user
grinder
<!--Location:latitude=048.51.15,longitude=002.20.41--><!-- os:FreeBSD, Linux, Solaris, Win32 --><!-- birthday:1964/3/19 --><!-- email:/msg me on perlmonks -->
<hr />
<blockquote><h3>The car's on fire and there's no driver at the wheel, and the sewers are all muddied with a thousand lonely suicides, and a dark wind blows. The government is corrupt, and we're on so many drugs, with the radio on and the curtains drawn.</h3></blockquote>
<hr />
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"><tr><td bgcolor="#000000">
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="3">
<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff"><h3>Ceci n'est pas un mongueur</h3></td></tr>
<tr><td bgcolor="#ffffff">Mongueur is the best I could come up with for pronouncing monger in French. Recently [stefp] pointed out that this was the Right Thing to do, because no-one else uses the word, so it's really easy to search for [http://www.mongueurs.net/|our website] using a reputable [http://www.google.com/|search engine]. Nice the way these things work out.<br /><br />
Paris Mongers have been meeting since 1999, these days on the second Wednesday of each month. Maybe if you're heading through, you ought to [http://paris.mongueurs.net/visit.html|get in touch with us]. We held the innaugural French Perl Workshop in July 2004. The second French Perl Workshop will be held in Marseille in June 2005.</td></tr>
</table></td></tr></table>
<br>
<center><font size="+3"><b>hear my hard boiled egg-heart beat<br>we go twisting</b></font></center>
<table align="right" width="100" border="thin black dotted"><tr>
<td><blockquote>I spent a couple of hours renaming several sets
of modules because one sentence in the documentation made no sense with their original names[id://376075|.] --chromatic</blockquote></td></tr>
</table>
<hr /><blockquote>
<h3>We're trapped in the belly of this horrible machine, and the machine is bleeding to death. The sun has fallen down, and the billboards are all leering, and the flags are all dead at the top of their poles.</h3></blockquote>
<hr />
<table><tr><td><h3>Perl Monks Survival Guide</h3></td>
<td>See also [id://185274|Perlmonks-specific acronyms], [id://145860] and [Aristotle]'s list of [id://389117|similar sites].</td></tr></table>
<p>If you're using Mozilla (and perhaps Netscape 6/7) you might want to try installing my [http://grinder.perlmonk.org/sidebar-setup.html|Moz sidebar] for viewing Newest Nodes. It seems to be working ok.</p>
<dl compact>
<dt>[id://106] <small>(106)</small></dt>
<dd>GIt all starts from here. Useful for bouncing on the CB talk button.</dd>
<dt>[id://131] <small>(131)</small></dt>
<dd>The home page. The casual user's first view of the site. Regular users will tend to use [id://3628], or some custom front-end, instead.</dd>
<dt>[id://1072] <small>(1072)</small></dt>
<dd>Here's where you can configure many different aspects of your
Perlmonks experience. What goes in the element, themes, links
to external stylesheets, what nodelets to display, when to wrap code...</dd>
<dt>[id://1609] <small>(1609)</small></dt>
<dd>If you want to check out a previous poll, here's where to go. Hint: if you have an idea for a poll, send a <tt>/msg</tt> to [jcwren] or [Petruchio], as they seem to be the [gods|monks] who most frequently add new polls. If you have leftover votes at the end of the day, you can always unload them on an old poll, it won't do much harm on the grand scale of things (but don't tell anyone else I said that).</dd>
<dt>[id://2072] <small>(2072)</small></dt>
<dd>What operating systems/browsers visit the front page? I am unsure of the timeliness of this information (when it was last updated, what period it covers), but interesting none the less. ([tye] tells me it is not updated in a timely fashion).</dd>
<dt>[id://2519] <small>(2519)</small></dt>
<dd>Clearly, some people have far too much time on their hands and spend all day in the CB</dd>
<dt>[id://3184] <small>(3184)</small></dt>
<dd>One of the easiest ways to view the Chatterbox, if you need it bad. My personal recommendation is to use an off-site client that uses the CB ticker... less load on the server.</dd>
<dt>[id://3557] <small>(3557)</small></dt>
<dd>A list of monks, sorted by number of nodes noded</dd>
<dt>[id://3559] <small>(3559)</small></dt>
<dd>Another take on viewing the monks with the most XP, this time showing XP and writeups.</dd>
<dt>[id://3989] <small>(3989)</small></dt>
<dd>The search field at the top of the page just returns nodes that have the given words
in their titles. This page provides a much more sophisticated way of querying the database.</dd>
<dt>[id://6345] <small>(6345)</small></dt>
<dd>Petition a [editor|janitor] to clean up mess, such as resubmitting and double posting a node.</dd>
<dt>[id://6364] <small>(6364)</small></dt>
<dd>View a monks nodes, ordered by date, or by title, or by reputation.
