欲乱情荒

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欲乱情荒 有生之年 狭路相勃 终不能幸免 手心忽然长出纠缠的老茧 10个最不可思议的科学常识 -[ 在别处 2Spare Science CRAZY ] You can Hypnotize Chickens A chicken can be hypnotized, or put into a trance by holding its head down against the ground, and continuously drawing a line along the ground with a stick or a finger, starting at its beak and extending straight outward in front of the chicken. If the chicken is hypnotized in this manner, it will remain immobile for somewhere between 15 seconds to 30 minutes, continuing to stare at the line. 无聊。 You can have an erection once dead A death erection (sometimes referred to as "angel lust") is a post-mortem erection which occurs when a male individual dies vertically or face-down – the cadaver remaining in this position. During life, the pumping of blood by the heart ensures a relatively even distribution around the blood vessels of the human body. Once this mechanism has ended, only the force of gravity acts upon the blood. As with any mass, the blood settles at the lowest point of the body and causes edema or swelling to occur; the discoloration caused by this is called lividity. Sorry, no photo for this one! 眼见都不一定为实,何况尚未眼见? Your hand can have a life of it's own Alien hand syndrome (or Dr. Strangelove syndrome) is an unusual neurological disorder in which one of the sufferer's hands seems to take on a life of its own . AHS is best documented in cases where a person has had the two hemispheres of their brain surgically separated, a procedure sometimes used to relieve the symptoms of extreme cases of epilepsy. It also occurs in some cases after other brain surgery, strokes, or infections. The HAND is after you! 在古代,合理的解释应该是鬼上身。 Don't laugh too much, it can kill you Fatal hilarity is death as a result of laughter. In the third century B.C. the Greek philosopher Chrysippus died of laughter after seeing a donkey eating figs (hey, it wasn't THAT funny). On 24 March 1975 Alex Mitchell, a 50-year-old bricklayer from King's Lynn, England, literally died laughing while watching an episode of The Goodies . According to his wife, who was a witness, Mitchell was unable to stop laughing whilst watching a sketch in the episode "Kung Fu Kapers" in which Tim Brooke-Taylor, dressed as a kilted Scotsman, used a set of bagpipes to defend himself from a psychopathic black pudding in a demonstration of the Scottish martial art of "Hoots-Toot-ochaye". After twenty-five minutes of continuous laughter Mitchell finally slumped on the sofa and expired from heart failure. His widow later sent the Goodies a letter thanking them for making Mitchell's final moments so pleasant. 笑着死去多开心啊。 A weapon could make you Gay Gay bomb is an informal name for a potential non-lethal chemical weapon , which a U.S. Air Force research laboratory speculated about producing. In one sentence of the document it was suggested that a strong aphrodisiac could be dropped on enemy troops, ideally one which would also cause "homosexual behaviour". So that's how they got Saddam! 这种武器泛滥的一天也就是世界大“同”的一天。 It's true, Men can breastfeed The phenomenon of male lactation in humans has become more common in recent years due to the use of medications that stimulate a human male's mammary glands. Male lactation is most commonly caused by hormonal treatments given to men suffering from prostate cancer. It is also possible for males (and females) to induce lactation through constant massage and simulated 'sucking' of the nipple over a long period of time (months). 相对于男人生孩子,这个的难度系数应该低了不止一个等级吧? Bart Simpson's Tomacco (half tomato, half tobacco) was possible A tomacco is originally a fictional hybrid fruit that is half tomato and half tobacco , from the 1999 episode "E-I-E-I-(Annoyed Grunt)" of The Simpsons ; the method used to create the tomacco in the episode is fictional. The tomacco became real when it was allegedly produced in 2003. Inspired by The Simpsons, Rob Baur of Lake Oswego, Oregon successfully grafted a tomato plant onto the roots of a tobacco plant, which was possible because both plants come from the same family. 