lobster (Metanephrops rubellus)
Sculpted lobster (Metanephrops sagamiensis)
Siboga lobster (Metanephrops sibogae)
China lobster (Metanephrops sinensis)
Red-banded lobster (Metanephrops thomsoni)
Velvet lobster (Metanephrops velutinus)
Bight lobster (Metanephrops boschmai)
Mitten lobsterette (Nephropides caribaeus)
Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus)
Spinetail lobsterette (Nephropsis acanthura)
Florida lobsterette (Nephropsis aculeata)
Prickly lobsterette (Nephropsis agassizii)
Scarlet lobsterette (Nephropsis atlantica)
Ridge-back lobsterette (Nephropsis carpenteri)
Gladiator lobsterette (Nephropsis ensirostris)
Saya de Malha lobsterette (Nephropsis malhaensis)
Ruby lobsterette (Nephropsis neglecta)
Pacific lobsterette (Nephropsis occidentalis)
Rosy (or Two-toned) lobsterette (Nephropsis rosea)
Indian Ocean lobsterette (Nephropsis stewarti)
Red and White lobsterette (Nephropsis suhmi)
Grooved lobsterette (Nephropsis sulcata)
Bellator lobster (Thymopides grobovi)
Patagonian lobsterette (Thymops birsteini)
Nilenta lobsterette (Thymopsis nilenta)

You forgot cookies.
_______________
Artificial intelligence beats natural stupidity.

Aug 17 2005 01:19pm

Bismarck
 - Ex-Student
 Bismarck

Biology
Clawed lobsters should not be confused with spiny lobsters, which have no claws (chelae), and are not closely related. The closest relatives of clawed lobsters are the reef lobster Enoplometopus and the three families of freshwater crayfish.

Smaller varieties are sometimes called "lobsterettes". Lobsters are invertebrates, and have a tough exoskeleton, which protects them. Like all arthropods, lobsters must molt in order to grow, leaving them vulnerable during this time. Lobsters are considered a food delicacy around the world. In Europe, they are extremely expensive; in some parts of North America, much less so.

Lobsters live on rocky, sandy, or muddy bottoms from the shoreline to beyond the edge of the continental shelf. They generally live singly in crevices or in burrows under rocks.

Lobsters are primarily scavengers, feeding on mollusks and decaying animal matter, but will also eat live fish, dig for clams, and feed on algae and eel-grass. An average adult lobster is about nine inches (230 mm) long and weighs 1.5 to 2 pounds (700 to 900 g). Lobsters grow throughout their lives, though, and are long-lived. They can thus reach impressive sizes. According to the Guinness World Records, the largest lobster was caught in Nova Scotia, Canada and weighed 20.14 kg (44.4 lb).

The environmental conditions of the lobsters can vary from ocean to ocean, but the lobster's temperature environment does not fluctuate much since their home is large mass of water, the ocean.

Like all arthropods, lobsters are largely bilaterally symmetrical; clawed lobsters often possess unequal, specialized claws, like the stone crab. The anatomy of the lobster includes the cephalothorax which is the head fused with the thorax, both of which are covered by the carapace, and the abdomen. The lobster's head consists of antennae, antennules, mandibles, the first and second maxillae, and the first, second, and third maxillipeds. Because a lobster lives in a murky environment at the bottom of the ocean, its vision is poor and it mostly uses its antennae as sensors. The abdomen of the lobster includes swimmerets and its tail is composed of uropods and the telson.

[edit]
The lobster industry

Lobster boatMost lobster comes from the north-eastern coast of North America with the Canadian Maritimes and the U.S. state of Maine being the largest producers. They are caught using lobster traps. These devices made of shrimp mesh and wire (wooden traps, now obsolete, were traditionally used) are baited and lowered to the sea floor. They allow a lobster to enter, but make it impossible for the larger specimens to turn around and exit. This allows the creatures to be captured alive. The traps have a buoy, sometimes referred to as a "pot", floating on the surface and lobster fishermen check their traps daily. Studies have shown that the inefficient trap system—which permits small, juvenile lobsters to easily escape—has inadvertently prevented the lobster population from being overfished.

