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Jeb

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Everything posted by Jeb

  1. September 11, 2001 attacks http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/September_11%2C_2001_attacks
  2. Abu Ghraib Prisoner Abuse http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abu_Ghraib_prisoner_abuse
  3. JimD http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:JimD GD http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:GD User:Quadell/Brag list page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Quadell/Brag_list
  4. Check' em all out here! http://www.recmod.com/hurricane/ivan/ivan7.html http://www.recmod.com/hurricane/ivan/ivan8.html See also: http://www.recmod.com/hurricane/
  5. Yeah it's a way cool webpage! Check it out at: http://www.freewebs.com/ivanthehurricane/index.htm
  6. The Edge of Creation http://www.edgeofcreation.net/ Other interesting URLs http://www.easychatforum.viperhosting.net/...hp?showtopic=39 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Bryan_Derksen http://www.aulinx.de/oss/code/wikipedia/ http://www.tropicalroundtable.com/index.php http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_...l=wikipedia.org
  7. This is an AWESOME satellite pic of IVAN as he neared landfall. http://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/archdat/tropica...b-279N-882W.jpg
  8. Check out phpbbclassified: http://www.phpbbclassified.com/
  9. Please see this page: http://www.chasersofthegraveyard.com/
  10. This is the Kitty Hawk website's page on water safety: http://www.kittyhawkfd.com/watersafety.html
  11. I don't mean the wrestlers, I mean The Hardy Boys adventure detective stories. Check out the Wikipedia Hardy Boys page!!! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardy_Boys
  12. Check this page out! They are at 9400 feet with 41 inches of snow as of 1pm EDT Oct 20 2004. http://www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/nwcc/sntl-dat...days=7&state=CA
  13. Name: Typhoon NOCK-TEN (28W) Date: 10-20-04 Updated: 11:38 AM (03:38 UTC) 1-min.Winds Warning Date/Time (in Knots) Direction of Number (in UTC) Position Sust. Gust Movement (Kts) Status Remarks ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ... 13/1130Z 06.7N/165.5E 20 25 WNW 04 TropDis TCFA 001 14/0000Z 08.7N/162.5E 25 35 W 14 TropDep Initial 002 14/0600Z 10.0N/161.4E 30 40 NW 13 TropDep Intensified 003 14/1200Z 10.4N/160.5E 30 40 WNW 10 TropDep ... 004 14/1800Z 11.0N/159.6E 30 40 WNW 11 TropDep Organizing 005 15/0000Z 11.8N/159.0E 30 40 NW 10 TropDep ... 006 15/0600Z 11.9N/158.7E 30 40 NW 06 TropDep Slowed Down 007 15/1200Z 11.5N/158.1E 30 40 W 07 TropDep Changed Course 008 15/1800Z 10.8N/159.7E 30 40 W 03 TropDep Relocated East 009 16/0000Z 11.1N/158.3E 30 40 W 06 TropDep Disorganized 010 16/0600Z 11.0N/156.5E 35 45 W 10 TropStm Upgraded 011 16/1200Z 10.9N/155.3E 40 50 W 12 TropStm Intensified 012 16/1800Z 10.3N/154.9E 45 55 SW 09 TropStm Intensified 013 17/0000Z 10.6N/154.4E 50 65 W 05 TropStm Slowed Down 014 17/0600Z 10.6N/153.8E 55 70 W 06 TropStm Intensified 015 17/1200Z 10.8N/153.2E 60 75 W 07 TropStm Bcmng Typhoon 016 17/1800Z 10.6N/152.8E 60 75 WSW 04 TropStm Slowed Down 017 18/0000Z 10.3N/152.5E 65 80 SW 04 Typhoon Upgraded 018 18/0600Z 10.2N/151.8E 75 90 WSW 05 Typhoon Small Ragged Eye 019 18/1200Z 10.1N/150.9E 85 105 W 08 Typhoon Acclrtd/Intnsfd 020 18/1800Z 10.1N/149.8E 85 105 W 11 Typhoon Accelerated 021 19/0000Z 09.8N/148.5E 85 105 W 12 Typhoon 09-NM. Eye/C,R* 022 19/0600Z 09.7N/148.0E 90 110 W 05 Typhoon CDO above Eye 023 19/1200Z 09.8N/147.1E 90 110 W 08 Typhoon Accelerated 024 19/1800Z 10.2N/146.0E 90 110 WNW 11 Typhoon Accelerated 025 20/0000Z 10.7N/145.1E 95 115 WNW 10 Typhoon Intensified
