Re: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

>On Sun, 20 May 2001, John Andrews wrote:
>
>>  First of all:
>>
>>  I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word
B
>>  is
>>  banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go
>>  through to the group.
>>
>>  My question:
>>
>>  Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
>>  appear
>>  on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them
for
>>  practice examinations.
>
>If the name you're thinking of is the same as that of the class of
>elementary pbrticles that follow the Bose-Einstein statistics, as
>opposed to say, a female representative of species Canis domesticus or
>(according to some) Homo sapiens, you can use it here. Boson. Boson.
>Boson boson bosonbosonboson. See? :-) And it's been abundantly discussed
>on this here fine list, so hitting the archives is probably your best
>bet.
>

Somehow, you remind me that the answer to the CID beta delay may be
that the test designer is Schrodinger's Cat.  Test takers were in a
state of either having passed or not passed, but the state could not
be known without opening the box.

(Reminding my cat that this is only theoretical and that he should not
worry.)
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Re: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-22 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Sun, 20 May 2001, John Andrews wrote:

> First of all:
>
> I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word B
> is
> banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go
> through to the group.
>
> My question:
>
> Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
> appear
> on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them for
> practice examinations.

If the name you're thinking of is the same as that of the class of
elementary pbrticles that follow the Bose-Einstein statistics, as
opposed to say, a female representative of species Canis domesticus or
(according to some) Homo sapiens, you can use it here. Boson. Boson.
Boson boson bosonbosonboson. See? :-) And it's been abundantly discussed
on this here fine list, so hitting the archives is probably your best
bet.

--
"Someone approached me and asked me to teach a javascript course. I was
about to decline, saying that my complete ignorance of the subject made
me unsuitable, then I thought again, that maybe it doesn't, as driving
people away from it is a desirable outcome." --Me
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
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Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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RE: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-21 Thread Chuck Larrieu

Clarification on the filtering - if the message text contains "boson.com"
the filter catches it and places the message into the moderator box. Your
friendly list moderator then reads the messages, makes the value judgement
as to whether this is  a marketing message,  or just a general interest
message, and passes or deletes the message accordingly.

Yes this is a bit arbitrary. It is also a bit funny. For example, in
response to a recent spam from a teen sex site, messages that contain the
word "teen" are now flagged. Be careful using words like sixteen :->

I am not sure if forbidden words in subject lines cause flagging. I'll pay
more attention next time I look.

Chuck

-Original Message-
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of John
Andrews
Sent:   Sunday, May 20, 2001 1:35 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:b tests [7:5194]

First of all:

I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word B
is
banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go
through to the group.

My question:

Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
appear
on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them for
practice examinations.

Comments appreciated..

John Andrews

Have a great day!
John Andrews
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Re: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-21 Thread Howard C. Berkowitz

>On Sun, 20 May 2001, John Andrews wrote:
>
>>  First of all:
>>
>>  I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word
B
>>  is
>>  banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go
>>  through to the group.
>>
>>  My question:
>>
>>  Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
>>  appear
>>  on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them
for
>>  practice examinations.
>
>If the name you're thinking of is the same as that of the class of
>elementary pbrticles that follow the Bose-Einstein statistics, as
>opposed to say, a female representative of species Canis domesticus or
>(according to some) Homo sapiens, you can use it here. Boson. Boson.
>Boson boson bosonbosonboson. See? :-) And it's been abundantly discussed
>on this here fine list, so hitting the archives is probably your best
>bet.
>

Somehow, you remind me that the answer to the CID beta delay may be 
that the test designer is Schrodinger's Cat.  Test takers were in a 
state of either having passed or not passed, but the state could not 
be known without opening the box.

(Reminding my cat that this is only theoretical and that he should not worry.)




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Re: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-21 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Sun, 20 May 2001, John Andrews wrote:

> First of all:
>
> I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word B
> is
> banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go
> through to the group.
>
> My question:
>
> Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
> appear
> on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them for
> practice examinations.

If the name you're thinking of is the same as that of the class of
elementary pbrticles that follow the Bose-Einstein statistics, as
opposed to say, a female representative of species Canis domesticus or
(according to some) Homo sapiens, you can use it here. Boson. Boson.
Boson boson bosonbosonboson. See? :-) And it's been abundantly discussed
on this here fine list, so hitting the archives is probably your best
bet.

--
"Someone approached me and asked me to teach a javascript course. I was
about to decline, saying that my complete ignorance of the subject made
me unsuitable, then I thought again, that maybe it doesn't, as driving
people away from it is a desirable outcome." --Me
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-21 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Sun, 20 May 2001, John Andrews wrote:

> First of all:
>
> I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word B
> is
> banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go
> through to the group.
>
> My question:
>
> Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
> appear
> on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them for
> practice examinations.

If the name you're thinking of is the same as that of the class of
elementary pbrticles that follow the Bose-Einstein statistics, as
opposed to say, a female representative of species Canis domesticus or
(according to some) Homo sapiens, you can use it here. Boson. Boson.
Boson boson bosonbosonboson. See? :-) And it's been abundantly discussed
on this here fine list, so hitting the archives is probably your best
bet.

--
"Someone approached me and asked me to teach a javascript course. I was
about to decline, saying that my complete ignorance of the subject made
me unsuitable, then I thought again, that maybe it doesn't, as driving
people away from it is a desirable outcome." --Me
FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: 
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Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=5253&t=5194
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Re: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-20 Thread ElephantChild

On Sun, 20 May 2001, John Andrews wrote:

> First of all:
> 
> I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word B
> is
> banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go 
> through to the group.
> 
> My question:
> 
> Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
> appear
> on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them for 
> practice examinations.

If the name you're thinking of is the same as that of the class of
elementary pbrticles that follow the Bose-Einstein statistics, as
opposed to say, a female representative of species Canis domesticus or
(according to some) Homo sapiens, you can use it here. Boson. Boson. 
Boson boson bosonbosonboson. See? :-) And it's been abundantly discussed
on this here fine list, so hitting the archives is probably your best
bet. 

-- 
"Someone approached me and asked me to teach a javascript course. I was
about to decline, saying that my complete ignorance of the subject made
me unsuitable, then I thought again, that maybe it doesn't, as driving
people away from it is a desirable outcome." --Me




Message Posted at:
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Re: b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-20 Thread Brad McConnell

Been a while since that test, but as I recall, I did find them rather
useful.  I and two friends all ran through their practice tests the morning
of the real exam, and none of us got below a 934.  Granted, most of that is
due to the study methods, but their tests definitely solidify a certain
confidence level to help with the real thing.  Too bad they have so many
errors.. kind of sad that they're the best thing available, really.  That
being said, they're still worth it, and I still use them when they're
available for a given test..

-Brad McConnell.


""John Andrews""  wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> First of all:
>
> I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word B
> is
> banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go
> through to the group.
>
> My question:
>
> Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
> appear
> on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them for
> practice examinations.
>
> Comments appreciated..
>
> John Andrews
>
> Have a great day!
> John Andrews
> FAQ, list archives, and subscription info:
http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html
> Report misconduct and Nondisclosure violations to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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b**** tests [7:5194]

2001-05-20 Thread John Andrews

First of all:

I worded the subject space that way because I was unsure if the word B
is
banned here or not, so that was to be on the safe side so this would go 
through to the group.

My question:

Are the above tests for switching close to the exam type questions that
appear
on the prometric. I have both switching exams and have been using them for 
practice examinations.

Comments appreciated..

John Andrews

Have a great day!
John Andrews




Message Posted at:
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