Re: Re: A little help.

2001-05-14 Thread Jim Windle
is indicators (like _this_ or like *this* or like) >> >> -- use of ellipses, em dashes, etc. >> >> -- vocabulary, phrases >> >I didn't want to have to come up with my own list if someone had done work >before me. > >Other ones I was thinking of we

Re: Re: A little help.

2001-05-14 Thread Jim Windle
On Sun, 13 May 2001 22:52:34 Ryan Sorensen wrote: > >* Jim Windle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [010513]: >> >> On Sun, 13 May 2001 21:41:06 Ryan Sorensen wrote: >> > >> >Any help is appreciated. >> >Including pointers to online resources

Re: A little help.

2001-05-13 Thread Jim Windle
rks, are the only source I am familar (with though there must be others). Unfortunately only the tables of contents of back issues seem to be available online. Jim Windle Join 18 million Eudora users by signing up for a free Eudora Web-Mail account at http://www.eudoramail.com

Re: p-adic chaos in random number generation: reference materials avail?

2001-04-09 Thread Jim Windle
"Numbers" Ebbinghaus et al Springer-Verlag ISBN 0-387-97497-0 Has an introduction to p-adic numbers that is about 20 pages and includes some references though nothing really recent. Jim Windle -- On Mon, 9 Apr 2001 14:56:08Phillip H. Zakas wrote: > >hi- > >con

Re: Re: Shooting down 'Bandit Satellites'

2001-03-11 Thread Jim Windle
According to Friday's Wall Street Journal spot platinum last closed at $588 per ounce and is up from $473 per ounce one year ago. -- On Sun, 11 Mar 2001 17:25:17 Brent Mattis wrote: > >nah bill, platinum is 600 dollars an ounce, its price has shot up over the >past five years. > >Brent > > >

Re: Re: Sealand and Experimental Rocketry

2001-02-21 Thread Jim Windle
-- On Wed, 21 Feb 2001 09:23:22 Declan McCullagh wrote: > >On Wed, Feb 21, 2001 at 12:17:32PM +, Ken Brown wrote: >> There have been commercial launches from Kenya, and from offshore >> platforms in the Indian Ocean. > >Right. I recall the company is SeaLaunch (I wrote about them once, a

Re: Sealand and Experimental Rocketry

2001-02-20 Thread Jim Windle
I think Tim's point was simply that Sealand's location is too far north to be a good launch site. To put a useful satellite in an orbit with a useful footprint for this purpose from a launch site so far north would require a lot lift capacity eliminating small launch systems, raising the issue