Domain: fc2.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to fc2.com.
Comments · 17
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Get used to it Hooverites.
There are many other messages that remain inaccessible historically.
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Here's the letter and data
This appears to be the letter and the data that started all this:
http://olympicsokuteikai.web.fc2.com/encontents.html
Perhaps the most crucial part of the letter is this:
"Just before the Fukushima power plant accident, the mean value of the atmospheric radiation in Tokyo was estimated as 0.04 Sv/h, and radioactive Cesium was almost non-existent. Therefore, atmospheric radiation value above this level can be regarded as the effect of the nuclear accident."
Is that a valid assumption? -
PS2NeXT
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PS2NeXT
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Re:No, no, no!
Not knowing what Reticulated Gap-Toothed Yokel were, a quick google search gave me a link to this http://gingerpubktic.blog128.fc2.com/ site.
As a ginger naturally I felt offended by you providing me with said link.
But when I finally get my revenge when we gingers take over the world due to the revengue collected from the sales of Tori Amos CDs and ginger porn which we continuously put in a big fund, it will be a special pleasure to me to forcing you to carry my umbrella whenever I leave the house in broad daylight. -
Re:Paging lawyers
Maybe this one?
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FYI: Strange sense of pursuit of quality
Just FYI, many Japanese geeks were amazed by his "pursuit of quality" shown on Japanese TV news.
[WASTE OF TALENT] On "Excessive quality" of Ika-Tako virus's illustration and character background.
- http://zeark969.blog38.fc2.com/blog-entry-1668.htmlAlthrough page above is in Japanese, I'd say a picture is worth a thousand words.
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You ain't seen nothing...
Welcome to China.
A more accurate translation would be "dry fried duck", but I suppose there's a more elegant translation.
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http://blog-imgs-38.fc2.com/o/t/t/ottovon/_20gb601.jpg
Welcome to Hong Kong -- this one actually made it to local news headlines for its hilarity.[ Bold/top line is original text, middle line is google's translations (which sucks), and bottom is what it really means ]
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The elementary school blog
Here's one of the elementary school's blog entries about the subject, in case any of you were curious.
"The amazing world through an electron microscope" (Japanese only)
Previously, we asked the children for suggestions on what they wanted to see through the electron microscope. At this morning's assembly, we showed objects that three students wanted to see. The first was a butterfly's scales [on its wings]. The second was a 10 yen coin. The third was a single-celled organism called Foraminifera. The children's eyes sparkle with excitement when they see things that are normally not visible through a regular microscope.
It sounds like these kids are really getting a kick out of this piece of equipment. Iwanuma isn't exactly a poor elementary school, but it's neat that the microscope is small and inexpensive enough that the school can afford it. I worked at a smaller elementary school in northern Miyagi that had a computer lab with videoconferencing equipment, and my guess is that the schools that don't buy an electron microscope will use those cameras to share with other nearby schools that do.
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Re:This is a longstanding Windows flaw.
I'd say it is a security flaw in Safari, but for different reasons. As the same blog explains, you could have Safari download an executable to the desktop that pretends to be e.g. Internet Explorer. If they normally launch IE from the desktop, they could click the fake IE next time, running arbitrary code.
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Re:Secure from the ground up!RTFA. Actually, it looks like this is a windows problem. Safari automatically downloads a file to the desktop. Then when you start Internet Explorer it runs the file on your desktop and there is the problem.
So the real issue is that Safari can be told to automatically download a file while internet explorer will automatically run a malicious dll from the desktop. actual post and proof-of-concept code here.
seems like a misleading summary to me. IE won't run anything "automatically." It sounds like the problem is that Safari both autodownloads to the desktop and then tells IE to open that file on its next load. -
Re:Secure from the ground up!
RTFA. Actually, it looks like this is a windows problem. Safari automatically downloads a file to the desktop. Then when you start Internet Explorer it runs the file on your desktop and there is the problem.
So the real issue is that Safari can be told to automatically download a file while internet explorer will automatically run a malicious dll from the desktop. actual post and proof-of-concept code here.
seems like a misleading summary to me. -
But, are they as cool as THESE?
http://pelleteria.blog89.fc2.com/
Can we get some "bling" with the bag of chips? -
Anime-style?
So these new suits look something like this?
Are they going to start using high school girls for astronauts too?