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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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Maniac (189 D(B))
12 Jan 15 UTC
(+2)
Well that's annoying...
I was planning on going out tonight to Star City Casino in Birmingham, but just found out I have to convert to Islam first. WTF??

http://www.buzzfeed.com/jimwaterson/fox-news-said-non-muslims-dont-visit-birmingham-and-created
18 replies
Open
Tolstoy (1962 D)
14 Jan 15 UTC
(+5)
Free Speech for Me, but not for Thee
France arrests dozens of people for speaking:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/france-arrests-54-in-hate-speech-anti-semitism-crackdown/article22442506/
11 replies
Open
Lanium (100 D)
15 Jan 15 UTC
Reliability ratings?
How are they calculated?
10 replies
Open
Sandman99 (95 D)
13 Jan 15 UTC
(+1)
Obama: The new Hitler?
Today, a member of the Republican party posted this to Twitter
"Even Adolph Hitler thought it more important than Obama to get to Paris. (For all the wrong reasons.) Obama couldn't do it for right reasons."
Discuss!
13 replies
Open
Sh@dow (3512 D)
14 Jan 15 UTC
Epic Comebacks
Could people post links to games where someone has solo-ed after being down to 1-2 units?
16 replies
Open
orathaic (1009 D(B))
13 Jan 15 UTC
New Black Panthers exercise Second Amendment rights...
Anymore on this? www.addictinginfo.org/2015/01/09/2nd-amendment-for-whites-only-conservatives-freak-out-over-new-black-panthers-carrying-guns/
Anyone feel Black people in America have more to fear from police brutality and militarizarion?
28 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
13 Jan 15 UTC
(+3)
What Israel is For
http://news.yahoo.com/funeral-begins-four-jews-killed-paris-attack-101918527.html "The fresh violence has shaken the Jewish community in France, which numbers 500,000 to 600,000 people. French migration to Israel hit a record high last year of 6,600 people, and many believe the trend will accelerate after the Paris slayings." Say they're wrong in the West Bank--they are. Say the last war was miserable--it was. But THIS is what Israel is for in a world which is still hotly Antisemitic.
109 replies
Open
Hannibal76 (100 D(B))
14 Jan 15 UTC
Pointless Question: Greatest military generals of classical antiquity?
Been puzzling me for a while. On the list there'd be Hannibal, Alexander, Scipio, Julius Caesar, Cyrus the Great. There are many I haven't heard of any names to add to the list?
26 replies
Open
JamesYanik (548 D)
14 Jan 15 UTC
(+1)
Best yo mamma jokes? fess em up
my favorite:
yo momma so fat and yo momma so ugly, da only thing attracted to her be planets 'OOOHHHHHHHHHH'
13 replies
Open
JECE (1253 D)
14 Jan 15 UTC
Issue with the new "Preview" feature big map
I know that the stand-off X's on a regular big map are often not accurate (and that issues with the big map aren't related to the order resolution code; see threadID=494283), but I'm surprised to see the stand-off X's turn up in random places in the big map of the "Preview" feature. Why would they show up for no reason?
1 reply
Open
VashtaNeurotic (2394 D)
12 Jan 15 UTC
Vash's Political Survey
Since the political compass is not the best tool for determining actual political allignment. I am compiling my own survey of the webDip community's political standings. Please take this survey (which is more accurate IMHO): http://politics.beasts.org/scripts/survey (should take about 15 minutes) and post your results in the comments. Also, please don't let this devolve into a political argument thread. Thank You.
48 replies
Open
TrPrado (461 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
(+1)
Political Alignment
Out of genuine curiosity, I wonder where people on here lie. I can get the gist of some people, but I want to know specifically. politicalcompass.org
If you wish to satisfy my curiosity, please take the test on that site and post the coordinate results on here so I can fill out a chart.
158 replies
Open
thomas dullan (422 D)
13 Jan 15 UTC
Did you see that US commentator on Fox News talking about Birmingham UK
He told the world in all seriousness that Birmingham UK was populated entirely by Muslims and it is a no-go area for non-Muslims.
Someone really should tell him to cancel his subscription to the Daily Mail,
2 replies
Open
Hannibal76 (100 D(B))
13 Jan 15 UTC
(+2)
2 Games as England
I joined 2 games, one is 3 days long and the other 4. BOTH ARE AS ENGLAND! I don't want to play as England for probably at least two months for 2 games. The games are both still at the first turn. Is anybody interested in taking my place? Before you guys start if no one comes forward I will continue playing I made a commitment and I understand that. That being said, PLEASE GET A GAME OF MY HANDS!
21 replies
Open
steephie22 (182 D(S))
13 Jan 15 UTC
Mathematics question
h(x)=xe^x^2=xe^u with u=x^2 so u'=2x
So far so good. Now I thought the next step would be: h'(x)=(x+1)e^x^2*2x
Apparently it should be: h'(x)=x+e^x^2*2x
Why doesn't x get multiplied with the rest?
8 replies
Open
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
12 Jan 15 UTC
Tipping
Why are people assholes?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2072667/Religious-diner-leaves-REAL-tip-waiter-Some-things-better-money.html
78 replies
Open
College Football Playoff Final
I'm rooting for the buckeyes but damn the ducks up tempo offense is something else.
2 replies
Open
floto (409 D)
12 Jan 15 UTC
3 players required
Hi, 3 players required here : gameID=153515
2 replies
Open
jmo1121109 (3812 D)
02 Jan 15 UTC
(+22)
Small Site Update
Winner Take All is now the default choice upon making a new game. If you wish to change the game to points per supply center open the advanced settings.
46 replies
Open
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
12 Jan 15 UTC
Hi
I an drunk. Sup diplofucks.
20 replies
Open
Top Player game
Normally I would suggest using wta gr but since that's dead any player that thinks they are good is free to join. Just looking for a good wta classic game. semi anon/non-anon, 36 hours, 50 bet. Details up for negotiation.
53 replies
Open
mrkyle7 (271 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
Surrender option
Not sure if this idea has been mentioned before, but a surrender option would be useful.
29 replies
Open
Stans8 (100 D)
12 Jan 15 UTC
ONLY 2 PEOPLE NEEDED IN 10 PERSON GAME: gameID=153460
JOIN QUICKLY
1 reply
Open
fiedler (1293 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
Political bias in the forums
So am browsing /b/ and read a comment from this astute fellow:
143 replies
Open
Jamiet99uk (873 D)
09 Jan 15 UTC
Russia bans transsexuals from driving
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-30735673

