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Been Selling E-cycles for a year now and there going well you can check them out on my website http://www.brilynestates.com Opening a New Sales location at 112 Portland St Dartmouth Dealer Inquries Welcome $$$$$ ... Are You Ready To Start Saving Money ...$$$$$ E-Cycles were brought into Nova Scotia in the spring of 2006. There are many of them out on the streets now. While they may not     

Group: ns.forsale · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in ns.forsale
Author: brilyn
Date: May 31, 2007 11:44

An accompanying mail was sent to the following addresses which are thought to be responsible for domain(s), IP blocks, ASN, or nameservers associated with the origin point: postmaster@010-101.com, abuse@gt.ca, abuse@peer1.net Message abstract: Message ID: <200705210135.l4L1ZxBE070274@trapjaw.010-101.com> Originating IP address: 64.69.77.70 (64-69-77-70.010-101.com
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On 15 Mar 2007 23:05:57 -0700, "RicodJour" <ricodjour@worldemail.com> wrote: >...There are certain things which show up much more frequently at night >and some people consider them worthy of viewing. Things like the >lights on buildings on mountains and in valleys, a nighttime skyline >with bridges, the moon reflecting on the water, stars.... There's also the matter of how our homes look     

Group: news.admin.netabuse.sightings · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in news.admin.netabuse.sightings
Author: Chris
Date: May 21, 2007 20:00

On 15 Mar 2007 23:05:57 -0700, "RicodJour" <ricodjour@worldemail.com> wrote: ...There are certain things which show up much more frequently at night and some people consider them worthy of viewing. Things like the lights on buildings on mountains and in valleys, a nighttime skyline with bridges, the moon reflecting on the water, stars.... There's also the matter of how our homes look
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On Dec 21, 11:24 pm, Ernst Blofeld <blofel...@hotmail.com> wrote: > On Dec 21, 9:01 pm, Vide...@tcq.net wrote: > > > > Krugman called Friedman a "profound economic theorist", which he was. > > > You don't do yourself any favors by calling Friedman a crank. > > >  he was being polite, whilst at the same time dissing him:) > > He certainly had his disagreements with Friedman--and he was usually     

Group: alt.architecture.alternative · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in alt.architecture.alternative
Author: Paul M. Eldridge
Date: Mar 16, 2007 08:06

Number: 129914 Category: ports Synopsis: [patch] net-im/amsn: fix tray icon issues with fluxbox / stalonetray Confidential: no Severity: non-critical Priority: low Responsible: freebsd-ports-bugs State: open Quarter: Keywords: Date-Required: Class: change-request Submitter-Id: current-users Arrival
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I have to admit that this was a bit of work because I never tried to make a plot with an x-axis break before, but this can be done with the Presentations package. I plot BesselJ[5,x] and x^2 on the same plot with the y scale on the left going from -0.4 to 0.4 and on the right going from 0 to 2500. The scale on the right was produced with CustomTicks. The x^2 function and scale are shown in     

Group: alt.energy.renewable · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in alt.energy.renewable
Author: Paul M. Eldridge
Date: Mar 16, 2007 08:06

>From the Help page, go to Core Language, Functional Programming. Then just try out these commands. There was another posting today titled 'eliminate values while calculating Mean[data]' by Pasha Karami in which he wanted to eliminate zero values from a list of data. This is very easily done with the Functional Programming Select command. You don't even have to know how long the list is
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Use the Fuctional Programming command Select. data = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0, 0, 0}; data2 = Select[data, # != 0 &] {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} Mean[data2] 3 -- David Park djmpark@comcast.net http://home.comcast.net/~djmpark/ "Pasha Karami" <karami@geo.uu.nl> wrote in message news:gag2rl$3fq$1@smc.vnet.net... > Dear all, > > An easy question: > I would like to make an average of a data     

Group: alt.fan.danquayle · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in alt.fan.danquayle
Author: Video61
Date: Dec 24, 2008 22:34

Narasimham, I'll do your problem using the Presentations package. Needs["Presentations`Master`"] First I find your notation just a little jarring. z is usually used for the complex variable, x is usually the real part of a complex number and I'll use f for the function. f[z_] := 1.3 Sin[1.7 z] + 0.6 Sin[4 z] The easiest way to see the zeros is to make a contour plot of the modulus
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Group: mailing.freebsd.portsbugs · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in mailing.freebsd.portsbugs
Author: Lars Engels
Date: Dec 24, 2008 09:41

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Group: comp.softsys.math.mathematica · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in comp.softsys.math.mathematica
Author: David Park
Date: Sep 16, 2008 16:23

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Group: comp.softsys.math.mathematica · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in comp.softsys.math.mathematica
Author: David Park
Date: Sep 15, 2008 00:42

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Group: comp.softsys.math.mathematica · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in comp.softsys.math.mathematica
Author: David Park
Date: Sep 15, 2008 00:42

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Group: comp.softsys.math.mathematica · Group Profile · Search for Net Zero Home in comp.softsys.math.mathematica
Author: David Park
Date: Sep 10, 2008 02:08

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