Note that you can only see the reputation of your own nodes. My
theory is that this stops you from easily seeing which nodes you
have already voted on for a person; thereby making vote bombing a
little harder.</dd>
<dt>[id://9066] <small>(9066)</small></dt>
<dd>Highest reputation nodes ever, the last week and the last 24 hours.</dd>
<dt>[id://9488] <small>(9488)</small></dt>
<dd>Lowest reputation nodes ever, the last week and the last 24 hours.
I'm not sure what is more detestable, the presence of this node, or
the fact that people use it to downvote nodes that are already
underwater. This usually takes the form of [id://158734|pissing on
newbies] (hmmm, in retrospect, a better example is needed here). Don't do it. If you want to spend votes here, upvote
nodes that you believe don't deserve such a low rep. Leave the other
ones alone.</dd>
<dt>[id://16082] <small>(16082)</small></dt>
<dd>List of people you have ignored in the Chatterbox (<i>i.e.</i> what
happens when you <tt>/ignore nick</tt>).</dd>
<dt>[id://16902] <small>(16902)</small></dt>
<dd>Viewing this, it seems clear that most people are far too nervous about checking "This is a significant update" whenever they update their homepage. I certainly never did until I saw this page. So now you know it's here, and that maybe more people will start looking at it now they now how easy it is to get to (just remember to come here :), you should start thinking about checking that lil' checkbox.</dd>
<dt>[id://17245] <small>(17245)</small></dt>
<dd>If [jcrwen]'s [http://tinymicros.com/pm/|stats page] is ever off the air, this will give you a crude analysis of the different levels and numbers of monks therein.</dd>
<dt>[id://17468] <small>(17468)</small></dt>
<dd>A list of monks, sort by XP. Sort of redundant, given [Saints in our Book] IMHO.</dd>
<dt>[id://18393] <small>(18393)</small></dt>
<dd>Finally, a decent reason to use Java.</dd>
<dt>[id://23288] <small>(23288)</small></dt>
<dd>More stats, updated hourly, that give a some idea of the number of monks at each level. Just use the stats page, ok?</dd>
<dt>[id://28877] <small>(28877)</small></dt>
<dd>For a Friar or higher, managing the monastery. Sometimes people use the
consideration nodelet for sending a message to the author, instead of the CB
nodelet. Don't laugh! it really happens. In this case, condider the node as an
"edit", get someone else to vote edit as well, and then a [id://59438|janitor] can
quietly remove the consideration.</dd>
<dt>[id://26917] <small>(26917)</small></dt>
<dd>This one's a bit of a head-scratcher. Nice table. It shows the relationship between $NORM, reputation and XP. Study it, and you will be enlightened.</dd>
<dt>[id://29281] <small>(29281)</small></dt>
<dd>Nothing goes down quite as well as a node with a savant dosage of exotic HTML tags to display your missives <i>just so</i>. Know that some ultra-hip tags (such as <code><cite></code>) are not allowed, but the rest of them are here. Study them, and use them (wisely) in your nodes.</dd>
<dt>[id://48824] <small>(48824)</small></dt>
<dd>For everyone, managing the messages you receive in the Chatterbox</dd>
<dt>[id://54389] <small>(54389)</small></dt>
<dd>Ok, so [cpan://CGI] is the most often mentioned module. But what is
the second-most mentioned module? [cpan://DBI]? [cpan://File::Find]?