动物也可以:狮虎兽、虎狮兽。当然,还有骡子。好象中国挺喜欢“杂交”的。 It's OK to have a third nipple A supernumerary nipple (also known as a third nipple) is an additional nipple occurring in mammals including humans . Often mistaken for moles, supernumerary nipples are diagnosed at a rate of 2% in females, less in males. The nipples appear along the two vertical "milk lines" which start in the armpit on each side, run down through the typical nipples and end at the groin. They are classified into eight levels of completeness from a simple patch of hair to a milk-bearing breast in miniature. 老友记里面Chandler有过第三颗。泡妞受挫后,割掉了。 You can die on the Toilet There are many toilet-related injuries and some toilet-related deaths throughout history and in urban legends. In young boys, one of the most common causes of genital injury is when the toilet seat falls down while using the toilet. George II of Great Britain died on the toilet on 25 October 1760 from an aortic dissection. According to Horace Walpole's memoirs, King George "rose as usual at six, and drank his chocolate; for all his actions were invariably methodic. A quarter after seven he went into a little closet. His German valet de chambre in waiting heard a noise, and running in, found the King dead on the floor." 比起上面的笑死,这个多么不值啊...... Picking one's nose and eating it might be healthy Mucophagy (literally mucus-eating, also referred as picking one's nose and eating it) is the consumption of the nasal mucus , boogers, and other detritus obtained from nose-picking. Some research suggests that mucophagy may be a natural and even healthy activity , which exposes the digestive system to bacteria accumulated in the mucus, thereby helping to strengthen the immune system. 以恶攻毒? Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-12-30 10:43:05 | Read More | Edit | Comments(1) | Trackback(0) The 50 Best Robots Ever -[ Robots 在别处 Wired magazine ] 50. ROBONAUT Not all NASA robots drive around poking at rocks. This android will one day work alongside people on space stations. Robonaut is the same size and shape as a person in a space suit, so it can handle tasks typically performed by humans - its hands are even better articulated than an astronaut's gloved digits. The fact that it looks like Boba Fett? Lucky coincidence. 49. LEONARDO Awww, isn't it cuddly? Or maybe just creepy. MIT's Cynthia Breazeal is famous for building robots that humans have an emotional reaction to. Her newest creation, Leonardo, was bolted together in 2002 with the help of the movie monster gurus at Stan Winston Studio (their animatronics include the Terminator, the aliens in Aliens, and the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park). Leonardo can grab objects, make facial expressions and complex gestures, and even learn simple tasks (like turning lights on and off) through trial and error. 48. KITT The smooth-talking, self-driving muscle car from the early '80s TV drama Knight Rider was so cool, it even upstaged David Hasselhoff. The success of this Trans-Am helped to usher in a new genre of show with supervehicles as heroes, from Airwolf to Stealth. 47. HAL 9000 Some tasks are too important to be left to humans. Just ask Hal 9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey. The 1968 film gave the world the ultimate all seeing, all knowing - and apparently all ego - AI villain. It set the standard for machines that can think (and kill) like us but are too powerful to control. 46. ROOMBA DISCOVERY This wasn't the first robosucker, just the first that didn't blow. In 2005, iRobot's second-generation robotic vacuum showed that domestic bots can actually work. To clean the floors, simply turn the thing on - just try not to stand around watching slack-jawed. 