  14. Jeb

    Storage+

    I am going to store messages in here that are intended for other boards/sites. We have been having some trouble with the server at WxChat.com and I will be storing messages here until Aaron resolves the problems. Aaron is moving the WxChat site to a newer, faster server. <span style='color:red'>EDIT: The move to the new server has been completed as of 3pm October 21 2004 so I am adding this edit. The messages below have been added to the WxChat site.</span>
  15. Google search........... http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=South...G=Google+Search
  16. Name: Typhoon TOKAGE (27W) Date: 10-20-04 Updated: 11:34 AM (03:34 UTC) 1-min.Winds Warning Date/Time (in Knots) Direction of Number (in UTC) Position Sust. Gust Movement (Kts) Status Remarks ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ... 11/1730Z 11.4N/152.5E 20 25 W 05 TropDis TCFA 001 12/1200Z 13.6N/148.3E 30 40 WNW 15 TropDep Initial 002 12/1800Z 14.0N/145.4E 35 45 W 22 TropStm Upgraded Off Rota 003 13/0000Z 14.2N/143.8E 45 55 W 16 TropStm Slowed Down 004 13/0600Z 14.3N/142.0E 50 65 W 17 TropStm Intense CDO Builds 005 13/1200Z 14.1N/140.3E 60 75 W 17 TropStm Intensified 006 13/1800Z 13.9N/139.0E 70 90 W 13 Typhoon Upgraded 007 14/0000Z 13.7N/138.1E 80 100 WSW 09 Typhoon Slowed Down 008 14/0600Z 13.7N/137.5E 80 100 W 06 Typhoon ... 009 14/1200Z 13.9N/136.5E 80 100 WNW 09 Typhoon Accelerated 010 14/1800Z 14.4N/136.1E 90 110 NW 06 Typhoon Intensified 011 15/0000Z 14.8N/135.6E 100 125 NW 06 Typhoon Intensified 012 15/0600Z 15.1N/134.7E 100 125 WNW 08 Typhoon Changed Course 013 15/1200Z 15.5N/134.4E 100 125 NW 06 Typhoon Slowed Down 014 15/1800Z 15.8N/134.1E 100 125 NW 04 Typhoon ... 015 16/0000Z 16.4N/134.0E 100 125 NNW 05 Typhoon Small Eye Seen 016 16/0600Z 17.6N/134.0E 110 135 N 10 Typhoon Small Ragged Eye 017 16/1200Z 18.3N/133.1E 120 145 NW 08 Typhoon 15-NM. Eye/S* 018 16/1800Z 18.6N/132.5E 120 145 NW 07 Typhoon Slowed Down 019 17/0000Z 19.1N/132.0E 125 150 NW 07 Typhoon Near STY Status 020 17/0600Z 19.8N/131.1E 125 150 NW 11 Typhoon Accelerated 021 17/1200Z 20.1N/130.1E 115 140 WNW 11 Typhoon Weakened 022 17/1800Z 20.9N/129.0E 115 140 NW 13 Typhoon Weak Ragged Eye 023 18/0000Z 21.7N/128.2E 105 130 NW 11 Typhoon Weakened 024 18/0600Z 22.2N/127.5E 95 115 NW 08 Typhoon Eyewall Collapse 025 18/1200Z 23.0N/126.9E 95 115 NW 10 Typhoon Eyewall Reformed 026 18/1800Z 23.6N/126.9E 90 110 N 06 Typhoon Changed Course 027 19/0000Z 24.8N/127.2E 80 100 NNE 12 Typhoon Recurving/Weakened 028 19/0600Z 25.9N/127.9E 75 90 NNE 13 Typhoon Over Okinawa 029 19/1200Z 27.3N/128.8E 70 85 NNE 16 Typhoon Acclertd/Weakened 030 19/1800Z 29.0N/130.4E 65 80 NE 22 Typhoon Bcmng Extratrop 031 20/0000Z 31.4N/132.1E 60 75 NNE 28 TropStm Downgraded
  17. Two western Pacific systems 7:38 p.m. ET ET Tue., Oct.19, 2004 John Desjardins, Senior Meteorologist, The Weather Channel Typhoon Tokage is a weakening tropical cyclone that will impact Japan over the next 24 hours. This will be the tenth tropical system to impact the island chain this season. Waves of 15 to 30 feet are possible along the eastern coastline of Japan. The system will likely be downgraded to a tropical storm before it makes landfall. Nonetheless, heavy rain and strong winds will sweep across the island. To the southeast, Typhoon Nock-Ten is slowly picking up steam. Though it is a relatively small circulation, it is packing sustained winds over 100 mph. The typhoon may pass far enough south of Guam to not have a major impact there. A gradual strengthening is expected as the typhoon tracks to the northwest. There is no significant tropical activity across the Atlantic or eastern Pacific basins.
