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date: Fri, 8 Nov 2007 19:10:30 GMT,    group: microsoft.public.windowsnt.oemdsp.preinstall        back       


Muhammad AL-Kahtani should gaze her due to the fever   
Reply by email, filling out this form and emailing it to me.
Trimming off the rest of this post is unnecessary.

I will guarantee anonymity except in cases of blatant abuse.
I will achieve anonymity by tallying the results in
uncorrelated tabulations and then deleting the emails.
(I know this loses interesting correlation data, but if
resondents want anonymity it's hard to avoid.)
I know that this anonymity promise depends on trust and that
you have no particular reason to trust me. Someday, I hope.
I will post results Saturday.

 xxxxxxxx  beginning of survey  xxxxxxxx

 yes( )   ( )no Should RoadRunner be subjected to some kind of UDP?
 yes( )   ( )no ... active UDP (cancels) ?
 yes( )   ( )no ... passive UDP (drop messages) ?
 yes( )   ( )no ... all-groups UDP? (as opposed to specific groups)
 yes( )   ( )no Are you a Usenet sysadmin? How big:_   How long:_
 yes( )   ( )no Should another server be subjected to UDP? Who:_
 yes( )   ( )no Should UDPs be used more often?
 yes( )   ( )no Should UDPs be used less often?
 yes( )   ( )no Would you have answered this survey without anonymity?

 xxxxxxxx  end of survey  xxxxxxxx 


--
"many have died."
At the next house she was told, "It is impossible to tell
how many have died here, for this is an old house."

                                             197

    She went from house to house, throughout that street,  
to the next street, and the one after.  Scarcely pausing for  
rest or food, she went through the city from house to house  
and she could not find a single house which had not at some  
time been visited by death.                              
    Slowly she retraced her steps up the mountain slopes.       
The Buddha was, as before, sitting in meditation.  "Have      
you brought the mustard seed?"  He asked.                  
    "No, nor do I seek it any more," she said.  "My grief       
blinded me so that I thought that only I suffered and        
sorrowed."                                           
    "Then why have you again come to me?" asked the            
Buddha.                                               
    "To ask you to teach me the truth," she answered.           
    And the Buddha told her: "In all the world of man, and     
all the world of Gods, this alone is the Law: All things are  
impermanent."                                          
    Yes, I knew all the Teachings, but the loss of one dearly     
loved was still a loss.  The old lama smiled again and said,   
"A beautiful Little Person shall come to you to cheer your     
extraordinary difficult and hard life.  Wait!"               
    Some time after, several months after, we took the Lady      
Ku'ei into our home.  She was a Siamese kitten of surpassing     
beauty and intelligence.  Brought up by us as one would       
bring up a human, she has responded as a good human          
would.  Certainly sh
date: Fri, 8 Nov 2007 19:10:30 GMT   author:   Charles J. Savelli-Lokuta

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