[edit]
As food
Prior to the 20th century, lobster wasn't popular as food. In the Maritimes, eating lobster was considered a mark of poverty. In some parts of the Maritime provinces of Canada, lobster was used as a fertilizer for farmers' fields. Outside of the rural outports lobster was sold canned, losing much of its flavour.

The reputation of lobster changed with the development of the modern transportation industry that allowed live lobsters to be shipped from the outports to large urban centres. Fresh lobster quickly became a luxury food and a tourist attraction for the Maritimes and Maine and an export to Europe and Japan where it is especially expensive.

Lobster is most commonly cooked by placing a live whole lobster in a pot of boiling water. Some consider this method cruel, and more humane ways of killing them include inserting a knife into the back of their head and slicing downward, and freezing them for 15 minutes before boiling [1]. The apparent cruelty of boiling lobsters alive was challenged in a Norwegian study released in February of 2005, which determined that lobsters cannot feel pain due to their diminished central nervous system capacity. [2]

Lobster is best eaten fresh, and they are normally purchased live. Restaurants that serve lobster keep a tank of the live creatures, often allowing patrons to pick their own. The shell of the lobster makes eating them a slow process, requiring a number of implements. The majority of the meat is in the tail and the two front claws, but smaller quantities can be found in the legs and torso. Lobsters are often eaten plain or with butter or white vinegar. Lobster can also be cut up and used in a wide array of dishes. One popular way of serving lobster was to combine it with steak in what became known by the 1960s as surf and turf.

In Canada, Shediac, New Brunswick promotes itself as the "Lobster Capital of the World".

"Lobster Newberg. Also "lobster a la Newburg"...The dish was made famous at Delmonico's Restaurant in New York in 1876 when the recipe was brought to chef Charles Ranhofer by a West Indies sea captain named Ben Wenberg. It was an immediate hit, especially for after-theater suppers, and owner Charles Delmonico honored the capatain by naming the dish "lobster a la Wenberg." But later Wenberg and Delmonico had a falling-out, and the restauranteur took the dish off the menu, restoring it only by popular demand by renaming it "lobster a la Newberg," reversing the first three letters of the captain's name. Chef Ranhofer also called it "lobster a la Delmonico," but the appelation "Newberg" (by 1897 it was better known under the spelling "Newburg";) stuck, and the dish became a standard in hotel dining rooms in the United States. It is still quite popular and is found in French cookbooks, where it is sometimes referred to as "Homard saute a la creme."...The first printed recipe appeared in 1895.”—Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani. New York: Lebhar-Friedman, 1999. Pages 187–8.
In the Indian subcontinent, especially in West Bengal and Bangladesh, a delicacy of lobsters is called "Golda Chingrir Malai Curry" and is cooked with coconut milk and spices.

[edit]
Types of lobster
Lobster species include:

Atlantic deep-sea lobster (Acanthacaris caeca)
Prickly deep-sea lobster (Acanthacaris tenuimana)
Red lobster (Eunephrops bairdii)
Sculptured lobster (Eunephrops cadenasi)
Banded lobster (Eunephrops manningi)
American lobster (Homarus americanus)
Cape lobster (Homarus capensis)
European lobster (Homarus gammarus)
Andaman lobster (Metanephrops andamanicus)
Arafura lobster (Metanephrops arafurensis)
Armored lobster (Metanephrops armatus)
Northwest lobster (Metanephrops australensis)
Caribbean lobsterette (Metanephrops binghami)
New Zealand lobster (Metanephrops challengeri)
Formosa lobster (Metanephrops formosanus)
Japanese lobster (Metanephrops japonicus)
African lobster (Metanephrops mozambicus)
Neptune lobster (Metanephrops neptunus)
Urugavian lobster (Metanephrops rubellus)
Sculpted lobster (Metanephrops sagamiensis)
Siboga lobster (Metanephrops sibogae)
China lobster (Metanephrops sinensis)
Red-banded lobster (Metanephrops thomsoni)
Velvet lobster (Metanephrops velutinus)
Bight lobster (Metanephrops boschmai)
Mitten lobsterette (Nephropides caribaeus)
Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus)
Spinetail lobsterette (Nephropsis acanthura)
Florida lobsterette (Nephropsis aculeata)
Prickly lobsterette (Nephropsis agassizii)
Scarlet lobsterette (Nephropsis atlantica)
Ridge-back lobsterette (Nephropsis carpenteri)
Gladiator lobsterette (Nephropsis ensirostris)
Saya de Malha lobsterette (Nephropsis malhaensis)
Ruby lobsterette (Nephropsis neglecta)
Pacific lobsterette (Nephropsis occidentalis)
Rosy (or Two-toned) lobsterette (Nephropsis rosea)
Indian Ocean lobsterette (Nephropsis stewarti)
Red and White lobsterette (Nephropsis suhmi)
Grooved lobsterette (Nephropsis sulcata)
Bellator lobster (Thymopides grobovi)
Patagonian lobsterette (Thymops birsteini)
Nilenta lobsterette (Thymopsis nilenta)
_______________
MYSTERY LINK

