Re: [newbie] Fw: cheval-de-frise:______ __________ __________

2003-09-06 Thread Michael Viron
At 10:04 PM 9/2/2003 -0400, you wrote:

This has *got* to be the most inscrutable piece of spam I have ever
received...LOL!

snip
As one of my sites has a large international following (it sees visits from
virtually every country the world over), I've received spam in spanish,
italian, german, russian, chinese, korean, and even danish.

Michael

--
Michael Viron
Core Systems Group
Simple End User Linux

Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


Re: [newbie] Fw: cheval-de-frise:______ __________ __________

2003-09-04 Thread Anne Wilson
On Thursday 04 Sep 2003 4:03 am, Eric Huff wrote:
   Oh, great.  Now popfile will think this crap is ham...  :)
 
  Will it?  On mine, [newbie] is set as a magnet, and therefore not
  scanned.  That crap would only be accepted inside the [newbie]
  protection.

 I just looked thru the docs, and i can't tell if magnets *prevent*
 learning or if they *force* learning.

 I tried to figure it out by sending some mail, but my tables havn't
 changed since august 24th/25th.

 If an email comes in with new words, but is classified properly
 with the previous words (ie i don't reclassify it), do any new
 words get added to the table?

 I looks as if they don't.

As I understand it, a magnet for [newbie] says 'I trust this source - 
just ignore it'.

Anne
-- 
Registered Linux User No.293302
Have you visited http://twiki.mdklinuxfaq.org yet?


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


Re: [newbie] Fw: cheval-de-frise:______ __________ __________

2003-09-03 Thread Anne Wilson
On Wednesday 03 Sep 2003 5:38 am, Eric Huff wrote:
 On Tue, 2 Sep 2003 22:04:35 -0400

 HaywireMac [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  This has *got* to be the most inscrutable piece of spam I have
  ever received...LOL!

 Oh, great.  Now popfile will think this crap is ham...  :)

Will it?  On mine, [newbie] is set as a magnet, and therefore not 
scanned.  That crap would only be accepted inside the [newbie] 
protection.

Anne
-- 
Registered Linux User No.293302
Have you visited http://twiki.mdklinuxfaq.org yet?


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


Re: [newbie] Fw: cheval-de-frise:______ __________ __________

2003-09-03 Thread Eric Huff
  Oh, great.  Now popfile will think this crap is ham...  :)
 
 Will it?  On mine, [newbie] is set as a magnet, and therefore not 
 scanned.  That crap would only be accepted inside the [newbie] 
 protection.

I just looked thru the docs, and i can't tell if magnets *prevent*
learning or if they *force* learning.

I tried to figure it out by sending some mail, but my tables havn't
changed since august 24th/25th.

If an email comes in with new words, but is classified properly with the
previous words (ie i don't reclassify it), do any new words get added to
the table?

I looks as if they don't.

-- 
Mandrake HowTo's  More:   http://twiki.mdklinuxfaq.org

Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


[newbie] Fw: cheval-de-frise:______ __________ __________

2003-09-02 Thread HaywireMac

This has *got* to be the most inscrutable piece of spam I have ever
received...LOL!

Begin forwarded message:

Date: Tue, 2 Sep 2003 21:26:41 -0400
From: free1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject: cheval-de-frise:__ __ __


 =?GB2312?B?4su8tcS0ytfp?=
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Content-Type: text/plain;charset=GB2312
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2003 09:33:12 +0800
X-Priority: 3
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.00.2615.200

Ç×°®µÄ¶ÁÕߣ¬ÄúºÃ!

Èç¹ûÕâ·âÐÅ´òÈÅÁËÄú£¬ÎÒÏòÄúµÀǸ£¬Çëɾ³ý´ËÐÅ¡£

ÄãÖªµÀ cheval-de-frise Õâ¸ö´Ê×éµÄÀ´ÀúºÍ±³¾°Âð£¿ËüÊÇºÍ °²È«»òÕ½Õù
ÓйصÄÒ»¸öºÜÓÐÒâ˼µÄ´Ê×飬¼ûÏÂÎÄ£º


ÐÂÈñÔÚÏß
http://ieven.yeah.net


cheval-de-frise (shuh-VAL duh FREEZ) noun
   plural chevaux-de-frise (shuh-VOH duh FREEZ)

   1. An obstacle, typically made of wood, covered with barbed wire
  or spikes, used to block the advancing enemy.

   2. A line of nails, spikes, or broken glass set on top of a wall
  or railing to deter intruders.
   
[From French, literally horse of Friesland, so named because it was
first
used by Frisians who lacked cavalry.]

Pictures of chevaux-de-frise:
http://www.cvco.org/sigs/reg64/pioneer.html

  Fold back the leaves of an artichoke and you discover ... more
artichoke
   leaves, at least until you come to the succulent, secret heart hidden
   beneath a chevaux-de-frise of thistle-like bristle.
   David Nelson; Gastronomic Adventure Unfolds Like an Artichoke; 
   The Los Angeles Times; Jun 21, 1991.

