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Ask Me Anything ...

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Lies:

Do flies (and other bugs) sleep through winter?

Where do the bugs of summer go when the weather turns cold? And how do they reappear the next year when the temperatures warm?

Of course, the insects don’t just ‘disappear’ and magically reappear the next year. Each species has developed some way of dealing with the cold weather.

One insect follows the example of the migratory birds and heads south. The monarch butterfly’s from east of the Rocky Mountains eventually find their way to central Mexico, where they overwinter in the mountain highlands near Mexico City. One or two areas are protected as monarch refuges. Monarchs from west of the Rockies travel to a spot near Santa Barbara, California. These are true migrating insects because the same individuals that go south for the winter come back the next year.

Some other insects, such as leafhoppers and milkweed bugs, strategy for dealing with winter is to head south as the winter cools. They reinvade the next year, but in this case, it’s different individuals that return.

Most insects stay here year round. They employ a variety of tactics for survival. One is simply to move in with humans. Insects such as ladybird beetles (ladybugs), cluster flies, elm leaf beetles and boxelder bugs overwinter as adults in wall voids, attics and other out-of-the-way places in homes and other structures.

Before humans started building insect hotels, they probably found shelter in hollow logs and other natural cavities.

Many insects spend the winter in immature stages – as eggs (the bagworm is a good example), as larvae underground (cicadas and June beetles) or as pupae (the large silkworm moths such as the Cecropia).

Yellowjacket and paper wasp queens, some mosquitoes and the mourning cloak butterfly are other examples of local insects that overwinter as adults. Like the ladybird beetle, they seek out a protected spot and become dormant until warm weather activates them again.

Whatever insect you’re looking at or whatever its winter survival may be, the pattern of development doesn’t leave much room for variation. For example, moths that form cocoons in the fall must have that winter cold period. If you bring them indoors and keep them warm, chances are that they won’t complete their development. Or, if they do hatch, it will be well in advance of the proper time so they have no hope of surviving outdoors.

Though some insects may become unseasonably active during an extended midwinter thaw, the true hibernators and the majority of those that rest in the adult stage will not be tricked to become active early. Of course, that’s not much consolation to the homeowner who has to deal with a midwinter wasp buzzing the family or an “invasion” of slow, stupid flies bumbling into windows and walls during a midwinter mild spell.

The final group of insects consists of those that remain active all year round. These are primarily aquatic insects that spend the winter as immatures in rapidly flowing streams that don’t freeze all the way to the bottom.

Some insects have body fluids that act like antifreeze. Glycol-like substances that resist freezing protect the insect from being torn apart internally by ice crystals.

With or without antifreeze, most insects simply can not function at temperatures below 40 degrees F. Because they rely entirely on the world around them for the warmth they need to function, they’ve developed this wide range of techniques for surviving cold weather and assuring the survival of their species.

Satisfied?

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NEXT!

Cheers, Martin :D
 
Yes, Martin, I am satisfied. You see, I was starting to think we had zombie flies up in our attic. They're all on their backs, and they only start moving after you've prodded them quite a few times... And then they try to walk around a bit, only to topple over after two steps. They also seem to have forgotten how to fly.
Anyway, now that I know our house isn't infested with 50 or so zombie flies (just infested with hibernating flies), I can get some sleep again.

Next question: are you a googler yourself, or is there some other search engine that floats your boat?
 
I've been told that one of the gay men on Queer Eye For The Straight Guy isn't as gay as the other four. This has led to some intense debating in the household as we're unable to agree on who the alledged un-gay guy is. Is it true that one of these men is living a lie? And, if so, which one?
 
Litany said:
I've been told that one of the gay men on Queer Eye For The Straight Guy isn't as gay as the other four. This has led to some intense debating in the household as we're unable to agree on who the alledged un-gay guy is. Is it true that one of these men is living a lie? And, if so, which one?

It's a sad day when we've resorted to this kind of question just to extend the thread that WILL.... NOT.... DIE.
It's time to turn your TV into an aquarium Litany.

RaVeN
 
Stella:

You don't have to say my whole name! Just Stella, ok?

Okay.

I'm not saying. It's baaaad. Sorry.

Come on! I've answered, like, a thousand questions here, so please answer me this one lousy question!

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Lies:

They're all on their backs, and they only start moving after you've prodded them quite a few times... And then they try to walk around a bit, only to topple over after two steps.

Have you been smoking pot on your attic recently?

Are you a googler yourself, or is there some other search engine that floats your boat?

Google is God incarnated.

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Wabbit:

Where is Atlantis?