Or something else entirely?</dd>
<dt>[id://56087] <small>(56087)</small></dt>
<dd>[NodeReaper] will eat you if you annoy the denizens of the Chatterbox. You will wind up here.</dd>
<dt>[id://61675] <small>(61675)</small></dt>
<dd>When not hanging out at the monastery, a lot of monks spend their time reading books. As can be expected from the monk community, this is about as an eclectic list of books as you'll find anywhere on the web. (Not sure if those ISBN links still work though). (noted by [barrd]).</dd>
<dt>[id://108949] <small>(108949)</small></dt>
<dd>For showing code fragments, especially when you have a dumb question that you want resolved by the chatterbox gang, and don't want the permanent, public ridicule that a SoPW may entail.</dd>
<dt>[id://276421] <small>(276421)</small></dt>
<dd>Very interesting information. [tye] built this node as an [id://279867|aid in profiling] what's hot (in the "overloaded" sense of the word) on the server. Interestingly enough the tickers are the most visited nodes, which is as it should be. Newest Nodes takes a pounding... why don't <b>you</b> find an off-site way of consulting it?</dd>
<dt>[id://397425] <small>(397425)</small></dt>
<dd>The brainchild of [demerphq], the most detailed way of looking at Newest Nodes. An excellent way of keeping track of new threads posted to old, old discussions. Use it to upvote worthy new nodes attached to conversations that disappeared off the radar long ago. There's nothing like anywhere else on the web.</dd>
</dl>
<p><tt>/msg</tt> me if you know of other special nodes on the site.</p>
<hr />
<blockquote><h3>It went like this: the buildings tumbled in on themselves, mothers clutching babies picked through the rubble and pulled out their hair. The skyline was beautiful on fire, all twisted metal stretching upwards, everything washed in a thin orange haze.</h3></blockquote>
<hr />
<h3>My code on Perlmonks</h3>
<table border="1" cellpadding="4" align="center">
<tr><th align="50%">Code & Craft</th><th align="50%">Snippets</th></tr>
<tr>
<td valign="top">
<ul>
<li>[id://491533]</li><!--copying Win32 files-->
<li>[id://188343]</li><!--diffsquid-->
<li>[id://133774]</li><!--extracting outlook-->
<li>[id://141482]</li><!--mrtg.errorcap-->
<li>[id://297667]</li><!--mx-->
<li>[id://91220]</li><!--nugid-->
<li>[id://66636]</li><!--pinger-->
<li>[id://68971]</li><!--perlfiles-->
<li>[id://493480]</li><!--pulling another page-->
<li>[id://572712]</li><!--socksumm-->
<li>[id://124838]</li><!--spew-->
<li>[id://419551]</li><!--tldwild-->
<li>[id://112377]</li><!--topweb-->
<li>[id://112378]</li><!--topwebdiff-->
<li>[id://60074]</li><!--Using DBI xfer-->
</ul>
</td>
<td valign="top">
<ul>
<li>[id://144086]</li><!--another take cmdline-->
<li>[id://69240]</li><!--ASCII rulers-->
<li>[id://434000]</li><!--basic FW-1-->
<li>[id://408792]</li><!--batch expand windows files-->
<li>[id://140903]</li><!--debug cgi-->
<li>[id://453916]</li><!--enumerate hotfix-->
<li>[id://170737]</li><!--files owned-->
<li>[id://161924]</li><!--find file-->
<li>[id://110550]</li><!--fmt elapsed-->
<li>[id://517745]</li><!--generate date stamp-->
<li>[id://425652]</li><!--how many IPs-->
<li>[id://316353]</li><!--invoking the debugger-->
<li>[id://350764]</li><!--open files lsof-->
<li>[id://238721]</li><!--ordering hashes-->
<li>[id://459572]</li><!--poor man's diff-->
<li>[id://235037]</li><!--seeing arbitrary hash key-->
<li>[id://299555]</li><!--sorting domain names-->
<li>[id://422695]</li><!--use m//g-->
<li>[id://230652]</li><!--using two css in cgi-->
</ul>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><b>It has often been said that, if the human species fails to make a go of it here on the Earth, some other species will take over the running. In the sense of developing intelligence this is not correct. We have or soon will have, exhausted the necessary physical prerequisites so far as this planet is concerned. With coal gone, oil gone, high-grade metallic ores gone, no species however competent can make the long climb from primitive conditions to high-level technology. This is a one-shot affair. If we fail, this planetary system fails so far as intelligence is concerned. The same will be true of other planetary systems. On each of them there will be one chance, and one chance only.</b></p>
<p align="right">Sir Fred Hoyle, 1964</p>
<p>Learn the secret of Stoney Tangawizi, <i>[id://5194|"It is a most inspired beverage."]</i>. If you're playing with random numbers, make sure you have a
[http://www.fourmilab.ch/hotbits/|random] [http://www.random.org/|seed]. . . . Speaking of random numbers,
ICQ 108142251 => I am not a number, I am a
free man. [TM The
Prisoner] . . . . who is number 2? . . . . Meat . . . They're made [http://www.terrybisson.com/meat.html|out of meat] <= better link found by [da]. . . . . .