What the utter fuck is wrong with Russia's politics, that anyone would consider this backward policy acceptable. Ignorant peasants.
112 replies
Open
__mariola__ (183 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
(+1)
odgovori
sta kao niko ne zna srpski?
5 replies
Open
__mariola__ (183 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
igra
kako se ovo igra?? sta je ovo koji k?
4 replies
Open
misomiso (137 D)
08 Jan 15 UTC
World Diplomacy ix strategy
Hello
Can anyone point me in the direction of a strategy guide for all the different countries of World Diplomacy ix?
19 replies
Open
goldfinger0303 (3157 DMod)
11 Jan 15 UTC
Flight MH17 Report
Its from a German site I had never heard of before, but it seems to be a well-investigated report from my point of view. I thought some here might be interested.
https://mh17.correctiv.org/english/
0 replies
Open
Strauss (758 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
(+1)
Licklider's Bequeathal

..... beep ..... beep ..... beep ..... beep .....
Strauss (758 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
A beep from the universe of Sputnik 1 in the year 1957 shocked the USA and changed the world. It should become the starting point of important American scientific projects in a race in the universe to attain technological superiority and has brought out particularly innovative and numerous developments, which are civilian used then later like the Global Positioning System (GPS) as well as the Internet. It likewise accelerated the western rocket programs (Blue Streak, GB) and led to establishment the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

After the first satellite was launched by the Soviets, American's felt threat by this and thought that they could now also do bomb attacks from the space. Besides the Soviet technical achievement questioned the always surely believed claim to superiority of the west. The term "Sputnik crisis" is synonymous for the political-social reaction at that time in the USA and Western Europe on the start of the first artificial earth satellite. The causes for this "technological backlogs" of the Western Hemisphere were self-critical (particularly the USA) found predominant in the education system. The real impressive demonstration of the efficiency of the Soviet science has as well inspired the US-Strategists for more experimental plannings of new military scenarios, concepts and strategies.

