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Dear God I know we human have made you very disappointed but please give as mercy. We know that we're bad we kill each other we destroy the nature but please forgive us for what we have done. But you must know not every people are bad, some of us are nice, we like peace, we care for the nature, we done like you told us to do so please forgive us.

2007-01-15 22:53:35 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Why would you want a really really really really long answer? Do you have any reasons for wanting that answer? And you don't even specify what you want your answer to be about!
And no I will not give you a really really really long answer because I don't feel like it. What if you're writing this on how our lives are so meaningless and boring that we are writing extreme long answers for a person who just demands them with no requirements and no explanations to why he or she would demand such a thing? Is this why you're asking for this? If so please list so in my details so that people can see what they're facing right now.
This is not an easy task. And there are no requirements as to what to write about. It's like the sky - limitless. Limits create borders. Borders create good writing. If a teacher told you to write about the sky, how would you do it? Would you write about color? Or heaven? Or God? Or balloons in the sky popping their helium there? Or angels floating? Or clouds and precipitation? Just by hinting to write about sky, numerous possibitlies arise. But yours is limitless. And least sky is a limit. It's a big limit but it's certainly smaller than yours. "Give me a really really really long answer". Without requirements on what to write on, we really have no clue. And having no clue has been proven by scientists to harming your life. Because clueless people are often not smart ones.
Another thing is that it is such a time-waster and space-waster to send you a really really really long answer. Are we supposed to spend forever on this? There is no time limit. Which can also be confusing for people - people like me. You may have tons of pages of answers because they are all really really really long as you demanded without explanation, reason or requirements.
Another thing is that what do you mean by send? Do you want us to send my email? Or do you mean to give you an answer here? Because either way kind of works. But this is Yahoo! Answers and if you wanted us to send via email, you would get no real answers. Am I right? And if we were to write you answers, that wouldn't technically be sending you answers, now would it? No it wouldn't. And I am sure most of the world would agree. You know the saying "majority rules".
And to conclude, I will not write a really really really long answer. My above statements fully support why I shouldn't write a really really really long answer because you simply demand it in your question without explanation, reason or requirements.

2007-01-16 06:34:35 · answer #2 · answered by callieRach 7 · 0 0

long boring articles
Recent long and boring articles:

Hide Your IPod, Here Comes Bill - To the growing frustration and annoyance of Microsoft's management, Apple Computer's iPod is wildly popular among Microsoft's workers.


Johnny Cash Remembered


Drifting out of the Territory: Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid - In the two hours it took him to tell the story of Pat Garrett killing Billy the Kid, Sam Peckinpah killed the Western


Prospecting for Gold Among the Photo Blogs - NY Times article about Photo Blogs and photo bloggers like me


The laneway attracts the attention of urban planners - repeat after me: "suburbia is wrong"


Combine and Conquer - EURO SPACE: A State of Mind - is the EU taking over the world from the inside out? Do I care?



Copy Protection Is a Crime …against humanity. Society is based on bending the rules. - Amen, brother. I just had to illegally copy this article.


Comments? email longboring@nonstopdesign.com When people first invented e-mail they thought that no one would need more than the 128 characters which make up the ASCII character set. (The 128 comes from 2 to the power of 7 -- hence the phrase 7 bit ASCII). Unfortunately, a binary character (needed for executable programs, word processor documents, pictures and the like) uses the full 8 bits, and unsurprisingly if you try and send 8 bits down a communication medium which only safely supports 7 then sometimes the eighth bit gets lost.

The solution is to translate your eight bit data (eg. a Word6 DOC file) into characters which only use 7 bits. You then can send the encoded file across the world wide e-mail network and translate the 7 bit file back into an 8 bit file at the other end.

Well, how do we do that? There are two main ways. The first one I will mention is the imaginatively named a-to-b. This was originally an Apple Macintosh program which (together with its sister program b-to-a) [1] few people use outside the Apple community. The more common method is uuencoding. Uuencoding (pronounced you-you-encoding) actually stands for Unix to Unix encoding, but you don't have to have Unix to use this.