I <strike>want to</strike> read [id://76219|Pragmatic Programmer, The] and to tell the truth I don't see what all the fuss is about. I suppose that means I am already quite pragmatic. . . . .
Code-u-like ([id://60383|Waiting] for children to die,
[id://46889|Rounding up] to nearest power of 2,
[id://77188|Timing out] shell commands (paranoia),
[id://75904|my $var = ''; vs. use constant VAR => '';],
How do I read [id://65453|the files in @ARGV]).
. . . Rant-u-like
(How do I do a [id://68185|natural sort],
I'm Such a [id://54219|Lonely Monk],
[id://77669|No excuses] about not using CGI.pm,
[id://71319|Rules-based Perl?],
The [id://70369|fickleness] of Reputation,
Why [id://75792|Closures?],
Why I like [id://34786|functional programming]).
. . . . Rave-u-like
(Suggestions for [id://79261|working with poor code],
[id://55329|references] quick reference,
[id://79629|Optimizing variable passing],
[id://79680|Process management],
[id://59345|Random Thoughts on Programming],
[id://80126|Regex Misuse]). . . . I got more of these but it's such a hassle typing them in. . . . .
. . . . Remember kids, all your base are belong [http://www.maficdesign.com/ayb/mrt.swf|to Mr T]. . . . . . . . . Sanctified circa 2001/09/22 12:00 UTC, made double saint some time around 2002/02/20. . . . triple saint around 2002/08/30-13:00 UTC. . . . . 7x 2004-11-18 12:58:03 UTC. . . . . . . . Curse the GNU folks who think info pages are better than man pages. . . .
. . . There is more to <strike>life</strike>Win32 Perl modules than ActiveState. The best place I know of to find out where they are is to consult <strike>[crazyinsomniac]</strike> [PodMaster]'s [http://crazyinsomniac.perlmonk.org/perl/ppm/|PPM repository]. You'll find a good number of PPMs that he makes available, as well as a list of other public repositories. . . . .
<p><b>emacs still sucks!</b></p>
<blockquote><pre>-----BEGIN PERL GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 0.01
P+++c++P6-R++M++O++$MA++E+PU++++BD+C++D
++S+++$X++WP+++MO+++PP n!CO+PO o+++G
A-OLC+OLCC--OLJ+Ee!Ev+Eon uL uB++uS+w
m!
------END PERL GEEK CODE BLOCK------</pre></blockquote>
<p align="center">Hey! I set up [http://grinder.perlmonk.org/|a site] on
[jcwren]'s [http://www.perlmonk.org/|perlmonk server], home of the</p>
<h1 align="center"><a href="http://grinder.perlmonk.org/pmsi/">Perl Monks Snippets Index</a></h1>
<br>
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#000000">
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="10"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#f8fafc">
Un petit d'un petit<br>
S'étonne aux Halles<br>Un petit d'un petit<br>
Ah ! Degrés te fallent<br><br>
Indolent qui ne sort cesse<br>Indolent qui ne se mène<br>
Qu'importe un petit d'un petit<br>
Tout gai de Reguennes</td></tr/></table></td></tr/></table>
<br>
<table width="55%" align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#000000">
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="10"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#fefbf9">
There's this man, see, and he walks into a pharmacy/chemist/drug store<sup>1</sup> and he asks for some deodorant.</p>
<p>"Ball or aerosol, sir?" asks the woman behind the counter.</p>
<p>"Err, no, for my armpits actually."