Aug 17 2005 01:08pm

Rivian Na'Dolo
 - Student
 Rivian Na'Dolo

NEVER!!!!!

:D

:empire::empire::empire::empire::empire::empire::empire::empire::empire::empire::empire:
_______________
What Do We Have To Learn From But Our Mistakes? All We Can Ask For Is Forgiveness. -Chaos~ [Master to Threat Na'Dolo and Trickster Na'Dolo][~Proud Friends~ Trooper,
Kensei, RoseRed, Kitmitsu, Gradius, Setementor, Tarpman, Liso Jowol ~]
[Owner of Tarpman's 2800th comment][Owner of Thomas Skywalker's 5398th and 5600'th comments][Owner of TreeX's 151th, 250th and 350th comments][Owner of Echuu's 666th and 800th Comments][Owner of JediFire's 123th comment][Owner of Vivi's 107th comment][Owner of Threat Na'Dolo's 100th comment][Owner of CC's 500'th and 1234'th comments][Owner of Kewan Obiobi's 310th comment][Owner of Piccolo's 2400th comment][Owner of Kensei's 3300'th comment][Owner of Liso Jowol's unexpected 2600th comment!] [Owner of the kill-Thomas-whenever-you-want-to certificate!][Winner of the 11000'th comment on Aeth S'kray's Count thread]
[Looking for unofficial Padawans To Train]Na'Dolo Site Here.


Aug 15 2005 09:55pm

CuZzA
 - Student
 CuZzA

Would somebody close this thread?...please?
_______________
- Even if Carlsberg made "w*nkers", Christiano Ronaldo would still be the biggest "w*nker" in the world

Aug 15 2005 08:00pm

Thomasooo
 - Student
 Thomasooo

That was very interesting and informative, Bismarck. Thank you.
_______________
In the navy and LOVING it! :D

Recipient of comment no. 1000 and heart-warming words from Ataris! :)


Aug 15 2005 06:20pm

Bismarck
 - Ex-Student
 Bismarck

The Lobster Pond on the left contains the broodstock of fertilised females, known as berried hens (banded to prevent them from fighting). Female lobsters mate in the autumn, and then carry their 20,000+ eggs on the underside of their tails, as they slowly mature. These eggs hatch into larvae during mid to late summer.

After hatching, the lobster larvae float to the surface of the water and tend to accumulate under the lights. At this point we transfer the larvae to the conical bins, which contain swirling and upwelling water. Here the planktonic, mid water stage is stimulated, during which time the lobster larvae molt (shed there shells) four times in order to grow. The stage four larvae (approx 1 cm in length) are miniature replicas of the adult form. In the wild they would sink to the seabed where they would burrow into the mud.

In captivity the stage four larvae are transferred into individuals cells seen here to prevent the tiny lobsters from eating each other. They are fed twice a day on a varied diet, to mimic what they would normally have in the wild: small pieces of mussel, crab, winkle, shrimp, prawn, mysid shrimp and sand hoppers. They are released into the wild after approximately one year. At this stage the lobsters are around 2-3 cm in length, and have a much better chance of growing to maturity.

