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Messages - Tuomas

#2481
General Discussion / Re: Earlobe issues
Mon 07/11/2005 18:59:31
I had this terrible acne 2 years ago, just for you to know...  and it took a year for it to heal, though I still have scars... but it left a lumb of somekind in both my earlobes. The other one left, but the other onein my right earlobe still is there. Has been for 2 years now... weird thing that one :P I just though it was a pimple, but dunno anymore.
#2482
General Discussion / Re: Help name my kitten!
Sun 06/11/2005 17:54:42
why not call her Piru? I heard of an old woman who had a cat called Piru... And she always yelled after it.

Or Ripuli?.... Miuku?   get a boy cat and name them Romeo and Julia... what then... Viksu? sorry, that's something saw in my room just now...  Mansikka is also a cool name.. or strawberry...
#2483
heh, I remember when I was one of the tallest in my class... that's what you get for growing up earlier... though today there's 1-2 boys in my whole school who are shorter than me :D Well at least I grow beard and none of my friends do, so though shorter, I get into the bars... And I was the first one to... well anyway... Some of them still scream occasionally and that's a laugh
#2484
Myself, I despise tabs... they tend to make you impotent... I recommend you get to know the most common scales first so that you won't have difficulties. I personally never learned any song by heart, just the chords and the structure, the musicians don't know the fills nor the solos by heart either, if they do, the solos lack depth and life.
   Actually I suggest you take into notes, once you learn them, they are much easier than tabulatures. My two friends learned stupid Metallica solos by heart and once they had to improvise solos, they only playd some from this and some from that. And basically, that sounded awful :P well, I don't know how my solos suond like, but my teacher says I'm rather good. Just that you need to know what for example blues, jazz, folk, country is all about before you can play it...

oh, and learn this by heart: http://users.utu.fi/mapekl/teoria/kvinttiympyra.gif

Might you give a hint of what kind of music you like...?
#2485
time heals all the wounds as they say. I've had the same problem many times. Wait for few months, and with good luck you'll be able to delete it then. Sometimes happens that it disappears by itself. If there's a quicker cure, I don't know it, but I'd like to...
#2486
I think, that a woman has every right to have abortion, in specific circumstances. And I believe the man has every right to know of it, though I agree, that she should not be forced to tell. I think that relationships are based on trust, but if such happens outside a relationship, it's up to the woman. Anyway, I totally accept abortion as a procedure, if the baby is not old enough. As a man I think I had the right to know, because it's about my life too, my baby... But it's up to the girl, let her concider it.
#2487
Janik, I meant that sonce I'm not qualified enough as any Ph.D would be, I can do such statements based on the knowledge that I hold. Real Ph.Ds or students for that matter are there to tell me what I did wrong :D

2ma2, you just said it. People used to think electricity was regarded as witchcraft, electric phenomenons maybe as ghosts or some "unnatural"... today, we do not understand ghosts, earlier they did not understand many things. So briefly thinking I might suggest that what I use the term of Ghost for is what I mean by something that is unknown to us. So I should withdraw the word ghost. No, rather I should keep the specific explanation to the term that will be used from now on, the one mentioned above.

After all this discussion perhaps I can truly finish my theory and present it to my teacher. Anyway, once we prove there is something now unknown to us and we discover it, it'll be unknown anymore... swell
#2488
Yes well, Janik, you see, if someone really is a Ph.D. he'd probably never waste his talent on something as useless as this. Though I remember seeing pictures with ghosts in them... Or not necessarely ghosts, things we reckon as ghost-like or even supernatural. But the might all be photoshopped or not. What I get from your post, is that it is not impossible for cameras to take pictures of such?

I only just realize Igot a little carried away with the O2 thing, I first wrote H2O there but then thought of it, and changed it without thinking it through really... I don't see why this couldn't be, I mean, H2O has hydrogen in it, and occasionally it may be in some commection to what I'm saying... got to study deeper or forget it.
#2489
Shbaz I don't necessarily mean just hydrogen atoms, it's an example because it's easy to study :P

Iwon't be saying there necessarily was some materia we do not know of, but to think of it, if we don't know about it, there may even be. I know there are lots of things I don't know but they still exist...
And I know for true I believe, that for example hydrogen emits light different to what we normally see and some may be able to see it.