You usually do something like:

uuencode binaryfilename newfilename > saveasfilename

Under DOS I might type:

uuen alexpic.gif alexpic.gif > alexpic.uue

after which I get a new file called alexpic.uue which contains:

begin 644 alexpic.gif M"0E!8W1I;VXZ($5D=VEN#0U%52M%1E1!("A2:7-T;RD-"2T@1FEN;&%N9"!H M87,@ end

I can now e-mail my mug shot to anyone I want, even if it goes across dodgy 7 bit ASCII e-mail links.
Coming Next Time On Alex's Boring Articles:

Decoding the uuencoded file.
What happens when the uuencoded file gets too large.
Tools to aid uuencoding and uudecoding.
Mime.
Why do my email messages get truncated to 60K or 255K? lex's Beginners guide to using FTP

Sometimes you want to make a copy of a file which is on a machine far away on the internet. It may be on another continent or across the room. The owner of that machine may be perfectly happy to let you have the copy but doesn't want to give just anybody access to his machine. The File Transfer Process lets system administrators devote a section of their hard disks for files which can be copied to other computers (it sometimes allows new files to be uploaded too). You don't get to fully use the machine as you would in a telnet session or rlogin. Instead you are limited to a set of commands with which you can copy files to your local machine but do no damage on the remote machine.

You must open a connection to the remote machine.

ftp

can be the numeric form eg 132.24.99.2 or a valid machine name such as vela.acs.oakland.edu

ftp vela.acs.oakland.edu

You will then be asked for your id and password. If the machine is private then you need to be told this by the system administrator. If the remote machine intends to let anyone use it then it will probably have a user id called "anonymous" (hence the phrase "Anonymous FTP"). In place of the password the remote machine will ask for your email address. It will record this and might complain if it is different from your local machine's name.

anonymous
me@mymachine.mysite.ac.uk

If this works then you will be presented with a welcome message telling you not to do anything naughty and you will be placed in an appropriate directory. This is usually /pub, meaning the directory containing the public files.

To list the files in that directory use

ls

(Directories usually have a line starting with a d)

To change directory you use cd.

cd /pub
cd galactic-guide
cd theguide

Now see if the file you want is there.

ls

You should see files including something like tg145.zip, or complete.zip.

Whenever I use ftp, I switch on hash marking with

hash

One more thing must be done. We have to say that this is a binary file and not an ascii text file. If you forget this then you may fetch a useless file!

bin

Now to actually get the file.

get tg145.zip

You need to wait a while (A few seconds for fast university connection, or a few minutes to hours for a slow modem connection). Then you will see a message saying how quickly it transfered the file. Then

quit

The file should be in your local directory that you started off in.

2007-01-16 06:28:42 · answer #3 · answered by Trey 1 · 1 1

I'd be happy to do so if only I had seen a really really really good question! It would then be easy to send a really really really long answer that would really really really waste more of my really really really precious time.

2007-01-16 06:30:43 · answer #4 · answered by Loki 3 · 0 0

hope this is long enough.
a quickbrown fox jumps over the lazy dog.if at first you dont succeed try try try again.whyyyyyyyyyy dont you build me up buttercup baby just to let me down.twinkletwinkle little star how i wonder what you are up above the world so high like a diamond in the sky. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
ccccccccccccc
dddddddddddddd
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
fffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff
gggggggggggggggggggg
hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
mmmmmmm
nnnnnnnnn
ooooooo
ppppp
qqq
rrr
aaaassssss!!!!!!!!!!!!!

2007-01-16 06:35:08 · answer #5 · answered by Apocalypse 1 · 0 0

Looooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooongggggggggg aaaaanswerrrrrrr

2007-01-16 06:28:45 · answer #6 · answered by booge 6 · 0 0

Sorry I don't have much time and you didn't really ask a valid question.

2007-01-16 06:28:22 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

s mile
its alleast a mile long

2007-01-16 06:30:29 · answer #8 · answered by Caring 3 · 0 0

long

2007-01-16 06:31:14 · answer #9 · answered by sinned 7 · 0 0

What kind of long answer??? Is this loooooooooong enough??

2007-01-16 06:29:11 · answer #10 · answered by jade s 4 · 0 0

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