Fun Open Thread

Carol

Member: Rank 5
Bat Out of Hell


Still can't type properly - saw it Monday night and clapped so much my hands hurt... singing, stomping and howling were also on the menu. My chum would vouch for the fact I ambled across Trafalgar Square in the moonlight using the mantra "happy, happy, happy, happy, happy...."

It seemed clear from the make-up of the audience that all teenage-to-twenty-something.offspring conceived by many of the audience members present to Meatloaf and Mr Steinman's musical collaborations through the years had been told to bugger off and do something -anything- else for the evening - mummy and daddy did not wish to be disturbed. Quite rightly.
 
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Hunter28

Member: Rank 3
I joined up on a few. I was a mod on a old Proboard, and Proboards can ban IP of trolls. Those forums are not bad for that reason. So far I like this board, mainly the folks here have a sense of humour. I can get away being sarcastic and warped if I need to be.
Yes I joined moviechat.org. Not a bad site. Like someone said you can see what others think of certain movies. Or see what people are saying about actors and actresses. Also I like their trending feature. You can see the last 15 posts and if anything interests you, you can click on it.
 

Alex Vojacek

Administrator
Staff member
VIP
Yes I joined moviechat.org. Not a bad site. Like someone said you can see what others think of certain movies. Or see what people are saying about actors and actresses. Also I like their trending feature. You can see the last 15 posts and if anything interests you, you can click on it.
You can do that here too. Simply click on "New Post" on the main bar to see the last posts arranged by date. The only difference is that here it's from now back to 2 months ago.

PD: I've seen that the "new post" button was not that prominent on this site and judging by your comment, it's much cleaner to have a nicer button so I modified the original "new post" to "trending now" and it's much more visible now.

Thanks for the feedback.
 
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Hunter28

Member: Rank 3
You can do that here too. Simply click on "New Post" on the main bar to see the last posts arranged by date. The only difference is that here it's from now back to 2 months ago.

PD: I've seen that the "new post" button was not that prominent on this site and judging by your comment, it's much cleaner to have a nicer button so I modified the original "new post" to "trending now" and it's much more visible now.

Thanks for the feedback.
Thanks for the tip Alex.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
US warship Indianapolis found 18,000 feet deep in Pacific Ocean


uss_indianapolis_at_mare_island_wide-5db917000a0403f3d0089eae72db8e7efdf3463e.jpg


Researchers have found the wreckage of the US warship Indianapolis, which was sunk by a Japanese torpedo in the final days of World War Two, more than 18,000 feet (5.5 kilometres) below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, the Navy said on Saturday.

The cruiser was returning from its mission to deliver components for the atomic bomb that would soon be dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima when it was fired upon in the North Pacific Ocean by a Japanese submarine on July 30, 1945.

It sunk in 12 minutes, according to the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington. No distress signal was sent. About 800 of the 1,196 crew members aboard survived the sinking, but only 316 were rescued alive five days later, with the rest lost to exposure, dehydration, drowning and sharks.


1406346550000-INIUSSIndianapolissurvivor-004.JPG



After a Navy historian unearthed new information in 2016 about the warship's last movements that pointed to a new search area, a team of civilian researchers led by Paul Allen, a Microsoft Corp co-founder, spent months searching in a 600-square-mile (1,500 sq km) patch of ocean.


With a vessel rigged with equipment that can reach some of the deepest ocean floors, members of Allen's team found the wreckage somewhere in the Philippine Sea on Friday, Allen said in a statement on his website. The statement said the Navy had asked Allen to keep the precise location confidential.


Allen said that the discovery was a humbling experience and a means of honoring sailors he saw as playing a vital role in ending World War Two.

"While our search for the rest of the wreckage will continue, I hope everyone connected to this historic ship will feel some measure of closure at this discovery so long in coming," he said.

Identification was easier than in some deep-sea expeditions: some of the exposed wreck was clearly marked with Indianapolis signage, according to photographs shared by Allen and the Navy.

"It is exceedingly rare you find the name of the ship on a piece of the wreckage," Paul Taylor, a spokesman for the Naval History and Heritage Command, said in a telephone interview. "If that's not Indianapolis then I don't know what is."

The Navy said it had plans to honor the 22 survivors from the Indianapolis still alive along with the families of the ship's crew.



 

SoapboxQuantez08

Member: Rank 2
Most Popular SLANG The Year You Were Born In


I just remember kids saying, "Mind your own beeswax" when I was growing up.
"Up yours" was at an all-time high, and people said, "eat me" rather than "bite me", like they did a decade later.
 
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SoapboxQuantez08

Member: Rank 2
Things that ANNOY you!


"That's what I'm saying".

First of all, this is disrespectful.
We all wind up re-iterating what someone just said, at one point or another.
Also, I find it incredibly pretentious to have to constantly be pointing out that the other person committed this.

People want to act like it's a big infraction every time.
Perhaps we need to at least come up with better expressions.
Perhaps: "Exactly", or "That's what I'm talking about".
 
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High Plains Drifter

The Drifter
VIP
California Wildfires 2017



http://abcnews.go.com/US/31-dead-horrific-california-wildfires-hundreds-missing/story?id=50383162


At least 31 dead in horrific California wildfires, hundreds missing

California is burning yet once again. It's sad to say it but this is so common now of days, it don't seem to get to me. Mainly the western coast have fires, some storms, middle states have tornados, northern states have the cold freezes/snow storms, and the southern states have floods, and hurricanes. I just think of it as a yearly thing. Any how on the fires yet once again some jackass decided to be a idiot, and poof now the state is on fire. I mean I don't want to sound like a jerk about this. Back before the state was really populated fires happened, and they burned themselves out. People are using the trend of keeping the areas cleaned control burnings. It's still not enough, and this stuff tends to happen. I mean yes people died, homes, businesses, schools, etc. were lost and it's sad. Now nature is cleaning up all the dry stuff so new growth can happen. Everyone will return, everything will get rebuilt. People will go back to living in the hills, and down the road in a few years another fire. Maybe, not as big as this one, but again another drought, another fire.
 