  18. Significant storm impacting the West 8:13 P.M. ET 10/19/2004 John Desjardins, Senior Meteorologist, The Weather Channel West With a storm system sitting off the coast, California was pounded by heavy rain and strong wind on Tuesday. One to three inches of rain fell across northern and central California during the day. This rain will work its way south through the evening. Showers will continue across Southern California Tuesday night and into Wednesday, though rainfall may not be quite as heavy as it was to the north. Wind gusts approached 50 mph in the San Francisco Bay area and Sacramento Valley. The Sierra Mountains were blanketed with heavy snow. Well over a foot of snow is expected above 5000 feet before the storm system winds down. On Wednesday, look for unsettled conditions to continue across the West as a trough deepens over the region. Rain showers and mountain snow will fall from the Rockies to the Great Basin and into California. The heaviest rain, up to an inch, is expected from Southern California into Utah. Locally higher amounts are possible. Mountain snow will continue from the Sierras to the Wasatch. More scattered rain will fall across the Pacific Northwest. Temperatures will remain below average across the region, with high temperatures ten to fifteen degrees below seasonal averages. Although this system will begin to move into the Plains by Friday, another – weaker - storm will move into the Pacific Northwest on its heels. South Severe thunderstorms erupted across portions of the Southeast on Tuesday. Large hail, strong winds, and a few tornadoes were reported in Alabama, Mississippi, western Tennessee, and southeastern Arkansas. Several homes were damaged by strong winds in the northwestern portion of the Florida Panhandle. Heavy rain accompanied this storm system, with one to three inches of rain falling from northern and central Alabama into North Georgia. The storminess of the past several days will begin to wind down on Wednesday. Though it will remain warm and humid, only scattered shower and thunderstorm activity is expected across the Southeast. Highs will be in the 70s and 80s. Farther west, it was another record-breaking day of heat across Texas. Houston set a record at 94 degrees. Laredo, along the Rio Grande River, hit 100. With sunny skies expected again on Wednesday, look for more records to fall. Highs will be in the 90s across the eastern half of Texas and portions of Louisiana, with 80s across Oklahoma and Arkansas. Northeast It was a gray, damp, and cool day across the Northeast. Low clouds and patchy fog lingered throughout the day from New England into the Ohio Valley. At times, visibility was reduced to under a mile in parts of western Pennsylvania. Rain showers were not as heavy as expected, but scattered light drizzle fell from the clouds across much of the region. A raw northeast breeze made temperatures in the 40s and 50s feel even more unpleasant. Only southern Virginia, on the mild side of a warm front, enjoyed sunshine with highs in the 70s. On Wednesday, gray skies will linger for much of the region. Patchy dense fog is likely during the morning. Scattered rain showers are still possible across interior sections of the Northeast. Clouds may begin to break up during the afternoon. But it will remain cold, with highs generally in the 50s. Midwest Most of the Midwest was stuck north of a warm front on Tuesday, resulting in a generally cloudy and cool day. A few light rain showers fell across the Upper Midwest as a weak storm system spun into Canada. High temperatures were in the 40s along the Canadian border. Low clouds, fog, and patchy drizzle made for a miserable day in the Ohio Valley. More sunshine allowed for highs in the 60s across parts of the central Plains. Improving conditions are on the way for Wednesday across much of the region. Clouds will hang tough across the Ohio Valley and a few showers are still possible across Michigan. Highs will be in the 50s from the Dakotas to the western Great Lakes with 60-degree readings from the central Plains into the northern Ohio Valley. A mix of sun and clouds can be expected from Kansas and Nebraska into Kentucky. The sun will allow some areas to climb into the 70s.