  On the land side, outside the battlements, are acres of
chevaux-de-frise:
   sharp rock slabs set vertically into the ground, making it virtually
   impossible for a person to pass, let alone a horse.
   Denise Fainberg; On Foot In Inishmore; The New York Times; Aug 1,
1999.

Artists sit on art horses -- wooden benches with supports for their
canvases.  Carpenters use saw horses, so called because they clearly
look like stylized representations of the animal. Not so obvious are
horses -- or their cousins -- hiding in many everyday objects. Literally
speaking, an easel is an ass (from Dutch ezel), while a bidet is a pony
(from French bidet).


¸ü¶à¾«²ÊÄÚÈÝ£¬¾¡ÔÚ ÐÂÈñÔÚÏß 

http://ieven.yeah.net


-- 
JoeHill
Registered Linux user #282046
Homepage: nodex.sytes.net
++
The race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, but
that's the way to bet.
-- Damon Runyon


-- 
HaywireMac
Registered Linux user #282046
Homepage: nodex.sytes.net
++
Mandrake HowTo's  More: http://twiki.mdklinuxfaq.org
++
Arrakis teaches the attitude of the knife - chopping off what's
incomplete and saying: Now it's complete because it's ended here.
-- Muad'dib, Dune

Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


Re: [newbie] Fw: cheval-de-frise:______ __________ __________

2003-09-02 Thread Aron Smith
On Tue, 2003-09-02 at 19:04, HaywireMac wrote:
 This has *got* to be the most inscrutable piece of spam I have ever
 received...LOL!
 
 Begin forwarded message:
 
 Date: Tue, 2 Sep 2003 21:26:41 -0400
 From: free1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: undisclosed-recipients:;
 Subject: cheval-de-frise:__ __ __
 
 
  =?GB2312?B?4su8tcS0ytfp?=
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Content-Type: text/plain;charset=GB2312
 Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2003 09:33:12 +0800
 X-Priority: 3
 X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.00.2615.200
 
 Ç×°®µÄ¶ÁÕߣ¬ÄúºÃ!
 
 Èç¹ûÕâ·âÐÅ´òÈÅÁËÄú£¬ÎÒÏòÄúµÀǸ£¬Çëɾ³ý´ËÐÅ¡£
 
 ÄãÖªµÀ cheval-de-frise Õâ¸ö´Ê×éµÄÀ´ÀúºÍ±³¾°Âð£¿ËüÊÇºÍ °²È«»òÕ½Õù
 ÓйصÄÒ»¸öºÜÓÐÒâ˼µÄ´Ê×飬¼ûÏÂÎÄ£º
 
 
 ÐÂÈñÔÚÏß
 http://ieven.yeah.net
 
 
 cheval-de-frise (shuh-VAL duh FREEZ) noun
plural chevaux-de-frise (shuh-VOH duh FREEZ)
 
1. An obstacle, typically made of wood, covered with barbed wire
   or spikes, used to block the advancing enemy.
 
2. A line of nails, spikes, or broken glass set on top of a wall
   or railing to deter intruders.

 [From French, literally horse of Friesland, so named because it was
 first
 used by Frisians who lacked cavalry.]
 
 Pictures of chevaux-de-frise:
 http://www.cvco.org/sigs/reg64/pioneer.html
 
   Fold back the leaves of an artichoke and you discover ... more
 artichoke
leaves, at least until you come to the succulent, secret heart hidden
beneath a chevaux-de-frise of thistle-like bristle.
David Nelson; Gastronomic Adventure Unfolds Like an Artichoke; 
The Los Angeles Times; Jun 21, 1991.
 
   On the land side, outside the battlements, are acres of
 chevaux-de-frise:
sharp rock slabs set vertically into the ground, making it virtually
impossible for a person to pass, let alone a horse.
Denise Fainberg; On Foot In Inishmore; The New York Times; Aug 1,
 1999.
 
 Artists sit on art horses -- wooden benches with supports for their
 canvases.  Carpenters use saw horses, so called because they clearly
 look like stylized representations of the animal. Not so obvious are
 horses -- or their cousins -- hiding in many everyday objects. Literally
 speaking, an easel is an ass (from Dutch ezel), while a bidet is a pony
 (from French bidet).
 
 
 ¸ü¶à¾«²ÊÄÚÈÝ£¬¾¡ÔÚ ÐÂÈñÔÚÏß 
 
 http://ieven.yeah.net
Huh1
 
 
 -- 
 JoeHill
 Registered Linux user #282046
 Homepage: nodex.sytes.net
 ++
 The race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, but
 that's the way to bet.
   -- Damon Runyon
 


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


Re: [newbie] Fw: cheval-de-frise:______ __________ __________

2003-09-02 Thread Eric Huff
On Tue, 2 Sep 2003 22:04:35 -0400
HaywireMac [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
 This has *got* to be the most inscrutable piece of spam I have ever
 received...LOL!

Oh, great.  Now popfile will think this crap is ham...  :)

Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com