For those who want to hang me for being a pagan or so, I suggest you take this with a little bit of humour, personally, I think this makes sense, still  do not believe in ghosts myself. It's hard because I haven't seen one. And hey. there's this one rule up there MrColossal pointed out, I will ignore one wrod posts since they don't make you any more mature than what I am.
#2490
Basically what I'm saying, is that "ghosts" as we know them, may not be something that we turn into, but merely some material we cannot see in most cases, which often gets the form of something familiar. Now that I think of it, all organic creatures reproduce their cells continuously. And as we do, the outer cells on our skin die, and fall. This means, that where ever we go, there are marks that we have been there. Sized as cells are, they will not be visible but through specific equipment.

Later on I started thinking: In every decomposing process is burning in variable froms, reacting with 02 to be exact. Now burning in most cases, if not all, produces amounts of hydrogen. Might it keep it's shape or then could the magnetic fields that surround us be transferred or perhaps the charge within the atoms stay, that is still unclear to me... must figure it out, thoug I think I don't have the equipment.

Anyway, there are some wavelengths that can be seen by some and not others, nor can they sometimes be seen with qualified equipment!

[edit]Due to complaining arguments and shallowminded people I am to appologise that I may have some spelling errors in the post, and thereby it isn't exact. Yet I ask you to even concider the theory before questioning it, because then you do not have anything to argue with, and I am not willing to argue with such people. Furthermore I will be willing to hear good arguments for and against me, such with which I can carry on further. Thank you[/edit]
#2491
Hear this people, and do not close your eyes for openness is a virtue.

While studying modern physics we came across this great invention called the spectrum of the hydrogen atom. Now we all know that the light visible for man is within the wavelength from 380-760Hz/nm. Spectrum means
Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  A. The distribution of energy emitted by a radiant source, as by an incandescent body, arranged in order of wavelengths.
Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  Ã,  B. The distribution of atomic or subatomic particles in a system, as in a magnetically resolved molecular beam, arranged in order of masses.
(free from a dictionary)Ã, 
Or to those who aren't so good at English
Thus the rainbow is a visual phenomenon called scattering where the white light, containing all the wavelengths of visible light, reflects from the front to the back of a drop of water and then again from the front as such:

Now what has this to do with hydrogen atoms? As all we know, some materia can emit spacific wavelength of light while others can absorb it. This would mean that if you sent the whole spectrum to say through some materia in the form of gas, the gas would absorb the wavelengths it cannot emit.
in this one there's no gas, but from top to bottom
1. Diamond(cape)
2. Diamond(with 540nm abrobtionline)
3. Ruby
4. Spinel (red)
5. Emerald
The black lines on each horizontal line stand for the wavelenghts that the certain minerals do not emit.

This phenomenon can also take place in other occasions such as the following. once the electron is charged it will move to an outer shell, and then immidiately return to it's position releasing it's energy in waves in spectrums.

In 1885 A Swiss mathematician Johann Palmer noticed, that the equation for hydrogen atom's spectrum, or better, the lines could be written as 1/λ = RH(1/22-1/m2,Ã,  m=3,4,5,... Where as we all know, the RH is the Rydberg constantfor hydrogen.
The black lines are MOSTLY located within the wavelengths of visible light. But, as later was noticed, some or them are located within those of both infrared and ultraviolet. Once we add those, we get: 1/λ = RH(1/n2-1/m2), n=1,2,3,...; m=n+1, n+2,...
Where the series within UV is named after Lyman, n=1, m=2,3,...; the visible light after Balmer, n=2, m=3,4,...; and the IR area- after Paschen, n=3, m=4,5,...; all by their founders.