45. NINTENDO R.O.B. In the mid-'80s, the PC was killing the market for videogame consoles. The game industry's only hope? A robot. Nintendo packaged the Robotic Operating Buddy with the 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System. The R.O.B. didn't do much, but the gimmick helped Nintendo sneak systems onto shelves. Lo, the console market was saved. 44. SLUGBOT Meet a real-life hunter bot. Built in 2001 at the University of West England, SlugBot uses a vision sensor and an extending arm to find slugs, grab them, and drop them into an onboard trap. The idea is that one day it will deposit the slugs in its dock and use the gas from the decomposing bodies to charge its fuel cells. 43. ATTACK BOTS FROM RUNAWAY Tom Selleck got top billing, but the real stars of Michael Crichton's overlooked 1984 thriller were the spider attack drones. OK, their weapons were low tech (they sprayed acid at people), but the bug bots presaged Genghis (see #14) and similar critters in The Matrix and Steven Spielberg's Minority Report. 42. LILLIPUT TOY ROBOT Before there were real robots, there were toy robots. Among the first was Lilliput, a windup walker from the 1930s. It couldn't do much - the legs would walk, causing the arms to swing. But by the late '40s, the tin tykes had spread from Japan to the US, earning a spot in toy history alongside teddy bears and fire trucks. 41. MOBOTS What would you get if Robby the Robot got busy with a Mars rover? Probably something like the Mobots. In 1960 Hughes Aircraft unleashed these industrial machines for use in hazardous material sites - teleoperators controlled the snaking appendages. Alas, like the Spruce Goose, they weren't financially viable. 40. ELEKTRO AND SPARKO Westinghouse engineer Joseph Barnett made a splash at the 1939 World's Fair with a 7-foot, cable-controlled metal man that could walk, speak 77 words, and even smoke cigarettes (so debonair). The next year Barnett gave the hulking android a best friend: a robotic dog that seemed to bark and sit in response to Elektro's commands. 39. S-BOTS An ongoing project of the EU's Future and Emerging Technologies program, these minibuggies show strength in numbers. Each s-Bot is fully independent, but get a bunch in a room together and they'll form a chain to carry heavy payloads or bridge obstacles. Kinda like ants on roller skates … in a conga line. 38. SONY AIBO Think this is a hunk of plastic that won't fetch a tennis ball? Think again. It's actually an advanced piece of robotics that won't fetch a tennis ball. Introduced in 1999, AIBO is one of the most sophisticated toys on the market. It can find its docking station, recognize its owner's face, and respond to voice commands. 37. RB5X It hit store shelves in 1985, and this first-ever mass-produced home robot kit is still sold today. RB5X can be programmed to speak, navigate a room, and perform such simple tasks as retrieving small objects. Of course, its real claim to fame was as a sweet prize on the '80s videogame quiz show Starcade. 36. PACKBOTS From the creators of the Roomba comes a kick-ass droid for the US military. Carried on a soldier's back, it can be tossed into a building or under a car, where it will assess the situation (or maybe just be blown up). First deployed in Afghanistan in 2002, it's now on active cannon-fodder duty in Iraq. 35. THE IRON GIANT This 100-foot-tall combat machine from the 1999 movie wields an energy cannon and snacks on cars. But he really gets in gear playing hide-and-seek with a schoolboy. The giant eventually achieves robot enlightenment, realizing that he controls his own destiny (even if that means head-butting a suborbital nuclear weapon). It's a classic example of how robots - like all technologies - are neither good nor evil, just tools of circumstance. 