From: Mxsmanic on
JohnT writes:

> It is French. You translated it.

No, I did not. See:

http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/

It's entirely in English.

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From: JohnT on

"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
Mxsmanic a pens trs 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 "Mdecins sans frontires" 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 ?

--
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From: Miguel Cruz on
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
--
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From: mrtravel on
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.