From: Mxsmanic on 2 Aug 2006 13:17 JohnT writes: > It is French. You translated it. No, I did not. See: http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/ It's entirely in English. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail.
From: JohnT on 2 Aug 2006 13:24 "Mxsmanic" <mxsmanic(a)gmail.com> wrote in message news:8gn1d2dnenngah8rcplhm019b1mp9ho2h0(a)4ax.com... > JohnT writes: > >> It is French. You translated it. > > No, I did not. See: > > http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/ > > It's entirely in English. > It is FRENCH. JohnT
From: Stanislas de Kertanguy on 2 Aug 2006 13:28 Mxsmanic a pens trs fort : > JohnT writes: > >> It is French. You translated it. > > No, I did not. See: The fact that the website's URL is http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org is NOT a proof that you didn't translate beforehand (actually before searching for the website). > http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/ > > It's entirely in English. The words "Mdecins sans frontires" appear at the top of the page, obviously this isn't English. Moreover, this is a link to a website, and you have endlessly claimed that they are not reliable. How can we know who wrote this website ? -- remplacez "lesptt" par "laposte" pour me joindre substitute "laposte" for "lesptt" to reach me
From: Miguel Cruz on 2 Aug 2006 13:36 Mxsmanic <mxsmanic(a)gmail.com> wrote: > The monopoly on the local loop has never been broken. In large cities in the US there are often multiple local loop providers. Not sure about outlying areas. miguel -- Photos from 40 countries on 5 continents: http://travel.u.nu Latest photos: Malaysia; Thailand; Singapore; Spain; Morocco Airports of the world: http://airport.u.nu
From: mrtravel on 2 Aug 2006 14:27
Mxsmanic wrote: > mrtravel writes: > > >>How did you calculatae a 3.3 percent chance over 40 years would come out >>to 74 percent. > > > If 3.3 percent of the population changes jobs each year, then there's > a 96.7% chance that a person will not change jobs each year. The > chance of not changing jobs in 40 years would be .967^40, or 26.125%. > Therefore the chance of changing jobs in 40 years would be 100-26.125, > or 73.875%, which I rounded up. > Interesting math. But.... Job change is not all about probability. |