Response time for gaming.....what I found

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Anonymous

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Maxflintoff:
OK, Nakasumy. I did copy and paste, but so what? I am quoting from others.If the infomation is wrong then it is not me then is it that is wrong! So I lied about where the infomation comes from. I could have said it came from Grand Dad. It don't change a thing....does it?

If the source doesn't matter, then why did you choose to make something up?

Maxflintoff:

No one knows nothing, They just pretend to know.That's the hippocracy.

You're the one pretending. Claiming others are while doing so oneself is hypocrite.
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Can I cut to a rather un-nerving chase that (& well-done Maxflinn, you didn't pursue this) has some concerning implications:

maxflinn - 1 year sign-on, 1850+ posts, ranked number 4

versus

Maxflinntoff - 2 weeks sign-on, 18 posts, ranked number 0

smacks of something smelly - dare I say "t"off?

by the way, loved the surreal (or surround) diversion......
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Andrew Everard:

PJPro:No, hmtb is correct. See here.

I fear that a hippo without the potamus is just a horse.

It really is inexcusable that I got that wrong. I used to live in Greece when I was very young (never studied Greek though), and "hippopotamus" was a word which for some reason was always broken down to me by my mother. Quite why, I have no idea, but having looked it up on Wikipedia for confirmation, it does state that the word comes from Ancient Greek and means "River Horse", Hippo being the horse part, and therefore Andrew is entirely correct in pointing it out, whilst I am rather embarrassed for having gotten it wrong.

Though in my, admittedly weak, defence, when I made the comment originally, I took the word hippo in the manner in which it is commonly used in English, in reference to the hippopotamus, rather than breaking each component of the word into its original Ancient Greek meaning.
 

Andrew Everard

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May 30, 2007
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hmtb:It really is inexcusable that I got that wrong. I used to live in Greece when I was very young (never studied Greek though), and "hippopotamus" was a word which for some reason was always broken down to me by my mother. Quite why, I have no idea, but having looked it up on Wikipedia for confirmation, it does state that the word comes from Ancient Greek and means "River Horse", Hippo being the horse part, and therefore Andrew is entirely correct for pointing it out, whilst I am rather embarrassed for having gotten it wrong.

Easy mistake to make: hippopotamus is of course the latin name, while the Ancient Greek is hippopotamos.
 
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Anonymous

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Classic student stuff - ID theft (through similarity), plagiarism in reporting other views as your own....nothing too worrying in a social context
 
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Anonymous

Guest
so , im ranked 4 , hmmm , so what , its no big deal , i wouldnt boast about it

3c3864e0-5b7f-4452-beff-9d1ff09585d.jpg
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Response time for TVs means as much as contrast ratios that are quoted.....POINTLESS! Trust your own judgement.
 
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Anonymous

Guest
notherealakinanakamura:
Response time for TVs means as much as contrast ratios that are quoted.....POINTLESS! Trust your own judgement.
max , what do you do for a living ?? seriously ...
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Who is max??

PS: My statement is in response to the no 4 you posted..You think it means something? Is there a point you are trying to make. If not why post it?
 
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Anonymous

Guest
notherealakinanakamura:
Who is max??

PS: My statement is in response to the no 4 you posted..You think it means something? Is there a point you are trying to make. If not why post it?

exactly............

ps....you didnt get the joke ??...
 

landzw

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Jun 9, 2009
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Ok stop the slagging its getting boring . but there is obviously a difference when using a TFT monitor to a main Tv , The monitor we a tend to look for ms and Tv's its the mhz but yet they work differently from each other .
 

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