34. OPTIMUS PRIME Robots are cool. Robots that turn into giant trucks - way cool. Robots that turn into giant trucks and command a fleet of autobots - now that could change pop culture history. Such was the impact of the Transformer when the toy line was introduced in 1984, spawning decades of TV shows, movies, and comic books. 33. THE TURK Step right up and marvel at the mechanical device that can beat you in chess. Not impressed? You would be if it were 1769. The contraption was a hoax (inventor Wolfgang von Kempelen stashed a human chess master inside), but it sparked early debates over what it means for a machine to think. 32. ABE Mars may belong to the rovers, but the oceans belong to the Autonomous Benthic Explorer. Completed in 1995 by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the first fully independent underwater scout can dive down to 15,000 feet, map thermo layers and collect water samples, then swim home on its own. 31. GM UNIMATE After bonding over their mutual love of sci-fi, engineers George Devol and Joseph Engelberger invented the industrial robot. They must have been reading very utilitarian fiction - their 1961 creation was a 4,000-pound arm that stacked sheets of hot metal. But it transformed the assembly line; a variant is still in use today. 30. THE TIN WOODMAN While technically a cyborg, the heartless lumberjack of Oz did wrestle with a common existential dilemma faced by robots: the desire to feel. (Well, that and the desire to combat rust.) Not bad for 1939. And hey, how many other robots sing and dance with Judy Garland? 29. VAUCANSON'S DUCK Back in 1739, Jacques de Vaucanson wanted to create artificial life. He settled for a mechanical duck that pooped. The machine used a weight system to quack, flap its wings, drink water, and eat grain, which it would digest mechanically and expel through an opening in its backside. 28. THE TERMINATOR Apparently robots of the future like to hit the gym. Out of a long line of assassin bots, the Terminator is the perfect blend of indestructibility and determination. With him, James Cameron personified what we really fear about robots: They'd do better without us. 27. MQ-1 PREDATOR Forget fantasy robots that kill people - here's a real robot that kills people. The US military's famed unmanned aerial vehicle became a household name in 2002 after taking flight in Afghanistan. Now armed with hellfire missiles, it no longer just monitors enemies - it blows them up, too. 26. FALSE MARIA The classic sexbot from Fritz Lang's 1927 Metropolis was one of the first mechanized humans on film. She danced topless, incited riots, and sparked duels, but what really got her off was overthrowing the ruling class. No wonder she inspired every vision of an android for the next 80 years. 25. PARTNER BALLROOM DANCING ROBOTS Some robots build cars, some explore space, some do the cha-cha-cha. In 2005, Tohoku University's Kazuhiro Kosuge debuted a series of ballroom dancing androids, complete with fancy dresses. They can predict the movements of a partner, enabling them to follow another dancer's lead. And they're klutz-proof: There are no toes to step on. 24. ELSIE AND ELMER Neuroscientist W. Grey Walter's mechanical tortoises from the 1940s were the first fully autonomous electric robots. Programmed to seek out light and to turn if they ran into an object, they could find their illuminated charging stations, even if something was in the way. 23. GORT In the 1951 flick The Day the Earth Stood Still, spaceman Klaatu and his robot Gort come to Earth to promote peace. When that doesn't work out, Gort teaches us what happens to those who eschew harmony - they die. Oh the irony that a machine must remind us of our humanity. 