Finally, these Paschen and Lyman series can in some very rare cases be seen to some people who are even more scarce. Meaning, that in some very obscure occasions some people may be anle to see things that are not visible to others. Now this goes for hydrogen. Suppose ghosts are not hydrogen, but some materia unfamiliar to us, yet. This however counts out the accusations we tend to make to those who claim they have seen a ghost, because we cannot prove they are lying, in fact, we can hereby prove they have seen something.

On these bases we could analyze a story written in the NY Times few days ago:

A New Home, Not Quite Vacated

By SUSAN MILLAR PERRY
Published: October 30, 2005

It began much like any classic horror story: an unsuspecting couple fall in love with a classic six with two bedrooms in a 1912 Blum Brothers building. It was a tumbledown wreck, of course, with cracked plaster everywhere, a creaky old kitchen and only one working bathroom, out of three. But my husband, David Perry, and I were won over by the glorious sprawl of rooms, with the bonus of original crown moldings, wainscoted walls and 10-foot ceilings.

In addition, the living room fireplace, adorned with Grueby Arts and Crafts tiles, was a gem. This was a palace compared with our one-bedroom two floors up, which we had so obviously outgrown since our son was born. And as luck would have it, not only the price was right - so was the timing, because we had a buyer for our place.

The fact that the big, vintage apartment had never fallen victim to a cheesy renovation had a simple explanation: In close to a century, only one family of renters had ever lived there. In fact, the last of the clan, the 90-year-old Mr. Schwab, the only name we knew him by, had peacefully died just weeks before in the master bedroom. My husband and I knew Mr. Schwab, a kindly, dapper man, with his signature trench coat and Camel dangling from his mouth.

Ã,  Ã, - A cliché, we know that... as you might have noticed, the writer was indeed the owner of the house, hardly in need of the money from publicity she gets according to the pictures of the house.

The building gossip was that he had been a spy for the United States during World War II. We kept thinking of that as we cleaned out piles of Nazi memorabilia from one of the nonfunctioning bathrooms, which he had used as a sort of giant filing cabinet, before we could forge ahead, painting, plastering and renovating the kitchen in order to move in.

I was more perturbed than understanding of our dog Bailey's reluctance to visit the job site. Bailey, normally an inquisitive retriever, refused to set one paw in the place, forcing us to drag him in by the leash.

Then our superintendent, who was clipping along nicely doing all the painting and plastering at night on his off hours, suddenly told us he would work in the apartment only during the daytime. That meant weekends, at a much slower pace. He never quite gave us a full explanation, just muttering something about hearing strange sounds and having a few too many accidental tumbles off his ladder.

It was only after we moved in that I knew that the apartment - or rather someone who used to live there - was trying to communicate with us, and not in the friendliest of ways. My husband, looking white as a proverbial ghost as he climbed into bed one night, told me that he had just been pushed while brushing his teeth.

As you see, this was a long story, which you can only read once you have signed in for an online subscriber, that is why I will not link it here. But I shall, cut the most meaningless parts away.

"Oh, come on," I said in disbelief. "No, really," he continued, "like this," and he gave me quite a shove. A few days later he said he had felt the same invisible nudge as he was drifting off to sleep.

From then on, the barking began, usually around 3 a.m. With the fur on his back bristling to attention, Bailey was obviously guarding us against something, but what?
Ã,  Ã,  -They had to make the dog listen classical music in order to get him relaxed.

Just as the barking - and shoving - seemed to subside, I was awakened one night by my son's screams: "Mommy, Mommy, there's a man in my room!" I knew it wasn't the power of suggestion that had induced his terror, because my husband and I had never spoken of our visitor in front of Nick, who was then 5.

