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MulderMan

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Everything posted by MulderMan

  1. havent seen her since the days of clueless . my german is a bit rusty, Whats forbidden? lol
  2. so you have took the test to get into med school? or have passed med school? i heard something like that on ER but im not sure
  3. Ive been a avid xfiles fan all my life, but now i think its time to get a bit of star trek experiance. I went on Sayo's site the other day and found it usefull. I just want to know where is the best place to start, the best series and the like. What tv channels its on if all, best place to learn about it in general, the ships + the characters. I watched the movie last night on sci-fi, where spock died. Thanks.
  4. thats new to me , i guess ill actually have to watch an eppisode of it now:D.
  5. <childish mode>x-files sealing copying fools, it was ok as a xfiles stand alone epp but not as a whole spinoff. chris cater should be concentrating on the new movie! </childish mode>
  6. lol dont worry even English people skit charles's ears.
  7. it was enough to make my eyes water and nose hurt when i did it in a less ventolated area. Borrowed from web elements It is rarely necessary to make chlorine in the laboratory as it is readily available commercially in cylindes. Chlorine is found largely in seawater where it exists as sodium chloride. It is recovered as a reactive, corrosive, pale green chlorine gas from brine (a solution of sodium chloride in water) by electrolyis. Electrolysis of molten salt, NaCl, also succeeds, in which case the other product is sodium metal rather than sodium hydroxide. Na+ + Cl- + H2O Na+ + 1/2Cl2 + 1/2H2 + OH- In the laboratory under carefully controlled conditions, chlorine can be made by the action of an oxidizing agent such as manganese dioxide, MnO2, upon concentrated hydrochloric acid - the same reaction used by Scheele in 1774 when discovering chlorine. MnO2 + 4HCl MnCl2 + Cl2 + 2H2O
  8. It doesnt look like they own or rent a dedicated server, just use shared hosting. i did a whois of the domain and the ip address doesnt lead to sf.net so usually that means shared hosting. looks like there hosted by http://www.vintagehost.net/
  9. electrolising salt water gives off chlorine doesnt it?
  10. i cant be bothered arguing, ive sat through 9 years of the x files so its my dutee to belive.
  11. bruce lee and jimi hendrix were born on my birthday, or dont u know who they are? o yea i was born on my birthday aswell...
  12. as for mathamaticians: Mathematicians born on this day: 1867 : Arthur Dixon 1909 : Malcev 1923 : Jesse Wilkins Mathematicians who died on this day: 1754 : de Moivre 1849 : Ruan Yuan 1852 : Lovelace 1904 : Paul Tannery
  13. jimi hendrix and bruce lee were born on my birthday
  14. can i ask what is calculus? my maths teacher says it is "old" maths but i figure she either cant be rsed to telll me or doesnt know herself.
  15. arnet dosimeters supposed to be develeped? or am i getting mixed up with another one?
  16. certainly different... but interesting, in a weird sort of strange way. shame i dont have a furby to perform an autopsy on.
  17. for asthma (inhalers) i take one called Beclazone 100 (Beclomethasone Dipropionate BP), that is the preventer that i take in the morning and night. then there is one called Ventolin (Salbutamol Sulphate BP), that is the reliver to take if i have a attack. then theres the steroid tablets but i hate those so ill leave it there. if you want to know the propelents used just ask.
  18. im sure its one size fits all, but they have some silly rule where under 16's cant fill up. in america is it self service or does someone do it for you?
  19. try getting one of those revision books for what level examination the student is at. i dont think its a case that you dont know the stuff its the case of you dont know what to teach them. what grade are you in?
  20. schools out! ive still got another month left!!oh well. ive not got a BSc but some/most people here have which is what most if not all teachers have anyway so i dont doubt alot. over here its compulsary chemistry knowladge to know the reactivity series in water and oxygen, before ya start GCSE's, but i dont know what year your in,
  21. dont mean to nit pick just flicking through my gcse chemistry revision guide . the reactivity series in it that we suposedly have to learn is : potassium , sodium, calcium, magnesium, alumunium, carbon, zinc, iron, lead, hydrogen, copper, silver, gold. is that right? what grade or year are you in school? if you get to know your science teacher/lab and they trust you they may let you do some 'off-curriculum' experiments, but im not sure how it works in america. but the only time we get to use potassium and sodium is when we do the 'how they react with water' experiment and even thats a demo by the teacher.
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