There are many different beliefs as to the actual location of Atlantis. Many believe that it was a sunken island under the Atlantic Ocean while others say it is located close to the Greek islands of Crete or Thera. The Azores, Madeira and the Canary Islands, along with smaller Atlantic islands,were also suggestions of where the lost civilization may be located. The Azores, in common with Thera have a sunken islands about them, these sunken islands include great black mountain peaks that rise directly from the ocean. The caribbean has also been suggested. During the 1920's, an American psychic Edgar Cayce predicted that Atlantis would rise again in 1968. He predicted that the ocean floor near Bimini in the Bahamas would be where Atlantis would rise. Moreover, in 1968 an airline pilot sighted a temple of great antuquity only a few miles away from Bimini in the Bahamas. Since then serveral suba divers have discovered flights of steps cut into the steep sides of the continental shelf the in same area. Circular patterns of monolithic stones have been photographed on the ocean bottom, suggesting a sort of American "Stonehenge". Under water pyramids and a great arch have also been observed by scuba divers. Dr. Manson Valentine first explored and discovered the "Bimini Road", which is a sunken wall or foundation, lying at a depth of six fathoms, east of North Bimini. However, South America has become the most favoured location for where Atlantis could of been located. In Peru, tremendous stone walls on mountain tops were a mystery to the conquering Spaniards and Incas. Tiahuanaco, which is an incredible old city located in Bolivia, was built so long ago that prehistoric animals were displayed on the local pottery. Enormous buildings that had an elevation of 13,500 feet, with walls as thick as 10 feet and foundation stones of 200 tons, were contructed with such an knowledge and exactness of physics and astronomy that many investigators are concinved that the buildings could not have been from the earth. Geological discovers around the area of Tiahuanaco include salt lines in the mountains, sea shells along the shores of lake Titicaca, and former cornfields under the frozen snow-line of the surrounding peaks, indicate that Atlantis was possibly an ocean port, forced up to its present alitiude 15,000 years ago, during the volcanic activity which accompanied melting glaciers. During 1965, Dr. Robert Menzies took photos from the research ships, "Anton Bruun", off the coast of Peru. Sonar recordings taken in this area indicated unusual shapes along the ocean floor, which seem to be a mud bottom. Photos that were taken at a depth of 6,00 feet display massive upright pillars and walls, which seemed to have writing on them. Other pictures that were taken were of scattered rocks laying beside each other, some in heaps as if they had toppled over, perhaps the reason why was because at the time this mysterious city fell more than a mile under the sea. With advanced technology, which at the present time is probing into outer galaxies, the time may come when researchers are able to completely discover the truth about Atlantis.

map2.gif


Is Elvis there?

No. He's performing somewhere on a planet far away in a shaggy bar, quite near God's final message to it's creation.

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Litany:

Is it true that one of these men (Queer Eye For The Straight Guy ) is living a lie?

Well, lets break this down:
  1. Carson (the fashion diva): He put the Q in queer.
    carson.gif
  2. Kyan (the hairdresser): He is very handsome and dresses normal.
    kyan.gif
  3. Ted (the chef guy): He's not that great a cook and he's kinda ugly.
    ted.gif
  4. Thom (the interior decorator): Nuff said.
    thom.gif
  5. Jai (culture guy..whatever that means): He is just too damn pretty to be straight.
    jai.gif

There's nothing to be found on the hetero-sexual-ness of any one of these guys, and in spite of the rumours nothing has been confirmed. I personally do not know this show, so I can't give you my opinion, but if one of them was heterosexual, and that fact was posted somewhere on the Internet, I would've found it by now.

So, my answer is no.

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RaVeN:

. . . to extend the thread that WILL.... NOT.... DIE.

Do you want it to die? Say so, and I'll close this thread immediately.

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NEXT!

Cheers, Martin :D
 
RaVeN said:
It's a sad day when we've resorted to this kind of question just to extend the thread that WILL.... NOT.... DIE.
It's time to turn your TV into an aquarium Litany.

The only reason I watch it is to figure out which one isn't gay. That's why I need to know. Then I'll be free from my curse. I reckon it's between the fat one who's far too overtly gay, or the chef who's not nearly gay enough.
 
Did anyone hear me say I wanted this thread to die? The thought never crossed my mind. All I said was it WILL..... NOT..... DIE.

Now don't put me in that position again or I'll be forced to insert tapioca into your thong :D

RaVeN
 
Google is God incarnated.

NAH-UH ... Google WAS God but it's day is done. Now it's full of spammers and bussiness types that exploit it's ranking system.