</td></tr>
<tr><td bgcolor="#fefbf9">1. Delete whichever does not apply to your cultural context
</td></tr/></table></td></tr/></table>
<br>
<table width="70%" align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#000000">
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="10"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#fcfcf0">
I was in the VIP lounge last week en route to Seattle. Whilst in
the lounge, I noticed Bill Gates sitting on the chesterfield enjoying
a cognac.</p>
<p>I was meeting with a very important client who was also flying to
Seattle with me but she was running a bit late. Being a forward
type of guy, I approached Mr. Gates and introduced myself. I
explained to him that I was conducting some very important business
and how I would appreciate it if he could throw a quick "Hello
Chris" at me when I was with my client. He agreed.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later while I was conversing with my client, I felt a
tap on my shoulder. It was Bill Gates. I turned around and looked
up at him. He said, "Hi Chris, what's happening?" To which I
replied "Fuck off Gates, I'm in a meeting."</td></tr/></table></td></tr/></table>
<br>
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#000000">
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="10"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#faf8fc">
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe.<br>
Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion.<br>
I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.<br>
All those moments will be lost in time -- like tears in rain.<br>
Time... to die.</td></tr/></table></td></tr/></table>
<br>
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#000000">
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="10"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#fefcf2">
A Swiss is visiting Sydney, Australia, pulls up at a bus stop where two
locals are waiting. "Entschuldigung, koennen Sie Deutsch sprechen?" he
asks. The two Aussies just stare at him. "Excusez-moi, parlez vous
français?" he tries. The two continue to stare blankly. "Parlare
italiano?" No response. "Hablan ustedes español?" Still nothing.
The Swiss guy gives up an drives off.</p>
<p>The first Aussie turns to the second and says, "Y'know, maybe we
should learn a foreign language." "Why?" says the other. "That guy
knew four languages, and it didn't do him any good."</td></tr/></table></td></tr/></table>
<br>
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#000000">
<table align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="10"><tr>
<td bgcolor="#fafcf8">
<pre>
-----BEGIN PERL GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 0.01
P++>+++$c-> P6 R++(--)M
>++O++MA+++E+>++PU >!BD
C++>*D++$S+++X+>++(-)WP!>+MO+++PP!n
CO+>+++PO->+o+>+++G
>+A-OLC+OLCC--OLJ--OLP--OLCO---OLS---OL
L+OLA--Ee---(++)Ev+>++Eon+(+++)$uL+$uB+
+uS+w m!
------END PERL GEEK CODE BLOCK------
</pre>
</td></tr/></table></td></tr/></table>
<p align="center">"Who cares what [http://groups.yahoo.com/group/egr-list/message/196|you] think?"<br>
President George W. Bush<br>July 4, 2001</p>
<hr noshade />
<table align="center" width="30%"><tr><th>
Are we unique? Are we something completely and utterly special in the universe? Or are we an example of many, many civilisations that have emerged, many, many different lifeforms?</th></tr></table>
<hr noshade />
<h2>Too gentle you were wise man<br>And I broke your holy bell<br>Run, run, run...</h2>
<hr />
<table><tr><td valign="top">
<h4>The Sun Is Burning</h4>
<p>The sun is burning in the sky<br />
Strands of clouds go slowly drifting by<br />
In the park the lazy bees<br />
Are joining in the flowers among the trees<br />
And the sun burns in the sky.</p>
<p>Now the sun is in the west<br />
Little kids go home to take their rest<br />
And the couples in the park<br />
Are holding hands and waiting for the dark<br />
And the sun is in the west.</p>
<p>Now the sun is sinking low<br />
Children playing know it's time to go<br />
High above a spot appears<br />
A little blossom blooms and then draws near<br />