  19. This is the Dell printer forum: http://forums.us.dell.com/supportforums/board?board.id=A940 Contact DELL: http://www1.us.dell.com/content/topics/seg...en&s=gen&~ck=lf Visit the dell.com support communications center. 888-560-8324 http://support.dell.com/support/index.aspx...s=19&l=en&s=dhs
  20. Tenth typhoon threatens Japan Tuesday, October 19, 2004 Posted: 0135 GMT (0935 HKT) TOKYO, Japan (Reuters) -- Typhoon Tokage is inching slowly towards Japan Tuesday, lashing the Okinawa islands with heavy rain and high winds as it headed north, threatening the country's main islands with the second typhoon in less than two weeks. Packing winds of up to 144 kilometers (90 miles) an hour at its center, Tokage -- which means "lizard" in Japanese -- was expected to hit southern Japan on Wednesday, making it a record 10th typhoon to make landfall in Japan this year. Television pictures showed rain pounding empty streets in Okinawa as palm trees bent in the wind. Most schools were closed, NHK national television said, and around 100 flights had been cancelled. Some ferry services were also suspended. As of 7.00 a.m. (2200 GMT), the storm was located about 220 km (137 miles) south southwest of Naha, the capital of Okinawa prefecture, some 1,600 km southwest of Tokyo. It was moving north northeast at 15 km an hour. Around 300 mm (12 inches) of rain was forecast to fall in some parts of western Japan by 6.00 a.m. on Wednesday (2100 GMT on Tuesday). Storms and floods have killed at least 78 people in Japan this year and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage. The latest, Ma-on, pummelled Tokyo and killed six people across the nation earlier this month. Experts say Japan has suffered from an unusual number of storms this year due to warmer offshore waters and weaker than normal Pacific high pressure areas. http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WEATHER/10/18/...reut/index.html
  21. Name: Typhoon TOKAGE (27W) Date: 10-19-04 Updated: 7:15 AM (23:15 UTC) 1-min.Winds Warning Date/Time (in Knots) Direction of Number (in UTC) Position Sust. Gust Movement (Kts) Status Remarks ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ... 11/1730Z 11.4N/152.5E 20 25 W 05 TropDis TCFA 001 12/1200Z 13.6N/148.3E 30 40 WNW 15 TropDep Initial 002 12/1800Z 14.0N/145.4E 35 45 W 22 TropStm Upgraded Off Rota 003 13/0000Z 14.2N/143.8E 45 55 W 16 TropStm Slowed Down 004 13/0600Z 14.3N/142.0E 50 65 W 17 TropStm Intense CDO Builds 005 13/1200Z 14.1N/140.3E 60 75 W 17 TropStm Intensified 006 13/1800Z 13.9N/139.0E 70 90 W 13 Typhoon Upgraded 007 14/0000Z 13.7N/138.1E 80 100 WSW 09 Typhoon Slowed Down 008 14/0600Z 13.7N/137.5E 80 100 W 06 Typhoon ... 009 14/1200Z 13.9N/136.5E 80 100 WNW 09 Typhoon Accelerated 010 14/1800Z 14.4N/136.1E 90 110 NW 06 Typhoon Intensified 011 15/0000Z 14.8N/135.6E 100 125 NW 06 Typhoon Intensified 012 15/0600Z 15.1N/134.7E 100 125 WNW 08 Typhoon Changed Course 013 15/1200Z 15.5N/134.4E 100 125 NW 06 Typhoon Slowed Down 014 15/1800Z 15.8N/134.1E 100 125 NW 04 Typhoon ... 015 16/0000Z 16.4N/134.0E 100 125 NNW 05 Typhoon Small Eye Seen 016 16/0600Z 17.6N/134.0E 110 135 N 10 Typhoon Small Ragged Eye 017 16/1200Z 18.3N/133.1E 120 145 NW 08 Typhoon 15-NM. Eye/S* 018 16/1800Z 18.6N/132.5E 120 145 NW 07 Typhoon Slowed Down 019 17/0000Z 19.1N/132.0E 125 150 NW 07 Typhoon Near STY Status 020 17/0600Z 19.8N/131.1E 125 150 NW 11 Typhoon Accelerated 021 17/1200Z 20.1N/130.1E 115 140 WNW 11 Typhoon Weakened 022 17/1800Z 20.9N/129.0E 115 140 NW 13 Typhoon Weak Ragged Eye 023 18/0000Z 21.7N/128.2E 105 130 NW 11 Typhoon Weakened 024 18/0600Z 22.2N/127.5E 95 115 NW 08 Typhoon Eyewall Collapse 025 18/1200Z 23.0N/126.9E 95 115 NW 10 Typhoon Eyewall Reformed 026 18/1800Z 23.6N/126.9E 90 110 N 06 Typhoon Changed Course
  22. Only active in the western Pacific 8:45 p.m. ET ET Mon.,Oct.18,2004 John Desjardins, Senior Meteorologist, The Weather Channel The Atlantic and eastern Pacific are devoid of any significant tropical activity this evening and look to remain quiet over the next several days. Meanwhile, two typhoons are spinning in the western Pacific. The more imminent threat is Typhoon Tokage with sustained winds over 100 mph. This typhoon could be the tenth tropical cyclone to impact Japan as it approaches the island chain over the next 24-36 hours. The good news is that Tokage is a weakening typhoon and would likely not do much damage. Meanwhile, Typhoon Nock-Ten is a strengthening typhoon with winds approaching 100 mph. The typhoon will pass just south of Guam within the next couple of days. The forecast calls for gradual strengthening over the next couple of days followed by a weakening trend as the typhoon continues on a northwesterly track.
