Yes, but don't you understand when it is a distinction without a difference? You're still waiting for a satellite system for your internet, and you have some notion that it's because it's so much better and we over in Merka need to "keep up." And, then you blame the fact that you can't get the system installed for you on the capitalists. I mean, it gets better and better.rEvolutionist wrote:Coit, you fucked up. You thought we were talking about TV when we were talking about internet.
You have no business calling anyone childish. Your entire demeanor and persona on this forum is that of a spoiled little schoolbrat. You engage in bullying behavior and then you whine endlessly about the mildest things. You claim some sort of discerning intellect, when you are plainly a substandard thinker at best. You'd claim a victory in an argument if someone used the word "tan" and the color was really "sandalwood."rEvolutionist wrote:
That's not my problem. Don't make it mine. If you understood the technology you are trying to discuss, you'd realise that there is a HUGE difference between providing TV services and internet services over satellite. You don't realise that, hence why you can't just stop digging and calmly admit you fucked up. I saw exactly what you wrote, and once again your butthurt is getting in the way of your parsing common language. You don't even realise that my "sorry, I must have lost that...." comment was sarcasm. I know exactly what you wrote, and the childish pantomime with all the "bwahahahahahahah's" and "hahahahahaha's" etc makes it clear that you don't accept that you were critically wrong. Grow the fuck up.
Go on, explain how the system you're getting over there is so awesome.
Groundbreaking.....don't have anything close to this in Merka....
http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/news/mill ... australia/The National Broadband Network aims to provide high quality communications via three methods. The copper wire and optical fibres will reach 93% of the population, and in rural areas, 4% will gain access to the broadband network via wireless systems. The remaining 3% will benefit from the use of these new satellites.
