
Asked by Andy Blackwell in Uncategorized
Uncategorized
Where you get the navs for ulip growth plan for last three years?
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Who uses road maps?
Asked in Broadband Internet, History of the Web, Telecommunications
Advantages and disadvantages on satellites in modern telecommunications?

advantages
used for long distance communication
high speed data transmission
many reciver stations can receive signal from the same sender
station
are used for spying and can detect where nuclear weapons are
launched
take pictures to help predict the weather
used for GPS (sat-navs) and for guiding ships and
airplanes
Scientists use the
disadvantages
very costly, haha.
Smart. Very smart ^^
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How calculate net assets per share?

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fund's net assets (securities held by the fund minus any
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Asked in Sailing, History of Maritime, Society and Civilization
Which society was known as the world's best sailors?

An answer we shall never know. Many societies had their fair
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Vikings
16th Century Spanish
18th Century English
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What does GPS mean in relation to sat navs?

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Note that while GPS, which was developed by the US government is
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Asked in Travel & Places, Maps and Directions
What on earth did people use to get around before sat navs were invented?

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Asked in Nissan
How do you remove the spare tire on a Nissan navara?

Behind the rear nearside passenger seat there should be a tool
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What is the difference between a mutual fund and a bond mutual fund?

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Bond funds are investment vehicles that are meant specifically for
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Asked in Astronomy, Artificial Satellites
What is a geostationary satellite State two uses of a geostationary satellite?

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above the earth orbit the earth in a couple of hours or so.
However, if the orbit is around 26000 miles up, then at that
distance the time it takes for a satellite to freely orbit is
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hours to rotate. Thus, if we could see the satellite in the sky it
would not move across the sky like the International Space Station
but it would stay in the same place in the sky.
This means that they can be used for communication - when you
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night or day. However, if the satellite moved across the sky in low
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and then have to wait until it was back in the sky again.
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Asked in English to Greek, Prefixes Suffixes and Root Words
What is the greek and latin roots and affixes for rule?

[ΚΥΒΕΡΝΑΩ, ΚΥΒΕΡΝΩ. The affix is equivalent to Cyber- ,or,
Cyberno- (e.g. Cyberspace), and Govern- (all of them are sonic
equivalents of the Greek word).
The original word must have been: (Η)ΥΠΕΡΝΑΙΩ (meaning:)
"Floating over (something)".
ΝΑΙΩ (v.) = I float. (NAVY = floating). The word for the "ship"
in ancient -and both the modern- Greek is: ΝΑΥΣ (pronounced: NAVS,
NAFS ). ΝΑΥΤΙΚΟ = the Navy. ΝΑΥΤΙΚΟΣ = the sailor.
(Η)ΥΠΕΡ stands for: OVER ( deutsch: UBER, (S)UPER- ).
The word HIBERNIA (=winter), (just think: Hibernation) has to do
with the snow clouds FLOATING OVER the land.
SIBERIA = HIBERNIA.
IBERIC / IBERIAN (peninsula) = HIBERNIA, too!]
WHAT ABJECTLY UNQUALIFIED
NONSENSE!
Whatever residue of fact is imbedded in the above statement is
immaterial to say the very least.
Michaelides, enough is enough. This is the second time I've come
across your inconceivably benighted ad-lib drivel masquerading as a
serious answer to an earnest question in etymology. Are you
actually trying to be helpful here, or are you auditioning for the
role of Gus Portokalos in a grade-school production of "My Big Fat
Greek Wedding"?
Should you ever tire of coating everything within reach in
idealogue-sopped pseudo-linguisitcs like a petulant toddler
flinging creamed spinach from his high-chair and become sincere
about rectifying your tragically wayward command of the classics,
then feel free to delve into some *competent* texts dealing with
Greek and Latin.
From a sense of nobless oblige, I'll even get you started; the
following is an excerpt from a translation exercise in J.A.C.T's
"Reading Greek", 2nd ed. [section 2C, p.26]. - to say that it is
apropos this discussion does it not a whit of justice - it all but
has your name written on it -let's see how you do!:
ΚΥΒΕΡΝΗΤΗΣ·
(SEE??! Eerie, no? There's more...)
οὐδὲν λέγεις. ὦ φίλε, καὶ οὐκ οἶσθα οὐδέν. οὔκουν κάλλιστον τὸν
λόγον ποιεῖς. ...σκόπει δή. ἡμεῖς μὲν γὰρ τὰ ἀληθῆ ζητοῦμεν, σὺ δὲ
ψευδῆ λέγεις.
Happy trails...