The next morning he wouldn't let it go. Over Cheerios and cocoa, our son described the man in his "nightmare," who sounded remarkably like Mr. Schwab. The man, he insisted, had stood at the foot of his bed, with outreached hands, ready to grab him. Could the vet be right, did our son and dog actually see dead people?
Ã,  Ã,  Ã, - Now here's something that my investigations back up well enough... And as it is universally known, aanimals hear, smell, and probably see more than we do... Do not forget that the older you get, the less colours you see. I could keep a lesson of this too, but I better spare you for now ;)

Not long after that, we came home to an even more disturbing scene. Bailey, quivering and soaking wet, was skulking under a table, with his tail straight and stiffened between his legs. And there was a rushing sound - water, from the bathroom shower inexplicably turned at full blast. The water was scalding hot, and so steam had built up everywhere, even causing the plaster on part of the living room ceiling to splatter to the floor.
Ã,  Ã,  -Ã,  The house got Blessed, etc. etc. The woman consulted her friend:

she assured me that I could perform the exorcism quite easily myself. "The ghost likes your feminine energy," she said. "He's never bothered you, just your husband, son and male dog."

-She then tried some exsorcism. etc. etc. etc. blaa blaa talked to the ghost she wouldn't see, and he never harrassed them again.

(The chapters were mostly loaned from NY Times, not copied, thus I am not breaking any copyright laws, I'm merely referring to the subject)

Now I reckon once you have taken the time reading this utmost discovery, you wouldn't leave it uncommented, would you now? Either refer to my theory, what do yo uthink of it, or to the article I referred to.
#2492
Well. It appears I was wrong... Seems it's somewhat anglican... well, I still concider myself Christian not celebrating them, so... nor does most of the European Catholics according to what Petteri linked. Therefore I still don't find it a *Christian holiday* if a minority of Christians celebrate a pagan holiday... Tat is why I don't find the midsummer day Christian holiday either!
#2493
I might argue with Halloween and Thanksgiving being Christian holidays since both of them are only celebrated in America, am I right? Yes, some of us try to sell stupid costumes, but no-one ever gets the day off for either of them. And as far as I recall, there are Christians in Europe too... I know I'm one.

And I know Father Christmas lives in Lapland, in Finland and he doesn't wear red and white COCA COLA colours, nor does he give out gifts. Or he wouldn't before other culures ruined our pagan holiday. how do I know this? Let's say, it's a VERY old tradition and here I'm on Russia's side. I truly hope there will never be Halloween here even though we tend to copy everything from America because it doesn't belong here, more, it doesn't fit here.
#2494
Actually, seeing Britney naked spasificly isn't at all the point. The point is to see someone nude. THe Britney there is a bite for googlers to get caught in. At least, I never took any notice to the girl being Britney Spears... of course we all know we wont find nude pictures on her in the net, or if we do, link me :D
#2495
General Discussion / Re: HELP: Gift Ideas?
Sat 29/10/2005 20:02:57
I'd get some clothes for both of them, that matches, that would be fun, She'd think you were adorable... Then I quote
Quote from: Evil on Sat 29/10/2005 19:57:52
Flowers or something
Fleur indeed... always good. Though you wouldn't want me to give gifts to your wife? anyway, gota go. Just make her remember you love her
#2496
Now there's a good way to kill your grandfather. That is if you necessarily need to do so.
#2497
to the anim. I would do this:
-Shorten the steps, that looks kind of painful..
-add some depth with shadowing, I doubt the leg behind would be the same level of darkness the whole time

well, nothing more :) but think of it
#2498
Critics' Lounge / Re: Just a sprite.
Tue 25/10/2005 20:53:24
My suggestion is: if you want to be a better drawer, take some effort and draw the best sprite you can, not the fastest you can. Once you can't make it better yourself, post it here and we'll be glad to help. No-one's really interested in giving c&c to someone who isn't or doesn't look like he's even trying.

If you want to know how it looks like, I say it looks like a sprite drawn in 2 minutes. It lacks effort and thereby, well, if I give you advice, you still can't make it in 2 minutes... Anyway, what's the use of making one so hastily if you can do better? I don't get the point here... ???
#2499
General Discussion / Re: I have superpowers.
Mon 24/10/2005 18:12:03
Or let's delete the starting post he made and continue with the very subject of hypnotizing because I for one am most interested and eager to hear more :D
#2500
General Discussion / Re: I have superpowers.
Sun 23/10/2005 20:43:33
mmääähh.. how can she find her retarded if she's dead?
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