Our lobster breeding station was set up to combat some of the effects that commercial exploitation has had on lobster populations. Lobsters are a highly prized and valuable commercial species. Drastic overfishing for the restaurant trade, combined with lobster’s extremely slow growth rate, has severely reduced lobster populations in many areas of Ireland. It takes between 5 to 7 years for lobsters to reach maturity, and by this stage they are at marketable size, so many have been caught by fishermen.

Here at Lahinch Seaworld, we enhance our lobster breeding programme in several ways:

· We house male and female lobsters together to ensure egg fertilisation.

· When any local fishermen catch pregnant female lobsters we buy them from them to enter into the breeding programme.

· In addition to rearing the larvae that our females lobsters produce, we also buy in juvenile lobsters at various stages from other hatcheries.

The larvae displayed here were bought in from a hatchery on the Orkney Islands this week. We bought in juveniles at an older age (stage five) as they have a much higher probability of survival at this age. There are no predators to reduce numbers in our system, but the larvae do attack each other so this can limit survival. We avoid this problem by settling them in separate calls so they cannot eat each other.

Hatching and growing juvenile lobsters in captivity ensures that a higher number of them survive. In the wild it is estimated that up to 90% of juvenile lobsters die before they become fully mature. We too have some mortalities in our breeding programme, but we strive to ensure that each juvenile lobster gets the care and attention it would need to survive to adulthood.

Our Lobster Breeding Programme has been a great success over the past few years. Since the programme has started we have released several hundred of our strongest and fittest lobsters into the local enviroment. We hope that these have gone on to help rebuild the local lobster populations. We also aim to educate people on the life cycle and importance of this species.
_______________
MYSTERY LINK

Aug 15 2005 05:52pm

Rivian Na'Dolo
 - Student
 Rivian Na'Dolo

So can we do eet or just better not? lol
_______________
What Do We Have To Learn From But Our Mistakes? All We Can Ask For Is Forgiveness. -Chaos~ [Master to Threat Na'Dolo and Trickster Na'Dolo][~Proud Friends~ Trooper,
Kensei, RoseRed, Kitmitsu, Gradius, Setementor, Tarpman, Liso Jowol ~]
[Owner of Tarpman's 2800th comment][Owner of Thomas Skywalker's 5398th and 5600'th comments][Owner of TreeX's 151th, 250th and 350th comments][Owner of Echuu's 666th and 800th Comments][Owner of JediFire's 123th comment][Owner of Vivi's 107th comment][Owner of Threat Na'Dolo's 100th comment][Owner of CC's 500'th and 1234'th comments][Owner of Kewan Obiobi's 310th comment][Owner of Piccolo's 2400th comment][Owner of Kensei's 3300'th comment][Owner of Liso Jowol's unexpected 2600th comment!] [Owner of the kill-Thomas-whenever-you-want-to certificate!][Winner of the 11000'th comment on Aeth S'kray's Count thread]
[Looking for unofficial Padawans To Train]Na'Dolo Site Here.


Aug 15 2005 08:34am

Gradius
 - Ex-Student
 Gradius

Cuzza, Bismark, I suggest whatever problem you guys have with eachother, you settle in private, before we settle it for you, alright? We don't need this crap floating around the forums. Both of you, grow up and settle it, please.
_______________
- Proud padawan of Kueller.
- We really are at the beginning of it all. The trick, of course, is to make sure we never find the end. - Bill Bryson, A Short History of Nearly Everything
- <gen-e-sis-happy> Liek, you can train, liek, a n00b, but he'll just be a trained n00b... --> Wise words!
- "daer SOE me likes your a company i am having your some money for letting me do stuff cos mes the best amd i do it all meself" - Slider


Aug 15 2005 07:47am

Bismarck
 - Ex-Student
 Bismarck

Quote:
you are a complete retard bismark :mad: I said stop!


From the rules:
No amount of personal attacks or character assasination (also known as flaming) is tolerated.



