Domain: google.hu
Stories and comments across the archive that link to google.hu.
Comments · 8
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Re:She fucking Darwined herself
It looks like a crossing (and it certainly should be) but it's actually not:
streetview -
It's not global
You all seemed not to notice the fact that it's only in the USA.
https://www.google.hu/images?q=blowjob
Just switch to a different domain.
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Re:Bitcoin
That's why I only accept currency that I can eat.
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Re:Not a unique ability
There was also a report on a sea snail which had chlorophyll incorporated in its body, giving it a green color and energy source:
http://www.google.hu/m/search?site=images&source=mog&hl=hu&gl=hu&client=safari&q=sea%20snail%20clorophyll#i=3 -
Re:It's fully functional.
No, just the bad words.
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Re:um
Just because people can't get rid of it doesn't mean it shouldn't die.
In 1997, the Gartner Group reported that 80% of the world's business ran on COBOL with over 200 billion lines of code in existence and with an estimated 5 billion lines of new code annually.
It's evolving, too:
Work is progressing on the next full revision of the COBOL Standard. It is expected to be approved and available in the early 2010s.
And if you still think it's unfair to compare Java to COBOL, I got news for you.
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Re:Corruption is good when it works in our favor
Besides, raids on suspected copyright infringers are nothing new. There have been similar raids on The Pirate Bay, and Sony certainly operates on a comparable scale. That is not some school kid who shares a few albums on his computer.
Things like that happen everywhere. Unfortunately Google Translate fails horribly (for example, the Hungarian word "lett" means both Latvian and was/became).
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Re:Myths and History
Personal security is a myth that rose from the ashes of wishful security.
Passwords are passwords: designed to distinguish those who have the rights from those who don't. If you grant anyone else the right to modify your personal website (except of course those who maintain it under your supervision), you shouldn't be a politician.
Oh, and any information that gets into a buerocratic machine is public from a security point of view. Take my word for it.