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I was just gonna say that.jonesthecurl wrote:Incidentally, and reinforcing an earlier point of mine, you will note that almost all your references were to film/TV, almost all mine to books.
Ah, I'll look into that.jonesthecurl wrote:Well, there have been film versions of both Yankee (with Bob hope I think) - from which the great song Busy Doing nothing came - and of Time Machine two at least, though I've only seen the classci George Pal one.
I'm not at liberty to tell you, otherwise the agency would revoke my rights to live in this century and the next/previous.jonesthecurl wrote: Did you turn the Memory Adjuster on, or one of those other TIme Patrol gadgets?
jonesthecurl wrote:Segueing from the Snorri tell us your views thread, where I shouldn't purvey MY views, I would recommend for the Dr Who that you try the modern ones first, the very originals, and the Tom Baker years. If that's not enough carry on, but it will get worse after that. BTW Douglas Adams was involved with the program for part of the Tom Baker period.
jonesthecurl wrote:Were one such a one, one might know
OMG!!!! THE COBRA COMMANDER IS SANTA CLAUS???? WTF???? OMG!!!!jonesthecurl wrote:Oh, sorry I meant Ho-ho-ho.
Well, I DO know if you've been bad or good. So be bad fro badness sake [turns to minion] "did I get that right? I always have trouble with that one"[turns back], no, I mean the other thing. Be good and that.Juan_Bottom wrote:[
OMG!!!! THE COBRA COMMANDER IS SANTA CLAUS???? WTF???? OMG!!!!jonesthecurl wrote:Oh, sorry I meant Ho-ho-ho.
Or a pimp?
No. Simply no.Burger King, or McDonalds?
Actually, most electricty is generated by causing a magnet to revolve at speed, I forget the details (I did used to lecture now and then to the public on this one occasionally) - but the reason that you get single-phase or three-phase power supplies is because the power is taken at three equally spaced points around the generator. Three power lines go down the normal street, each calling at every third property. For higher usage (usually industrial or commercial) a three-phase supply wil be used.Electricity can be used to control magnetism, how do I use magnetism to control/create electricity?
Ok.. so how do I get the electricity to go where I want it by using magnets, and no power lines? To control it like shooting a dart of electric power or something?jonesthecurl wrote:Actually, most electricty is generated by causing a magnet to revolve at speed, I forget the details (I did used to lecture now and then to the public on this one occasionally) - but the reason that you get single-phase or three-phase power supplies is because the power is taken at three equally spaced points around the generator. Three power lines go down the normal street, each calling at every third property. For higher usage (usually industrial or commercial) a three-phase supply wil be used.
The difference in producing electricty, with a few exceptions, is in how you make the magnet rotate.
Very well.jonesthecurl wrote:Ask me something about King Arthur and you might find some actual expertise displayed.
muy_thaiguy wrote:Which movie version of it do you prefer?
Good choice... high on my list as well.jonesthecurl wrote:Incidentally, my personal favourite of all the knights has always been Gareth Beaumains.
Come on? That story is retarded. He goes on a ride and every ten feet he meets a diffent knight to challenge? Each of them has a different colored armor, and each has more servants than the last?Nikolai wrote:Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Juan_Bottom wrote:Come on? That story is retarded. He goes on a ride and every ten feet he meets a diffent knight to challenge? Each of them has a different colored armor, and each has more servants than the last?Nikolai wrote:Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Story is dumb. I only read it thrice.
Well, at the end of Malory's Mort D'Arthur, Gawaine persuades Arthur to go to France to wage war on Lancelot. Lance fights as little as he possibly can, and knocks Gawain down but refuses to finish him. Eventually one of teh wounds proves fatal, and Gawain as he is dying realises what a wally he's been, that he has probably caused to defeat of Arthur by taking away his army to a war he didn't want, and with his dying breath begs Arthur to forgive Lancelot, call him back, and help fight the villainous Mordred.Nikolai wrote:Well answered... although I usually consider Chretien to be fairly early in the development of Arthurian legend, since he established the romantic attitude towards that court that tales of such have usually taken since. I always found it amusing that Gawain was considered the foremost of the court in arms and Galahad in purity, while Lancelot usually ranked as the third best knight (barring those few specific circumstances where he is suddenly somehow the best knight in the world, for a specific task)... and now people are lucky if they've heard of Gawain from Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Lancelot's story just makes better movies, I suppose... although I think you made a good pick on Excalibur. (Greystoke Legend, too.) Which raises an interesting prospect: might it be that Lancelot is the superior knight as an abstract literary character?
I do have to ask... since you might actually know... what is the name of the tale in which Lancelot kills Gawain? Somebody asked me last month and I couldn't remember.
Good choice... high on my list as well.jonesthecurl wrote:Incidentally, my personal favourite of all the knights has always been Gareth Beaumains.
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Big hands is Gareth? My bad...jonesthecurl wrote:Juan_Bottom wrote:Come on? That story is retarded. He goes on a ride and every ten feet he meets a diffent knight to challenge? Each of them has a different colored armor, and each has more servants than the last?Nikolai wrote:Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Story is dumb. I only read it thrice.
no, yer getting Gareth and Gawain mixed up.