As first reaction of Sputnik 1, the United States started only four months later in the early 1958 a program for strengthening co-operation and for networking of communication. So the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA) then was established in February 1958 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The agency worked for the safety from space based missile attack and should secure the crucial technological lead in the Cold War for the United States. Also in the same year followed the first US-satellite "Transit" (also called NavSat) and it was simultaneous the first satellite navigation system of the world, the forerunner of the GPS. The concrete idea Internet originally resulted from a development - on behalf of the United States Air Force starting in 1962 of a research group under the special direction of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the United States Department of Defense - for a decentralized network structure, also in case of failure several network nodes to should remain stable and efficient. The development ARPANet (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network).

ARPANet was the worldwide first operational packet-switched-network and the progenitor of today's Internet. Leonard Kleinrock devised at the University of California in LA the ingenious procedure to send data in small packages over wire around the world. The "Packet Switching" is an important digital networking communications method for the realization of the ARPANet and today forms the dominating basis for worldwide data communication. Although those ARPA had financed the project for the US-Department of Defense at that time, the agency looked for methods for a networking of universities and research establishments, in order to be able to use the limited computer capacities of the expensive large mainframe computer by exchange of data meaningfully, first in the USA, later worldwide. The range of duty of ARPA was, however, not only from the outset limited to the space research, therefore in the majority civilian projects were promoted.

The myth that ARPANet had been developed in order to resist nuclear attacks demystified Kleinrock, which didn't think of nuclear conflicts during his research with a short sentence: "That is a myth". ARPA is as being the main supporter of the Internet, maybe the most important force in the course of the United States and probably world history in the computer. Today it is the tenor of history that the USA never would have grown in the computer technology the way it did without ARPA. It just explore also the role of the US-Government in building the Internet, for the simple reason that the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) was created within the ARPA in the US-Department of Defense (DoD), is therefore the early and most significant institutional of the mission Internet. In the year 1962 the ARPA brought with the IPTO an institution into being, which should huge affect the Internet of the future considerably. Working within the institution, scientists provided leadership in creating the new field of computer science and was the real birth of the Internet.

Head of the institution IPTO became 1963 Internet pioneer Joseph Carl Robnett Licklider, former psychologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) who he was active in the emerging field of human-computer interactions. A man who already dreamed 1960 in his manuscript "Man-Computer Symbiosis" of the networking between computers and humans, in a time where everything was completed over time-consuming techniques such as punch cards and magnetic tapes. Now as the director of the IPTO - the renaming of the office for computer sciences within ARPA should reflect the changes Licklider's - he initiated three of the most important developments in the information technology: Time-sharing, networking and at last the fact that in former times at no US-university could be attained a doctorate in computer science. His work justified the facility of the appropriate research basis at four of the best universities of the country.

Licklider's vision of an universal network greatly influenced his successors at the IPTO and he mostly shaped the subsequent research that led to development of the Internet. Already August of the year 1962 the legend Licklider had submitted concepts for the "Intergalactic Computer Network", contained these great ideas already nearly everything that constitutes the modern Internet today. He felt that his already presented concept of a computer network will be trend-setting and inevitable. His desired project was first rejected by the Ministry of Defense, but taken up in 1965 again and could then realized in 1969 finally. ARPA assigned the order for the building of a network at 04/07/1969 to BBN. This should work according the conceptions Licklider's to make a good balance in the information technology as well as to creating for all humans the computing strength of the computer.

When ARPANet was replaced from the Internet and the last one given freely for the non-military use (Usenet too, both formed of this beginning), it was changed over to protocol TCP/IP of the Internet. Usenet as a transport system of data is the oldest network. At the same time the UUCP was replaced by the NNTP and permitted to the first time the participation of computers with arbitrary operating system on the Usenet. The UUCP remained existing parallel and makes possible a participation on the Usenet without Internet connection till today. In 1983 the protocol TCP/IP were used in the ARPANet, whereby it became a subnet of the early Internet. The ARPANet was shut down officially 02/28/1990, then the use of internet was exploded after 1990.

Before the start of the World Wide Web in 1993, just several American online providers competed. The largest were the online pioneer CompuServe. Already in 1992 Internet access was available for common public. In contrast to the CompuServe with its meager user interface, American Online (AOL) offered an optically responding software for the entrance to its net. Internet entrance like by AOL was possible only over a proprietary software with connection to a centralized portal. Start of the World Wide Web simultaneous was a start for an emancipated net culture, because the Early Adopters got rid of the connection to centralized portals at the same time and used Internet over Web browsers - as I.