  23. Two major storm systems 9:57 P.M. ET 10/18/2004 John Desjardins, Senior Meteorologist, The Weather Channel Midwest Severe thunderstorms swept across the Mississippi Valley on Monday afternoon, with extensive damage being reported in central Arkansas and eastern Missouri. Several tornadoes touched down, including at least one near Little Rock and several southwest of St. Louis. Heavy rain also fell across portions of the Ohio Valley, with parts of Ohio and Kentucky receiving over three inches of rain. The severe thunderstorms will diminish during the overnight hours, but locally heavy rain will continue across Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee. The rain will exit the Ohio Valley through the first half of the day on Tuesday, with a drying trend to follow. Elsewhere, a few showers will fall across the Upper Midwest as a disturbance rotates through the area. Mainly sunny skies are expected across the Plains. High temperatures will be generally in the 50s and 60s. Cooler 40s will hug the U.S.-Canadian border. A few 70-degree readings are expected from the central Plains to the Tennessee Valley. West A significant early-season storm will move into the West Coast on Tuesday. While showers have been falling across parts of western Washington and Oregon throughout the day, more significant rainfall will be moving onshore overnight. The hardest hit areas will likely be southern Oregon and northern and central California. Several inches of rain are possible, which could create flooding problems in the burned areas of the Sierras. Speaking of the mountains, winter storm warnings are in effect for California's high terrain, where well over a foot of snowfall is possible with this storm. Additionally, wind gusts to 50 mph are possible across the northern half of California. This storm system will impact the entire West. Look for showers across the Great Basin and into the central Rockies, with snow at the higher elevations. Showers are also possible across Southern California and northern Arizona by late in the day. Unsettled weather will continue across the region into midweek as a deep trough moves into the region. All of the clouds and precipitation will keep high temperatures ten to twenty degrees cooler than average across the region for the next several days. South Scattered showers and thunderstorms fell across the Southeast on Monday. Some storms turned severe across parts of Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama. More showers and thunderstorms are possible across the Southeast again on Tuesday, with severe weather possible in the same areas as Monday. Highs will be in the 70s and 80s across the Southeast. Farther west, abundant sunshine allowed for temperatures to soar to record levels. Dallas hit a record of 93, while a 91-degree reading was a record at Fort Smith in western Arkansas. Tuesday will be a similar day. Look for sunny skies with highs in the 80s and 90s. More records will likely be set again on Tuesday. Northeast After a mainly dry day, showers began falling across Pennsylvania and West Virginia by mid-afternoon. Rainfall will be on the increase across the entire region on Tuesday. Heavier rain may fall for much of the day along the I-95 corridor from Boston to New York. Rain should begin to taper off across the Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. areas during the afternoon. The only part of the Northeast that will likely escape the rain on Tuesday will be the mountains of New Hampshire and Maine. High temperatures across New York and New England will be quite cool, only in the 40s and 50s. Milder readings in the 60s are expected across southern Pennsylvania and southern New Jersey. Highs in the 70s will be felt across much of Virginia.
  24. Jeb

    Browsers

    These are all the browsers I have on my computer: Avant Browser The AB forums: http://forum.avantbrowser.com/ Netscape 7.2 Opera 6.1 Opera 7.5 Mozilla Firefox Internet Explorer 6
  25. Please go to this page: http://www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/hurricane/flash/
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