And the sun is sinking low.</p>
<p>Now the sun has come to Earth<br />
Shrouded in a mushroom cloud of death<br />
Death comes in a blinding flash<br />
Of hellish heat and leaves a smear of ash<br />
And the sun has come to Earth.</p>
<p>Now the sun has disappeared<br />
All is darkness, anger, pain and fear<br />
Twisted, sightless wrecks of men<br />
Go groping on their knees and cry in pain<br />
And the sun has disappeared.</p>
<p align="right">Ian Campbell, 1964</p>
</td><td valign="top" style="padding-left: 2em">
<h4>Ginette</h4>
La mer ça n's'invente pas<br />
et nous on crève à rester là<br />
et le funambule beau qu'il est<br />
marchant sur son fil<br />
Charles il disait l'albatros<br />
il en est mort<br />
a marcher sur la terre<br />
mais c'est pas fini<br />
on va continuer<br />
a marcher dans les airs<br />
et les supermarchés<br />
pour nous donner l'air<br />
de ne pas rien faire<br />
et pour manger<br />
on va s'aimer encore et encore<br />
pendant des années<br />
j'étais là moi monsieur<br />
sinon on sait pas trop c'qu'il faut faire<br />
et là y a la Ginette qui valse en guinguette<br />
qu'a toujours un verre d'avance<br />
des fois qu'on ferme la dernière porte<br />
faut s'enivrer quoi qu'il arrive<br />
et puis rêver et faire la fête<br />
c'est des musiciens sur des tréteaux<br />
tôt ou tard ça va s'écrouler<br />
mais leur histoire on s'en fout<br />
Ginette continue à tourner<br />
sur cet air de ferraille et de verres cassés<br />
allez Ginette!...<br /><br />
La mer ça n's'invente pas<br />
et nous on crève à rester là<br />
et c'est tout.<br />
<p align="right">Têtes Raides</p>
</td></tr></table>
<hr />
<h3>I said, "Kiss me, you're beautiful — these are truly the last days." You grabbed my hand and we fell into it like a daydream or a fever. We woke up one morning and fell a little further down — for sure it's the valley of death. I open up my wallet and it's full of blood.</h3>
<hr />
<h4>Favorite nodes from <a href="http://www.bash.org/?random">QDB</a></h4>
<ul>
<li>
<a href="http://www.bash.org/?182">182</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?8051">8051</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?9148">9148</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?11841">11841</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?13821">13821</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?15735">15735</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?21277">21277</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?21282">21282</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?111338">111338</a>
| <a href="http://www.bash.org/?244321">244321</a>
.</li></ul>
<p>And of course, the quote that didn't make it:</p>
<blockquote><tt>
<Macphisto> Wanna take over the world?<br />
<neshura> is it hard?<br />
<Macphisto> You can have Djiboudi.<br />
<neshura> aww but he's old<br />
<Macphisto> Being a country - yes, I guess he is.<br />
<neshura> practically in a nursing home<br />
<neshura> that's not a country!<br />
<Macphisto> Yes it is!<br />
<neshura> show me on a map!<br />
<Macphisto> It's in Africa.<br />
<font color="#800080">Macphisto goes to get a map.</font><br />
<grinder> I wanna be Sheik Djibouti<br />
<font color="#800080">neshura does not see "Africa" on the Krusty Burger map</font><br />
<Macphisto> http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/dj.html<br />
<Macphisto> grinder++<br />
<cow> haha<br />
<font color="#800080">neshura giggles</font><br />
<cow> sheik sheik sheik<br />
<cow> sheik sheik sheik<br />
</tt></blockquote>
<center><font size="+3"><b>i lit it up with an engine,<br />now it's rolling for you</b></font>
<h1><font size="+7">∞</font></h1>
</center>
2009-07-20 04:43:19
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1570
<a href="http://paris.mongueurs.net">Paris</a></td></tr><tr><td>Organization:</td><td>The Lusty Decadent Delights of Imperial Pompeii</td></tr><tr><td>Do not exceed</td><td><div align="center"><font size="+7" color="red">350</font></div><br />
1
90
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on