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ps2huang

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Posts posted by ps2huang

  1. I don't know if this appears to happen your places: when you go to withdraw money, you just simply press on the button of optional pads on the screen.

    I am thinking this, if we could use that to our computers, how wonderful it is. You still need a keyboards to type for your computer, but like browsing the sites, you just put your finger on something you want to.

     

    Great idea~~~~

  2. German settlers came from the East' date=' Asia. Jews moved there for some reason, and Germany accepted them until Martin Luther started the whole Nazi thing. Jews being smart in math is a stereotype, and a rather conservative one. There language was originally from Indo-European setters but blended locally having nothing to do with Hebrew. What else are we missing?

     

    Oh, and yeah, Germans have a strict hierarchy like society.[/quote']

    Well, someone told me on the net. Maybe I was confused. So you mean the earliest German settlers were from where of East, and where of Asia?

    Indo-European??? Sounds familiar. Does that mean Indian and European?

    I was told German language is difficult to learn. So I think Germany must have a strong policies. I think German people are very conservative at many perspective fields, righttt?

  3. I don't know. Some people on the net told me that Germans are very strict, hard-working group among all Europeans. They said because Germany have strong antecedent with the natives of Israel--which is Hebrew. We all know Jewish are smart at math or whatever, they were the earliest colonist in East German. And Eistien was half German and Half Jewish. So is this country stricest country over there?

    Also I heard German language has lots to do with Hebrew, right?

  4. I think in early studies they cut off the head didn't they?

     

    Well either way' date=' this is still being research. If any of you have read the front page article about zombie dogs, you'll notice that the science is still being perfected. I believe there are government regulations to actually try it on humans at this time.[/quote']

    Yeah, I saw it. If it is done successfully on humen, will that become Headline of Everywhere's News? Will that bring a huge evolution?

  5. There are some people frozen under the cryogenic devices. The purpose of doing it is because they want to be revived back to humen when it is able to. So how many constituion of this work are in US? And I heard they have sucessfully brought back a dog from death to alive. Will we be able to see some humen being brought alive in near future? If so, that means it will change the system of humen nature.

  6. You can keep food cold up to 3 days with dry ice but you will have to keep the outside temperature below 15 degress celisius or so. There are some handling precautions.

     

    To use dry ice make sure the manufacturer says that it is ok for the plastic as some will crack at that temperature and NEVER EVER EVER allow the dry ice to come into contact with metal. It will scream something aweful. Also you will have to ventilate the gas as it is carbon dioxide so you will have to leave the chest cracked a bit and plenty of fresh air from the outside. If not you can suffocate on long road trips.

     

    I have only used it when I could put it in the back of open air pickup trucks and than only on rare occasions when I was 4x4ing into the interior of a national park for up to a week at a time.

     

    It is much easier to pickup ice in convience stores as you need it. Dry ice is dangerous.

    I don't understand. First, what is the difference between normal ice and dry ice? And if I buy a bag of ice cubes putting into my ice chest to cool off my drinks, will those ices stay same for few days? How many days will they melt to water?

  7. Well, I have a question: Is there any ice chest that is able to chill your drinks for at least 3 days? That their cold temperature will stay same during the time. I saw the one sold in Long store for only 19 dollars, wondered if it has such a ability.

  8. But there is one thing to concern. THose people who are cryonically-preserved are aged people. Even we revive them, they might only live for another 20 years or so. So we need to find a way to stretch their life-span, then it is worth!

  9. There is a cryonic that preserve humen once they are dead.

    Do you think in future that the technology is able to make those people back along with infesting them young cells?

    Interesting to see those dead people come back.

  10. Well' date=' um, no, I didn't, but now you have me wondering about that.

     

    In speech, the adverb usually follows the verb, but in writing the placement depends very much on the required emphasis.

    E.g.

    "Slowly add the acid to the water."

     

    Is your native language inflected?[/quote']

    I think they put adverb behind a certain action is more common; so you mean they do it to emphasize something?

    I think to dissect the grammatical structure of that: do it which is slowly. But you say do it slowly is a fast-paced phrase.

  11. These are not actually wrong' date=' they are just uncommon. Yoda you will sound like if speak this way.

     

    But the answer to your question is that English is not a heavily inflected language; that is why word order is so important.

     

    Advice:

    If you want to study, work on vocabulary; as long as you know the right words, the conversation will flow.

     

    Don't worry so much about the rules of grammer; people would rather put a little effort into figuring out what you mean than watch you struggle to get the words out.

     

    To learn the rules of grammar, read, read, read. Start with children's books, start with Dr. Suess, and work your way up.[/quote']

    So you mean many native speakers say"slowly read it", too. Just that speak "do it slowly" will be easier for mouth and throat interatcion, right?

  12. The US, although it is currently being held down by many federal laws, is still able to do a fair amount of research. For example while other countries have the right to take stem cells from embryos, the US is devoting research to alternative stem cells found in human organs. These are showing more and more promise and if they (the US) are able to find a stem cell in the human body that can generate the phenomenal results produces by the embryonic stem cells. Also many US scientists simply move to other countries to bypass the laws that are currently restricting stem cell research. So really the US is not that far behind the rest of the world.

    Well, I think if US can continue doing stem-cell research, we will solve many problems in hospitals: some people have lung-cancer. If we can put a single cell of certain person to cultivate an artifical-made internal organ to replace its worsened lung, then it will be a whole new person.

    Isn't it nice?

    I think we are able to cultivate a complete internal organ of any kind within secs with reforming fluid and some other instructions, correct ?

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