Please check out the NEXT generation :)

Teoma (has been around awhile BUT still good. )

Explanation of how Teoma works

Adding a New Dimension to Search: The Teoma Difference is Authority

A lot of the players in the ever-evolving search space talk about relevance. But what do they really do to achieve this Holy Grail? And what do they offer to prove their claims? The truth is, not much.At Teoma, we've invented a whole new approach to search, and this allows us to achieve our mission of providing the best search results on the Web. Now, we could throw a lot of fancy terms at you, like dynamic ranking and advanced algorithms. And these concepts are a crucial part of what makes Teoma so powerful. But, what's really important for you to know is that Teoma adds a new dimension and level of authority to search results through its breakthrough approach, known as Subject-Specific PopularitySM.

Instead of ranking results based upon the sites with the most links leading to them, Teoma analyzes the Web as it is organically organized—in naturally-occurring communities that are about or related to the same subject—to determine which sites are most relevant. Teoma is the only search technology that can locate communities on the Web within their specific subject areas, as they actually exist. And this allows us to finely tune our search process, providing more precise results.

To determine the authority—and thus the overall quality and relevance—of a site's content, Teoma uses Subject-Specific PopularitySM. Subject-Specific Popularity ranks a site based on the number of same-subject pages that reference it, not just general popularity. In a recent test performed by respected industry publication Search Engine Watch, Teoma's relevance grade was raised to an "A" following the integration of Teoma 2.0.

To better understand why taking this extra step is so crucial in delivering highly-relevant results, picture yourself in your garage, in front of the opened hood of your severely out-of-commission pick-up truck. You need help with this major repair, and you can either ask your uncle, who owns two cars but has never held a wrench in his life and happens to be visiting (similar to using other leading search technologies) or you could phone your best friend, who has a degree in applied mechanics and builds automobiles from the ground up in his spare time (similar to Subject-Specific Popularity). The choice is quite clear.


The two big new ones. They more advanced alogorythms than Google. Of the two, I prefer All The Web but the other is very good and Clustering can be very handy.

Visismo

From CCN article.

Better search results than Google?
Next-generation sites help narrow Internet searches
Monday, January 5, 2004 Posted: 1606 GMT (12:06 AM HKT)

NEW YORK (AP) -- As wonderful as Internet search engines are, they have a pretty big flaw. They often deliver too much information, and a lot of it isn't quite what we're looking for. Who really bothers to read the dozens of pages of results that Google generates?

Some intriguing technologies are getting better at bringing order to all that chaos, and could revolutionize how people mine the Internet for information.

Software now emerging analyzes search results and automatically sorts them into categories that, at a glance, present far more information than the typical textual list.

"We enliven the otherwise deadening process of searching for information," said Raul Valdes-Perez, co-founder of Vivisimo Inc., which quickly puts search results into clickable categories.

Pittsburgh-based Vivisimo sells its technology to companies and intelligence agencies, and offers free Web searches at Vivisimo.com.

Valdes-Perez describes his company this way: If the Internet is a giant bookstore in which all the books are piled randomly on the floor, then Vivisimo is like a superfast librarian who can instantly arrange the titles on shelves in a way that makes sense.

Consider it a 21st century Dewey Decimal System designed to fight information overload. But unlike libraries, Vivisimo doesn't use predefined categories. Its software determines them on the fly, depending on the search results. The filing is done through a combination of linguistic and statistical analysis, a method that even works with other languages.

A similar process powers Grokker, a downloadable program that not only sorts search results into categories but also "maps" the results in a holistic way, showing each category as a colorful circle. Within each circle, subcategories appear as more circles that can be clicked on and zoomed in on.

It takes a few minutes to get used to Grokker. But the value of its nonlinear approach quickly becomes clear.

Let's say, for example, you're curious about accommodations in France and enter a search for "Paris Hilton."

Google recognizes this as a search in the category of "Regional-Europe-Travel and Tourism-Lodging-Hotels" but still produces page after page with links about celebrity socialite Paris Hilton and her exploits. That's because Google's engine ranks pages largely based on how many other sites link to them, sending the most popular pages to the top.


A screen shot of Grokker2 shows how search results are displayed.
If you run the search on Grokker, however, the resulting circle shows all the possible categories of information the Internet offers on a search for "Paris Hilton" -- including reviews, maps and online booking sites for the Hilton hotel in Paris, which are all but buried in the Google rankings. Now you've much more quickly found not what is popular among Internet gawkers, but what is genuinely useful to you.

Groxis Inc., the 15-person company that introduced Grokker last year and released an upgraded, $49 second version in December, is not out to replace Google. Grokker is not in itself a search engine -- it only analyzes and illustrates search engines' results.

