The Arcive of Official vBulletin Modifications Site.It is not a VB3 engine, just a parsed copy! |
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#2
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An interesting read.
Xenon isn't "the unknown" anymore. Sort of. ![]() |
#3
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velocd took what i was going to say lol
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#4
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I even get a mention!
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#5
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Erwin, you're just so popular!
![]() Nice article too. ![]() |
#6
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ROFL! I cracked up when you said this. It's such a Stefan classic
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#7
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*gg*
yeah Dean, right who else could have answered a question like that ![]() @Erwin: Honor to those who earn the honor ^^ @Velo: oh, there is so much more you don't know about me ![]() @Sandman: thx for correcting the spelling mistakes ![]() |
#8
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Interesting.
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#9
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More info about Xenon...
xe?non ( P ) Pronunciation Key (znn) n. Symbol Xe A colorless, odorless, highly unreactive gaseous element found in minute quantities in the atmosphere, extracted commercially from liquefied air and used in stroboscopic, bactericidal, and laser-pumping lamps. Atomic number 54; atomic weight 131.29; melting point -111.9?C; boiling point -107.1?C; density (gas) 5.887 grams per liter; specific gravity (liquid) 3.52 (-109?C). See table at element. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [From Greek, neuter of xenos, foreign, strange. See xeno-.] Source: The American Heritage? Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright ? 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. So Xenon is a colorless, odorless, unreactive, strange and foreign gas. Very appropriate. ![]() |
#10
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Hehe, jep, if you'd know my clothing, you would know how good that fits ^^
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