The time of the explorers was started, the World Wide Web was like a new continent on the horizon. Everything was so exciting. Not by American Online. In a time of explorer and pioneer they disavowed itself as a not serious online service in the story-books, was considered only as safe port for them who are afraid of water and discredited AOL customers overall as technical idiots. The Stigmata to be an online service for all them who aren't yet ripe for the World Wide Web, became AOL-synonym quickly. And maybe therefore the New York Times summarized 1998 a bit disappointed, however, laconically that AOL are generally appreciative as kind of protection for technical beginners.

Against it, the adventure-hungry Netscape Communications Corporation with the Netscape Navigator than their flag ship was more courageous. The product logo was well selected, a ship steering wheel. As a challenge for adventurers and discoverer, it wakes associations "Where No Man Has Gone Before" which characterizes the Star Trek series and has entered popular culture. The correct equipment for an undiscovered continent. When in 1995 the use of the World Wide Web became popular, the Netscape Navigator had already a worldwide market share from over 80 percent, until then Microsoft just negated the new Internet and didn't recognize the innovative potential of this medium. That changed fast.

After Bill Gates had decided to invest substantial into the medium Internet and develop a competition product against the Netscape Navigator, began on the evidence of this project a as the "Browser War" (1995 until 1998) ingloriously known cutthroat competition between the enterprises Microsoft and Netscape around the market power of the Web browsers. Microsoft had, however, two crucial strategic advantages in opposite to Netscape: First the enterprise had substantially more financial resources, secondly they could by the additional integration of Internet Explorer in Windows which was installed at that time on 95 percent of all new sold computers, the market share rapidly increase.

Netscape had lost the technology leadership, it was a dramatically case. Far more seriously than the loss of the technology leadership - if Netscape had actually developed later to a serious competitor - was the great characteristic, that the Netscape Communicator contained a set of programming interfaces (APIs) witch could be used by developers to create own programs and could run on the basis from Netscape. Indeed, on Netscape side also were erroneous trends in the light of unassailable leads in their market share, approximately with the extension (Version 4) with functions for online purchase and doubtful search assistance with privacy-legal doubts, instead of really repairing critical errors.

The Netscape Communicator 4.5 should become in 1998 again a new start, but after the assumption of Netscape by American online only one month later was questioned everything again, because there were to much doubts about the seriousness of AOL to resume the development of the Netscape browser, after the service had already shown its serious occurrence in the new Internet world. Netscape had simply not earned this.
jmo1121109 (3812 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
(+1)
tldr
Strauss (758 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC

- Usenet Chronicler

I'm a relic of the old Usenet, of a great idea, which could develop a high discussion culture particularly with subject-specific topics and to which the ideal of dialogue corresponds. The much often disturbing intentional or unintentional nonverbal communication in interpersonal communication is omitted as within all virtual areas. The real meetings with strange people an attitude crucial for the further process already forms itself, before the opposite spoke the first word. An engage in an one-to-many communication form offending a lot of more people than in an one-to-one communication form as like e-Mail. We define one-to-one communications as those in which a person is communicating with another person as like face-to-face: a dialog. Communicating with many people by one post is quite analogous to communicating with one person with the exception of possibly offending a very large group of participants. Therefore, it's quite important to know as much as you can about the audience of your message.

Usenet as a social network was instituted by the inventors Tom Truscott, Steve Bellovin and Jim Ellis 1979 (all from USA) by a first connection of two Unix computers between the University of North Carolina and the Duke University. The idea was to create a free and cheaper alternative to the ARPANet. Data exchange was made by conventional telephone lines with Unix protocol UUCP or likewise protocol NNTP. This principle didn't changed, reduced entrance is possible by means of e-Mail (mail-to-news-gateway) or an appropriate Web page (web-to-news-gateway). Usenet is against the other social networks on Web page basis a worldwide, electronic network, which represents its own independent service of the Internet apart from the World Wide Web. It can be just understood as worldwide transport system for texts for a knowledge library, which formed itself during a continuous discussion process. Indeed, an important knowledge collection, which goes back into the late 1980 and developed on the principle "giving" (author) as well as "taking" (reader).

