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If you look at the time for all posted my threads, you'll see different time for DIFFERENT DAYs. It simply reflects 4 threads for saturday and 4 threads for sunday.
What is the problem? Why did you lock some of my threads and give me an infraction when I followed the rule?
All the threads were after 12 am when I looked at the posting times. If you want to stay within the rules no more than 4 threads in any 24 hr period.
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"Some guys play in all-star games, some guys don't. I don't know who picks all those all-star teams. In all honesty, I don't know who picks the combine, for that matter," Belichick said. "How does (Miami-Ohio offensive lineman Brandon) Brooks not get invited to the combine? How did Vollmer not get invited to the combine? I don't know. We can't really worry about that. We just have to try to evaluate them the best we can."
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This is what I see on my computer. I live in CA and my board setting reflects Pacific Time. I FOLLOWED the rule.
$1 cigaret tax: Yesterday, 11:32 PM
Impeach Obama board: Yesterday, 11:30 PM
Obama sign into law public debt: Yesterday, 11:27 PM
Early sign of double dip: Yesterday, 11:23 PM
For all Bush haters: Today, 12:47 AM
Biden and Obama are hypocrites: Today, 12:27 AM
Queen Obama: Today, 12:50 AM
CNN news anchor: Today, 12:52 AM
There may be a need for clarification here.
Is the rule "within a 24 hour period," or is it "in a day?" (Which is nit-picking because a "day" is any 24 hour time period , i.e. noon on Tuesday to noon on Wednesday is "a day." ) I suppose a more basic understanding of "a day" might be "Today is Sunday, tomorrow is Monday," but that seems like pretty Neanderthal thinking.
If it's the basically understood "in a day" then posting 4 threads immediately before midnight and 4 threads immediately after midnight is, technically, 4 in one day and 4 in another - although it's most likely done with the intent to annoy rather than "oh this is the only time I can get online in the entire 48 hour period," rather than just being unable to grasp what "a day" really means.
If it's the more sophisticated "in a 24 hour period," then we have a flagrant disregard for the rules in that, by your own admission, you posted 8 threads in 91 minutes.
In other words, unless you can't add or subtract time, if your "day" started at 11;23PM on Saturday it doesn't end until 11:23PM on Sunday.
Is the rule "within a 24 hour period," or is it "in a day?" (Which is nit-picking because a "day" is any 24 hour time period , i.e. noon on Tuesday to noon on Wednesday is "a day." ) I suppose a more basic understanding of "a day" might be "Today is Sunday, tomorrow is Monday," but that seems like pretty Neanderthal thinking.
If it's the basically understood "in a day" then posting 4 threads immediately before midnight and 4 threads immediately after midnight is, technically, 4 in one day and 4 in another - although it's most likely done with the intent to annoy rather than "oh this is the only time I can get online in the entire 48 hour period," rather than just being unable to grasp what "a day" really means.
If it's the more sophisticated "in a 24 hour period," then we have a flagrant disregard for the rules in that, by your own admission, you posted 8 threads in 91 minutes.
In other words, unless you can't add or subtract time, if your "day" started at 11;23PM on Saturday it doesn't end until 11:23PM on Sunday.
See ya tonight.
I can only be here when i have free time. If i can be here between 11 pm and 12:30 am, so be it . The rule is 4 threads/day. I followed it because it showed on the board.
I can only be here when i have free time. If i can be here between 11 pm and 12:30 am, so be it . The rule is 4 threads/day. I followed it because it showed on the board.
I can only be here when i have free time. If i can be here between 11 pm and 12:30 am, so be it . The rule is 4 threads/day. I followed it because it showed on the board.
Yesterday is not the same as today.
How many hours in a day?
Was last night at 11:30PM more than that many hours ago?
The word "day" refers to various relatedly defined ideas, including the following:
24 hours (exactly)
the period of light when the Sun is above the local horizon (i.e., the time period from sunrise to sunset);
the full day covering a dark and a light period, beginning from the beginning of the dark period or from a point near the middle of the dark period;
a full dark and light period, sometimes called a nychthemeron in English, from the Greek for night-day;
the time period from 6:00 AM to 6:00 PM or 9:00 PM or some other fixed clock period overlapping or set off from other time periods such as "morning", "evening", or "night".
The word "day" refers to various relatedly defined ideas, including the following:
24 hours (exactly)
the period of light when the Sun is above the local horizon (i.e., the time period from sunrise to sunset);
the full day covering a dark and a light period, beginning from the beginning of the dark period or from a point near the middle of the dark period;
a full dark and light period, sometimes called a nychthemeron in English, from the Greek for night-day;
the time period from 6:00 AM to 6:00 PM or 9:00 PM or some other fixed clock period overlapping or set off from other time periods such as "morning", "evening", or "night".