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Name: Steven (Steveo)
Birthday: 2/2/1983
Gender: Male


Interests: sailing, conversation, friends, proper lighting, God, laughter, breakfast foods, music, learning, good books, the facebook, movies, worship, restoring/remodeling old buildings (something I hope I can eventually list as an expertise), the fruits and gifts of the Spirit
Expertise: Listening


Message: message me
Website: visit my website
AIM: StevenACoyne


Member Since: 12/13/2004

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Thursday, October 12, 2006

This is for you, Kent

I found this article today on engadget.com.  Can't say I'm into all that techie stuff, but some of the comments people left were hilarious.  I've included my favorites below.

Inventors claim to turn 300 microwaves into megawatt energy weapon

If you happen to have say, 300 microwaves kicking around between you and your friends, it turns out that you'd have a large part of the ingredients necessary for a pretty substantial weapon. That is, according to two New Mexican inventors, who recently filed a patent for a "high-power microwave system employing a phase-locked array of inexpensive commercial magnetrons." Translated into English that basically means that these guys claim you can combine the magnetrons (the bits that generate the actual microwave that cooks your popcorn) from a bunch of consumer-grade microwaves and tweak 'em a bit to develop a megawatt-level death ray, or in military/legal parlance, a "directed energy weapon system." Yeah, we've seen energy weapons (or tools, if you prefer) before, but this is probably one of the first times that we've seen ordinary kitchen technology more complicated than a knife turn into a seriously lethal weapon.
 

T. Bell @ Oct 23rd 2006 4:15PM

I would like to echo the concern of others here and say that we can't let this technology remain in the hands of any Mexicans, be they New, Old or otherwise. I've severely burned the roof of my mouth on a surreptitiously over-microwaved burrito on more than one occasion, and I can only imagine the carnage a burrito whose refried core is superheated to plasma and launched in a projectile weapon.

The choice is clear. We must rid Mexico of these Weapons of Microwave Destruction.

James @ Oct 23rd 2006 4:25PM

OMG! Mexico has WMDs?!
Well at least we don't have to go overseas to institute regime change!

And, of course, we know exactly where they're located ...

American Copywriter @ Oct 23rd 2006 4:54PM

The drawback of this weapon is that our enemies, once fired upon, will likley remain cold in the middle unless they're on some sort of giant battlefield turntable.

willdao @ Oct 23rd 2006 4:58PM

What? You've never jammed a pencil into the lid-lock on a Cuisinart, in order to fire "deli-copter death-blades" at your mothers-in-law?

Man! You lamos've never lived!

Jeffler @ Oct 23rd 2006 5:15PM

In other news, Costco and Sams Club have decided that they will stop selling the 300 and 500 packs of microwaves.

"299 Should be more than enough for anyone" Said the CEO of Walmart.

p-diddy @ Oct 23rd 2006 5:25PM

Mexicans have WMDs?? Let's bomb the shit of them for oil.... oh wait.

stan lee @ Oct 23rd 2006 5:11PM

You've never jammed a pencil into the lid-lock on a Cuisinart, in order to fire "deli-copter death-blades" at your mothers-in-law?

The casualness with which you tossed out this comment leaves me somewhat concerned that you really have tried this.

And for Robby Stewart...

Manuel @ Oct 23rd 2006 5:51PM

Now i get it , that's why hundreds of Imperial stormtrooper where buying microwaves on wal-mart and getting them to the soon-to-be fully operational death star.


Monday, October 02, 2006

It's amazing what a little editing will do to a picture sometimes.  I took this very uninspiring picture last fall.  Yesterday, I decided to play around with it to see if I could make it look good in black and white.  Here's the result.

Before...

IMG_1069

After...

IMG_1069bw3

I wish I could make the pictures bigger but I haven't figured out xanga's new photo system yet.


Monday, July 24, 2006


Monday, June 05, 2006

"I think I'm gonna try to win the Nobel Prize.  I've been thinking about it a lot the last few days." - Benji


Friday, May 19, 2006

We've Got it all Backwards

There's a common teaching in the church today that says God often leads us by closing doors.  I agree with that wholeheartedly, just not the way it's taught.  Basically the idea is there's two options we're presented with and God closes one door.  We should take it as a sign that God doesn't want us going through that door; instead we need to go through the door that He's left open.  That's a great theology if our God is a god of the possible.  But our God is a God of the impossible.  It's great theology if we walk by sight.  But we don't; we walk by faith.  This doctrine is the result of human logic, not the Word of God.  It's unredeemed thinking.  When I read the Bible, I find a pattern that shows the promises of God behind the closed doors, not the open ones.  Look at Sarah - God's promise to her and to Abraham was behind a closed door, or rather, a closed womb.  And what about the Promised Land?  It was behind a series of closed doors.  Pharoah and his army were a closed door.  The Red Sea was a closed door.  The wilderness was a closed door.  The Jordan River was a closed door.  The giants living in the land of Canaan were closed doors.  So were the walled cities.  See the pattern?  The promises of God are contained behind the closed doors, not the open ones!  Yes, God leads by closing doors.  He closes them to highlight them as the door we're supposed to go through!  We've had it backwards; we've been the wrong door.  Those who base their lives by what's possible die in the wilderness.  It's the generation that lives by faith that inherits the Promised Land because the Promised Land is only entered by faith.  I don't think this rule applies 100% of the time.  God probably closes doors sometimes because He doesn't want us going through them.  But to say a closed door is a sign that God is leading us away from something is a faithless statement that puts no trust in the power of God.



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