22. ROSSUMS' UNIVERSAL ROBOTS Czech author Karel Capek coined the term robot in his 1920 play about automaton factory workers. One problem: The characters that gave a title to all robotics weren't actually, you know, robots. They were biological creatures - more Jango Fett clones than C-3PO. 21. PERSONAL SATELLITE ASSISTANT Legs, wheels, and treads - those are for bots that can't get off the ground. NASA's Personal Satellite Assistant possesses none of these things; instead it uses small fans to propel itself through zero gravity. Perhaps as soon as 2007, these assistants will hover over an astronaut's shoulder, serving as an all-in-one PDA, videophone, and air monitor. 20. MINDSTORMS Since 1998, Mindstorms have been turning 8-year-olds into fledgling roboticists. The Lego kits come with programmable blocks that animate all manner of dinosaurs, vending machines, unmanned planes - whatever kids, or more likely their parents, can dream up. 19. R2-D2 R2-D2 and C-3PO - the Abbott and Costello of space - may be the most popular robots in history, but it's the littler one that really steals the show. Sure, C-3PO could walk and speak 6 million languages, but R2-D2 proved that robots can be emotive without being humanoid and don't need to speak English to communicate. 18. HONDA'S P2 Asimo? A pipsqueak. Before Honda's much-hyped biped was touring the world, there was P2, a 6-foot, 462-pound prototype. Unveiled in 1996, P2 possessed most of Asimo's walking skills - including the ability to climb stairs - making it, as Honda puts it "the first self-regulating, two-legged humanoid walking robot." 17. ALBERT HUBO Here's an idea: Stick an elastomer foam Einstein head on a robot spaceman. This 2005 collaboration between roboticist David Hanson and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology is more likely to give you nightmares than a unified field theory. But it's the best combo to date of bipedal movement and realistic facial expression. 16. ROBART III Not only does Robart III have a gun, it has a team of spider "slave" bots. Under development by the Navy since 1992, this security robot uses microwave motion detectors to search, say, a hostile building for enemies, sending out its insectoid companions to look in dark corners. Alas, its barrels hold only rubber bullets and darts. 15. WABOT AND WABOT 2 In the '70s, some roboticists were building machines to make Chevettes, but researchers at Tokyo's Waseda University were building bots in man's image. In 1973, they introduced Wabot, the first full-scale programmable android. It had eyes, flailing limbs, and the ability to speak Japanese. The next rev, Wabot 2, played piano. 14. GENGHIS Creeped out by bug bots? How about bug bots that can learn? In 1988, Rodney Brooks' lab at MIT created this six-legged walker, which taught itself how to scramble over boards and other obstacles. The secret: Allow each leg to react to the environment independently and you won't need to program every complex step. 13. EDINBURGH MODULAR ARM SYSTEM Part man, part machine, all Scottish: Campbell Aird received the first complete bionic arm in 1998. Pressure sensors in the shoulder attachment detect minute fluctuations in Aird's muscles, activating motors that control the arm's movement. Eat your heart out, Lee Majors. 12. T-52 ENRYU What's better than an 11-foot-tall robot? An 11-foot-tall robot that can rip cars in half and lift 1,100-pound slabs of concrete. Japanese manufacturer Tmsuk unleashed Enryu in 2004 to help in rescue operations (think earthquakes). The best part: It's piloted from a cockpit in its belly, manga style. 11. SPEEDY Before Sonny (shown) made Asmiov's three laws of robotics known to the masses, there was Speedy, the robot in the 1942 short story Runaround that inaugurated the directives. Speedy knows not to harm humans, to obey their commands, and to protect itself, just not which rules matter most. Turns out a bot's needs come last. 10. THE STANFORD CART Grand Challenge finishers, UAVs, and even KITT from Knight Rider all owe a debt of gratitude to James Adams and Hans Moravec's Stanford Cart. In 1979, the wagon traversed a chair-filled room on its own, a landmark achievement for self-navigating vehicles. Travel time: roughly five hours. 