_______________
MYSTERY LINK

Aug 14 2005 11:12pm

Mic Den Octela
 - Student
 Mic Den Octela

¬_¬
Perhaps this should be closed...
_______________
-Padawan of Virtue -Brother of Menaxia, *|irael, Krynn Adept, Majno, Ris Win Juljul, DaMi3N, Beowulf, Dash Starlight, Carrock and Yuken Zalak Bartender at Munes bar. Sir Mic of Nippledom! Proudly beating Wang, since '07. (Crackdown)

Aug 14 2005 11:05pm

CuZzA
 - Student
 CuZzA

you are a complete retard bismark :mad: I said stop!
_______________
- Even if Carlsberg made "w*nkers", Christiano Ronaldo would still be the biggest "w*nker" in the world

Aug 14 2005 09:53am

Bismarck
 - Ex-Student
 Bismarck

[quotSe] Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
it was a thread where yoQUOTE[[QU]u keep replying and 'quote' the last post

QQ
Like this? :D:P: Quote:
D


I t Quote:
hin
k I started that thread. :P

One of the many...

EDIT: yes I am quiwqq[quto] quio/]] Quote:
te aware of what I am doing. ;)


am i doin this rite?
_______________
MYSTERY LINK

Aug 14 2005 08:43am

tarpman
 - The Tarped Avenger
 tarpman

Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
it was a thread where you keep replying and 'quote' the last post


Like this? :D:P:D


I think I started that thread. :P

One of the many...

EDIT: yes I am quite aware of what I am doing. ;)
_______________
Saving the world, one kilobyte at a time.

This comment was edited by tarpman on Aug 14 2005 08:44am.

Aug 14 2005 12:54am

Thomasooo
 - Student
 Thomasooo

Quote:
Quote:
it was a thread where you keep replying and 'quote' the last post


Like this? :D:P:D


I think I started that thread. :P
_______________
In the navy and LOVING it! :D

Recipient of comment no. 1000 and heart-warming words from Ataris! :)


Aug 13 2005 11:25pm

Gradius
 - Ex-Student
 Gradius

Quote:
it was a thread where you keep replying and 'quote' the last post


Like this? :D:P:D
_______________
- Proud padawan of Kueller.
- We really are at the beginning of it all. The trick, of course, is to make sure we never find the end. - Bill Bryson, A Short History of Nearly Everything
- <gen-e-sis-happy> Liek, you can train, liek, a n00b, but he'll just be a trained n00b... --> Wise words!
- "daer SOE me likes your a company i am having your some money for letting me do stuff cos mes the best amd i do it all meself" - Slider


Aug 13 2005 11:18pm

CuZzA
 - Student
 CuZzA

it was a thread where you keep replying and 'quote' the last post
_______________
- Even if Carlsberg made "w*nkers", Christiano Ronaldo would still be the biggest "w*nker" in the world

Aug 13 2005 11:18pm

Mreoton
 - Student

Damn! I never see the bad topics >_< Well at least youre not getting banned Chaos for whatever it was :P

Aug 13 2005 10:37pm

Bail Hope of Belouve
 - Student
 Bail Hope of Belouve

Quote:
soz i didnt know if yall had done it before, i am extreamly bored :o

that's okay :)
everyone is allowed to make mistakes ... until you make too much of them :P
_______________
Visit the Belouve Family Website!
Quote:
I try to have fun with my friends and try to make a difference as best I can. What does making a difference mean? Well, it can be as simple as saying hello, answering a question that seems obvious or heck, just talking. -- Vladarion

Want to know Vladarion? Read the Article about his life here.


Aug 13 2005 10:35pm

Rivian Na'Dolo
 - Student
 Rivian Na'Dolo

/me delts all my comments...

ignore this whole topic!!!

soz i didnt know if yall had done it before, i am extreamly bored :o
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Aug 13 2005 10:32pm

Bail Hope of Belouve
 - Student
 Bail Hope of Belouve

for the sake of DJ's database, and the temper of the JACs
please don't do this ... we tried it before, it was closed off.

and with good reason I might add
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Visit the Belouve Family Website!
Quote:
I try to have fun with my friends and try to make a difference as best I can. What does making a difference mean? Well, it can be as simple as saying hello, answering a question that seems obvious or heck, just talking. -- Vladarion

Want to know Vladarion? Read the Article about his life here.


Aug 13 2005 10:31pm

CuZzA
 - Student
 CuZzA

You'll get banned for this
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- Even if Carlsberg made "w*nkers", Christiano Ronaldo would still be the biggest "w*nker" in the world

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