Usenet is a top-level media type text. The news are text-based (only for plaintext), large formats and standards as for instance .doc or HTML. unwanted. The simplest and most important subtype of text is "plain". The pure word like the holy word. Plain in particular just indicates that plain text simply containing no formatting commands or directives of any sort. Plaintext is intended to be displayed "as-is", so no special software is required to get the full meaning of the text, aside from support for the indicated character set. The term plaintext is used also in connection with cryptography (unencrypted text), while "cleartext" refers usually to hearing security lacking. As like for text files, for plain also text different indication encoding are used. Because only the pure text without formatting characteristics is sent, the sender of an article doesn't have influence on it, with which character font the receiver will view itself the article. A newsreader is usually used in addition.

News is designated public news, which will worldwide receive on computers. News are freely available and can be read from everyone, which is interested in it. Those news is also called "article". A Newsserver transport the news. Newsserver is designated either a software, which passes on, stores and makes Usenet-News available, or really a server (computer), on which this software runs. By thousands of Newsservers the worldwide distribution of the articles as well as a temporary rate time of the articles are guaranteed. The spreading and the access to the Usenet are made today on the Internet, but the simple fact that it doesn't have to be inevitably the case, is also still today argued that is Usenet - strictly seen - actually no part of the Internet or it to be doesn't have.

Newsgroups altogether or the top-level hierarchy are also called for example "us", "us.*" or "us.all". The second-level hierarchies are arranged either into further sub-hierarchies (third-level) or contain first concrete newsgroups. The firm major groups are so-called "The Big Eight" (previously Seven). It's a group of newsgroups established after the renaming and restructuring of Usenet 1987, each of these classifications is organized into groups and subgroups according to topic. The hierarchy alt.* wasn't part of the original seven, but it created separately as a place with more freedom and fewer rules than in the Big Seven. They were open and free for anyone to participate in a discuss. The original hierarchies are:


° comp.* ---------------------------> computer-related discussions
° humanities.* ------------> fine arts, literature, and philosophy
° misc.* ---------------------------------------> miscellaneous topics
° news.* ------> discussions and announcements about news
° rec.* ------------------------------> recreation and entertainment
° sci.* --------------------------------> science related discussions
° soc.* -------------------------------------------> social discussions
° talk.* -----------------> talk about various controversial topics


Usenet is a absolute free net and the last bastion for authors without financial influence (advertisement, marketing etc.) or stately influencing control on topics and contents, which would counteract the sense of a free discussion. Usenet is likewise a social experiment of the liberty of opinion and sets off from all other social networks. Participant is the publisher and author with unrestricted topic sovereignty, if it suits thematically into a group to regard the principle of arrangement for recherche. Usenet is a knowledge concentration within the thematically "cleanly arranged" hierarchies, sub-hierarchies and newsgroups. While the scattered worldwide knowledge of all the Web forums must be looked for laboriously, the worldwide knowledge of Usenet concentrates in only one topic newsgroup where can be discussed also directly. The classical domain of the scientific Usenet are natural science and technology.

At 1995 (until 2001) "Deja News" began to archive a variety of all those articles on their website and was made available to read. The volume of data of Deja News was bought up by Google and offered then under Google Groups search service. They hosts a very big archive of Usenet posts dating back to May 1981. In the German hierarchy there I write since the last millennium, I have published there tens of thousands articles in nearly all subjects area with my real name. Particularly in key groups (social graces), which affected the net culture by a better discussion culture. Usenet is thematically complete. The Web 2.0 generation (Twitter, Facebook etc.) unfortunately isn't to be inspired for it, today it must be everything fast, finished and total multicolored and click-able. The term *Use*net leaves advantages to recognize.

Only a few people had desire, passion and enough time for such a long-term process, with which success adjusts itself maybe after years. Like or dislike, that's the Zeitgeist. The last momentum of new users came with the AOL oversupply in the year 1996. Of a generation which was either dialogue unable or simply didn't want it. Sad. Usenet is anachronistic and faded more and more, the bedrocks become extinct or leave finally the public platform with their mental treasure. The last curtain will even fall also for a protagonist of my school. So may have had a sense. The beginning and the end, a chronicler I am and want conclude this long era with a quotation of Galileo Galilei: "A man who doesn't know the truth is just an idiot, but a man who knows the truth and calls it a lie is a crook."
Strauss (758 D)
11 Jan 15 UTC
"tldr"

Capitulation?
steephie22 (182 D(S))
11 Jan 15 UTC
Is there a point to this?


6 replies
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