For example, Grokker2 can categorize and map files on your hard drive -- arranging them by content, not by the folders you happened to put them in -- or listings on Amazon.com. If you use Grokker2 to search the Web, it combines results from six search engines -- Yahoo, MSN, AltaVista, Wisenut, Teoma and FAST, a business-focused product by a Norwegian company.

In 2004, Grokker plans to release up to two dozen downloadable plug-ins that will set its colored circles loose on a wider variety of databases, including the Library of Congress, news Web sites and yes, Google itself.

"We now have the capability to 'grok' anything," said R.J. Pittman, chief executive of Sausalito, California-based Groxis. Would-be Grokkers, a note of caution: it requires Windows 2000 or XP or Mac OS X.

The Google plug-in is partly a market test; Google and Groxis will analyze how well it works and then consider whether to work on developing a service together, Pittman said.

Google spokesman Nathan Tyler declined to comment on Groxis. Nor would he say whether Google is exploring its own measures of sprucing up search pages with categorization tools like Vivisimo or visualization aids like Grokker.

Another visualization possibility is offered by TouchGraph LLC, which has a Google plug-in that shows links as an interconnected web, an appropriate image for the World Wide Web.

Such tools have been applied by the Manhattan firm Plumb Design in its Visual Thesaurus, which maps a word's meanings, or in a navigation tool it developed for a Smithsonian Institution exhibit.

Meanwhile, a number of search sites have gotten hip to honing results.

For example Teoma, which is part of Ask Jeeves Inc., suggests ways to refine or narrow a search. That means a Teoma search for "Las Vegas" will serve up roughly the same links as other sites, but it also suggests "Vacation Packages" and "Vegas Wedding Chapel."

"Search has to evolve," Pittman said. "It can't just be Google sitting there with a stash of places they've crawled on the Web. People are becoming more astute and demanding better results, and they're demanding a more powerful search experience. People like to get a landscape of information once they've found out there's one available."


All The Web

My fave! All The Web. I find stuff I can never find with the other search engines on All The Web. Damn! Could not find much about "all the web" But I do remember reading a huge article about how it has the most advanced search tech and why. Oh well, you will just have to check it out!! :)

An excellent crawler-based search engine, All The Web provides both comprehensive coverage of the web and outstanding relevancy. If you tried Google and didn't find it, All The Web should probably be next on your list. Indeed, it's a first stop search engine, for some. In addition to web page results, AllTheWeb.com provides the ability to search for news stories, pictures, video clips, MP3s and FTP files.

Until recently, AllTheWeb.com was owned by a company called FAST and used as a showcase for that company's web search technology. That's why you sometimes may sometimes hear AllTheWeb.com also referred to as FAST or FAST Search. However, the search engine was purchased by search provider Overture (see below) in late April 2003. It no longer has a connection with FAST.


Regards
Silly ( too much information ) Wabbit
 
You're not stealing my thunder, are you? :mad: :mad:

Nah, Kiddin'. Thanks for those links, Wabbit. Google is still providing me with all the information I want (just look at the 24 pages above), but an extra few search-engines can't harm, right?

NEXT!

Cheers, Martin :D
 
Martin said:
Alrighty then.

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watercrystal:

Why i cannot find the friendshipforum?

You're on it!!

Can you introduce some famous or best literature of Netherland?

Yep. I think the most famous piece of (modern) Dutch literature (which I've read and am familiar with) is Harry Mulisch' The Discovery of Heaven. For more info, look here and here[/url


Yes, this forum is definitely a friendly forum. UH, but, the one i mentioned, whose name is 'friendshipforum', is the one i cannot find its website recently.

:) Thanks for the links. I will check the book, The Discovery of Heaven, in our uni-library.HOpe i can find it.

BESTS
 
Watercrystal:

UH, but, the one i mentioned, whose name is 'friendshipforum', is the one i cannot find its website recently.

You mean www.friendshipforum.co.uk/forums/? I had the same problem, the link didn't open. Don't know why, though.

I will check the book, The Discovery of Heaven, in our uni-library.HOpe i can find it.

You do that, it's an excellent book. Quite big, though, about 900 pages.

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NEXT!

Cheers, Martin :D
 
I think if any of them is straight, it's Ted. But I'm pretty sure they're all really, really gay. Just my 2 cents.
 
Time for some mystic mumbo jumbo

Why is everyone so afraid of death?

Is it not possible that this life is just a form of purgatory we all have to endure before we are ready to face the paradise in the next world, and thus the people who die young are on the right track?
 
Where, on a fresco "The Last Judgement" in the Sistine Chapel, is portrayed Michelangelo himself?
 
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