Domain: yahooligans.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to yahooligans.com.
Comments · 12
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Reminds me of a better game...
Start at Yahooligans and see how many clicks it takes to get to a porn site. You can only click, you're not allowed to search.
Hint -- the beginner's method is to click on the "Terms of Service" link at the bottom of the page which features a convenient link to the real Yahoo. From there, it's easy. I consider that cheating, but whatever works for you.
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"Bible" and "paper" both come from "papyrus""Bible" comes from Byblos:
Byblos.
Ancient city, E Mediterranean coast. Located north of modern Beirut, it was occupied at least by the Neolithic period; extensive settlement developed during the 4th millennium BC. As the chief harbor for the export of cedar to Egypt, it was a great trading center. Papyrus received its early Greek name, byblos, from its export to the Aegean through Byblos; Bible means essentially "the (papyrus) book." Byblos has yielded almost all the known early Phoenician inscriptions, most from the 10th cent. BC. By that time Tyre had become predominant in Phoenicia, and Byblos, though it flourished into Roman times, never recovered its former supremacy.Paper also comes from papyrus:
Etymology: Middle English papir, from Middle French papier, from Latin papyrus papyrus, paper, from Greek papyros papyrus Date: 14th century
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Yahooligans!I personally recommend (and point people toward) Yahooligans which is basically "Yahoo for kids". From there you can find lots of great stuff from all over the web. Hint: the buttons on the left refer to Yahooligan's own content, and the directory topics in the center go to a typical yahoo-style directory. Of course, you can also do a search on the main page.
This page is also a great location to set the browser home page to on computers in schools and other similar locations where the kids are likely to be the primary computer user.
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sites for kids
- Yahooligans is Yahoo's directory of kid-friendly sites
- Discovery Channel stuff for kids
- News for kids
... get them used to keeping up with world events!
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Yahoo!
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Re:flash...
Useless 'intro' pages exist because the web authors view a lot of pr0n sites, and model their company site off what they're familiar with. This is painfully obvious when the intro pages have another link like:
If you do not wish to consume our goods and/or services, you must EXIT.
(PS: flash must die.)
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Re:As others will surely also state...
I equate intelligence to survival
The moon's survived for four billion years. Does that make it intelligent? -
Why not filtering & monitoring tools?
"Erotik providers are the only on-line industry, which writes black numbers." LOL!
German politicians would emphasize parental responsibility (to beat a skeletal horse) instead, via the use of personal filtering and monitoring tools, or even *gasp* supervision! Surely this would give them better results than attempting to regulate 'hours of operation' of porn sites over which they have no control whatsoever.
I love when politicians attempt to draft legislation around technical issues, without the slightest attempt to learn about the issue. There's really no excuse for it. -
Of *course* Perl is funny!
I've known for a long time that Perl is a funny language. After all, its creator, "Larry Wall", definitely has a sense of humour.
The proof of this, of course, is right here, and here.
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Yahooligans!Does this mean that all of Yahoo! will be blocked by the various censorware companies?
Heck! They may block themselves...
And one wonders if some arbitrary link from Yahooligans could ever cross the line...And wasn't Yahooligans a censroware service itself at one point? Now that's talking out of both sides of your face!Galego
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Let others do the work for you
If this is for a public access site, set up the browsers so they cannot manually enter URLs, then set up bookmarks to kid friendly indexes like Yahooligans This provides access to sites for "breast cancer" and "chicken recipes", but won't return anything for "hot anal sex"
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Re:The Law of War?
"Rules of Engagement" are as old as conflict itself, and as silly as it might sound, they're better than nothing at all.
In regards to this particular gem, i'm not entirely sure how this is a "new" revelation - impersonating enemy leaders has always been "illegal", in any form - whether it be cardboard cutouts or professional actors.
Digital imaging is just another form of said impersonation. Why, exactly, did we need a study to show this to be true? Ah, the tax money hard at work.
This is a little off topic, but there's always room for informational links on the Laws of War, so i say :).
What are the rules of Engagement? - about.com
Y! - The Rules of War
Rules of Warfare - Arms Control
The Geneva Convention(s) - Modern "Laws of War".
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| big bad mr. frosty
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