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High Plains Drifter

The Drifter
VIP
Now they're after Civil War re-enactors


http://www.americanthinker.com/blog...vil_war_reenactors.html#.WeS5v4quNTI.facebook

Now they're after Civil War re-enactors
Civil War re-enactors replaying the Battle of Cedar Creek in Virginia on Saturday went ahead with their demonstration despite the group organizing the event receiving a letter threatening "bodily harm" to anyone who participated.

The battlefield was temporarily cleared on Saturday when a "suspicious device" – possibly a pipe bomb – was discovered. The FBI is investigating.

Washington Post:

"We wanted to send a message," said Keith MacGregor, 56, from Lebanon, Pa., who was playing the role of a Union infantry captain for the reenactment of the Battle of Cedar Creek, held not far from here. "We wanted to show the U.S. that we aren't going to let some terrorist, or some nut, stop the event. I was never prouder of people in our hobby."

Before and after the minute-long "U.S.A." chant, the two sides who acted out the battle came together and thanked each other for coming – and for staying. "The Star-Spangled Banner" was played and sung. So was "Dixie."


"You did not see any reenactors in Charlottesville," said Confederate reenactor Terry Shelton, referring to the gathering of white supremacists in the Virginia city in August. The event turned violent and led to three deaths.

The public was not allowed onto the battlefield or into the reenactor camps Sunday, but could watch the battle from a distance.

Local and federal law enforcement officials declined Sunday to describe the "suspicious item" found at the battlefield here about 4 p.m. Saturday, which prompted law enforcement to evacuate the immediate area. Several reenactors said they were told it looked like a pipe bomb.

In a statement Sunday, the FBI said that "the device was located during an annual reenactment of the Battle of Cedar Creek. No persons were harmed and the device was rendered safe by the Virginia State Police."

Dee Rybiski, an FBI spokeswoman, said Sunday that the bureau "was not elaborating on the device."

The FBI is investigating the incident, along with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; the Virginia State Police; the Frederick County Sheriff's Office; and the Middletown Police Department.

The battle reenacted Sunday took place on Oct. 19, 1864, and was a Union victory.

Re-enactors play a vital role in preserving American heritage and specifically Civil War battlefields that have been under assault for decades by developers. Most battlefields have shrunk considerably, especially in the east, where towns and cities have grown up around what was formerly farmland and forest. Re-enactor groups fight for the land upon which American blood was shed

Beyond the dedication of re-enactor groups to preserving our heritage, there is the meticulous and loving way they go about their "hobby." Every aspect of their kit – clothing, utensils, armament, and living conditions – are carefully and faithfully reproduced to come as close to authentic as humanly possible. Outfitting a Civil War re-enactor can cost a couple of thousand dollars if done right. Some re-enactors make their own clothing, trying to duplicate the process down to using sewing machines and other tools from that era.

And now they have become a target of the destroyers of American history.

When the Cedar Creek re-enactors sang both the National Anthem and Dixie, they weren't making a statement on race. They were, in the purest sense, re-enacting. They were doing exactly what Southern and Northern soldiers would have done. That these dedicated living history re-enactors would be threatened for trying to preserve an important part of our history shows that those who claim to be fighting racism are nothing more than ignorant terrorists, trying to destroy what they can't possibly understand.
 
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croft_alice

Member: Rank 4
Hi,friends...it's been two years since the Colectiv Club tragedy.64 dead and over 100 wounded...still no one is found responsable for this...Bastards.
 

croft_alice

Member: Rank 4
Amazon and aliexpress


Hi,friends...can i ask you for an advice on something?...i intend to buy some products that i couldn't found on local online stores,but i find it on amazon and aliexpress.Can you tell if they are trust worthy,is it safe to buy from them?

Thank you and have a nice day
 
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High Plains Drifter

The Drifter
VIP
Canadian hacker pleads guilty in huge Yahoo hack case


https://techcrunch.com/2017/11/28/karim-baratov-guilty-plea-yahoo-hack/

A Canadian citizen has pleaded guilty to aiding Russian intelligence officers in a 2014 hack of Yahoo that exposed as many as 500 million accounts. The defendant, 22-year-old Karim Baratov, is the only arrest to come out of the Yahoo hack as the three other individuals facing charges live in Russia, which obviously has no interest in extraditing them to the United States.

Prosecutors have stated that two of those charged are officers in Russia’s spy agency, the FSB, while the other is known Russian hacker Alexsey Belan. They believe that FSB officers Dmitry Dokuchaev and Igor Sushchin directed the hack and contracted Baratov when their targets used email accounts outside of Yahoo’s system. The summary issued by the Northern District of California’s U.S. Attorney’s Office details the scope of these charges:

According to his plea agreement, Baratov’s role in the charged conspiracy was to hack webmail accounts of individuals of interest to the FSB and send those accounts’ passwords to Dokuchaev in exchange for money. As alleged in the indictment, Dokuchaev, Sushchin, and Belan compromised Yahoo’s network and gained the ability to access Yahoo accounts. When they desired access to individual webmail accounts at a number of other internet service providers, such as Google and Yandex (based in Russia), Dokuchaev tasked Baratov to compromise such accounts.

According to his testimony, Baratov placed ads for his services on Russian-language websites. Once contracted, he gained access to his victims’ accounts by spearphishing them with faked correspondences designed to appear as though they were sent from the relevant email host.


Baratov pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to violate the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and eight counts of aggravated identity theft
 
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