09. DANTE II After eight volcano researchers were killed in two 1993 eruptions, robots were brought in to take the heat. The next year, Carnegie Mellon's Dante II was lowered into Alaska's steaming Mount Spurr to collect data. It fell in, but not before uploading its readings, making it the first "successful" terrestrial explorer robot. 08. DA VINCI SURGICAL SYSTEM In the future, you'll beg to be operated on by a machine. Credit Intuitive Surgical's 2000 robot, a fusion of arms, cameras, and instruments that allows doctors to slice into patients remotely. Procedures done with the da Vinci are more precise than when humans wield the scalpel - research shows there's less blood loss and quicker recovery. 07. THE MECHANICAL KNIGHT Way back in 1495, Leonardo da Vinci designed what was probably the first robot - an automated suit of armor with a windup crank. It could sit up, wave its hands, and maybe even talk. Five hundred years later, engineer Mark Rosheim used the master's schematics to build a working miniaturized version. 06. QRIO Bipedal robots that can walk up stairs seem flatfooted compared with the running, jumping, and traditional-Japanese-fan-dancing Qrio. Officially, Sony uses its state-of-the-art androids, debuted in 2003, as corporate ambassadors. But the company may one day sell them for entertainment. Works for Beck: The singer recently used all six Qrios in his video for "Hell Yes." 05. SHAKEY Developed by Stanford Research Institute International, Shakey had jerky, often nonsensical movements. But that didn't stop the 1972 robot from entering the history books as the first machine to autonomously locate objects, steer around them - and then explain its logic for doing so. 04. ROBBY THE ROBOT Few robots can trace their origins to Shakespeare. Robby, from the 1956 film Forbidden Planet, was inspired by Ariel in The Tempest. But that didn't keep Robby from leaving a legacy all his own. For decades, the very idea of a robot was synonymous with Robby's bulbous figure. 03. SPIRIT AND OPPORTUNITY Some robots sit in labs for researchers to tinker with. These two bots are on frickin' Mars. Expected to last only three months when they touched down on the Red Planet in January 2004, the rovers are still going strong two years later - each sends back 100 megabits of data a day. 02. ASTROBOY While American kids were daydreaming of Superman, Japanese tykes were worshipping at the altar of Tetsuwan Atom, aka Astroboy. First drawn in 1951, Astroboy has rocket boots, lasers that shoot from his fingertips, and, uh, an ass cannon. The lovable crime-fighting robot was an inspiration to a generation of kids -some of whom went on to become robotics researchers. He's a big reason why Japan is at the forefront of android development today. Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto. And the #1 Robot of All Time Is... 01. STANLEY The Stanford Racing Team's autonomous vehicle is a modified Volkswagen Touareg that can scan any terrain and pick out a drivable course to a preset destination. Cup holders optional. Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-12-26 11:32:05 | Read More | Edit | Comments(0) | Trackback(0) ColorJunction -[ Google 游戏 在别处 ] google 的给它的自定义主页( personalized homepage )增加了一个新项目: Google Homepage API ,可以利用google 提供的api 自己写google 自定义主页上面显示的元素。ColorJunction是其中的一个,玩了一个中午,终于玩出一次: Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-12-15 13:27:54 | Read More | Edit | Comments(0) | Trackback(0) 马桶边的RSS新闻 -[ RSS 在别处 ] 由台湾 Yi Tien科技公司为各位打造的如厕用 RSS Reader,可以将你所需要的 RSS 新闻讯息,用卫生纸列出来。并且支持RSS2.0标准,还附一个浏览器型控制面板的“厕所信息管理中心”,赶紧去 Engadget那里 看看究竟吧!! Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-12-13 16:04:17 | Read More | Edit | Comments(0) | Trackback(0) 2005最受欢迎的科技产品 -[ 在别处 科技 popular Science ] 美国销量最大的科普杂志Popular Science(中文版本为“科技新时代”)不久前颁发了2005年“Annual Bese of What's New Award(年度最佳新品奖)”。“Best of What's New奖项是Popular Science授予的最高荣誉,获奖的产品是从数千件参选作品里脱颖而出,”编辑Mark Jannot说道。“这些获奖作品不仅仅影响着我们现在的生活方式,更可以改变我们对未来的思考方法。” 更具体介绍请点击 POPSCI 。 Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-12-12 16:33:37 | Read More | Edit | Comments(2) | Trackback(0) 邪恶指数 -[ 无聊 邪恶指数 在别处 ] 很是无聊,上 这个网站 做了一个站点 邪恶指数 的测试。居然不够邪恶XXX Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-12-08 11:23:52 | Read More | Edit | Comments(4) | Trackback(0) 免费在线词典 -[ 在别处 英语 在线词典 ] 金山词霸 :最大的好处就是这是中文的。解释简单,无例句,有发音和音标,有相关的短语。 dictionary.com :可以查同义词反义词。同一个词可以在 百科全书、同反义词、词典三个界面跳转,非常方便。上下文连接也做得不错。其中百科全书中提供不亚于wiki的解释。 Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary :非常有名的词典的在线版。基本上没有上下文连结,内容和纸质版的内容相符,而且单词有发音。比较遗憾的是不提供例句。 Cambridge Dictionaries Online :剑桥大学出版社的词典在线版,可以直接选择剑桥大学出版社的好几种词典,其中包括法语和西班牙语词典。查词时会直接显示相关的词汇,并且对应的解释带有例句。很好的一点是音标是标准的以图片形式显示的(可以开关),确保了兼容性。解释较少。 alphaDictionary :号称可以同时搜索992个在线词典。优点是有多种分类词典可以选择,琳琅满目。而且对好的词典置顶显示。而且还搭配了 onelook 搜索引擎,非常爽。绝对可以作为词典中的hao123。 www.webopedia.com :如果你要找电脑网络方面的术语,来这里就没错了。中文的同类站点有 donews wiki ,目前这个站点的内容还比较乱,偏向于it风云人物和新闻,对于词语定义等方面的内容还比较少。 encarta :微软的百科全书,解释详细。同时还提供词典的解释,查词时分两步,先给出搜索结果,然后才是词条页面。词典有音标和发音。总体来说不错,但广告太多。 Heinle's Newbury House Dictionary of American English :著名词典的网络版。 缺点:只有定义,无例句,无相关词汇等其他内容。 优点:查词典的时候体验非常好,单词按字母在左边的子窗口中显示字母表,右边显示解释,查起来很有翻词典的feel。 yourdictionary.com :词条解释的页面非常的清新,没有广告,版式也非常得体,令人眼前一亮。它的一大特色是提供了词语历史,大大增加了学习者学习单词的兴趣。而且提供这方面内容的词典实在是不多。带有发音(发音文件可下载)和音标(需要安装字体文件)。 WordNet Search - 2.1 wordnet :如雷贯耳的牛b单词网站,是单词领域最先进的研究成果之一。特色是在词的相关性方面做得非常好。由于单词都是手工输入的,所以收词不多,解释也不是特别全。音标等内容就免谈了,但提供 wordnet软件下载 。具体可以去看 网站的自述 。推荐一试。 wikipaedia :可编辑的在线百科全书,内容丰富,有多种语言版本,发展势头最猛的再线词典,一些语种甚至还打算出版纸质的百科全书。但在中国大陆还处于被封禁的状态。可以用代理上。 WordReference.com Online French, Italian and Spanish Dictionary wordreference :查词的时候可以很清晰地知道词典处在词典的哪一类,词性等内容,页面的版式也比较新颖,上下文连接也很丰富。软肋就是单词的解释实在是太简明扼要了,有短语但无例句。 提供在线词典的网站实在是数不胜数,这只是我比较常用的几个而已。具体内容还是要靠自己去慢慢摸索才知道。个人认为 alphaDictionary , wikipaedia , encarta 是最值得推荐的在线词典。 转自 伪钞的印刷基地 . Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-12-02 10:39:18 | Read More | Edit | Comments(0) | Trackback(0) Thanksgiving -[ Thanksgiving 在别处 感恩节 ] Google GMail Yahoo! Ask Jeeve Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-11-25 14:37:45 | Read More | Edit | Comments(0) | Trackback(0) Google服务完整清单 -[ 在别处 Google ] Jay Koby 列了一张迄今为止最完整的清单,有些是大家都知道的服务,有些服务可能还不为人知。Google自己也有 一份清单 ,但不完整。Jay Koby的完整清单如下: Add to Google Blogger Froogle Gmail (或Google Mail) Google AdSense Google AdWords Google Alerts Google Analytics Google Answers Google Base Google Blog Search Google Book Search Google Catalogs Google Code Google Compute Google Deskbar Google Desktop Google Directory Google Earth Google Groups Google Homepage Google Image Search Google Labs Google Local Google Maps Google Mobile Google Movie Showtimes Google News Google Reader Google Ridefinder Google Scholar Google Send to Phone Google Sitemap Google SMS Google Store Google Suggest Google Talk Google Toolbar Google Video Google Web Accelerator Google Web Search Hello Orkut Onsite Advertiser Sign-Up Picasa 来自: Playin' with IT Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-11-24 15:09:06 | Read More | Edit | Comments(4) | Trackback(0) Jennifer Aniston : GQ's Man of the Year: -[ 在别处 老友记 Friends Jennifer-Aniston ] Jennifer Aniston 当选为 GQ 杂志10年以来的第一位女性“Man of the Year”。她同同绯闻演员男友 Vince Vaughn 以及饶舌歌手 50 Cent 各占据着 GQ 杂志的三个封面之一。 Jennifer Aniston 获得这份荣誉是因为杂志认为“she showed a lot of poise, grace and good humor during her breakup with Brad Pitt this year. The couple's divorce was granted last month after four years of marriage.” Posted by 文刀刘 at 2005-11-23 20:30:00 | Read More | Edit | Comments(0) | Trackback(0) Page: Tags Updated Comments Archives www. flick r .com Links Booso