Obviously, you have no intention of answering me, so I am informing you that I am going to speak with Admin and filing a formal complaint against you.
some guy that has a 100b def and leaves 30 -40b out
he also made comments so i massed him and he sends me this via pm
'Dear mr Admin
Theres some guy that hits me for naq alot and massed me cos i called him a ****
please could you ban...'
best pm ever
- *zesh*
- Forum Expert
- Posts: 1189
- Joined: Sat Apr 29, 2006 12:45 pm
best pm ever
BORED 
papa says:
bebs
papa says:
man that guy makes me miss mukasa
TLE - This is my family


FOR THE LULZ
papa says:
bebs
papa says:
man that guy makes me miss mukasa
TLE - This is my family


FOR THE LULZ
- Suzuk
- Forum Regular
- Posts: 738
- Joined: Sat Jun 16, 2007 6:59 pm
- Alliance: Brothers in Arms
- ID: 0
- Location: Ohio, USA
Re: best pm ever
seriously?


- *zesh*
- Forum Expert
- Posts: 1189
- Joined: Sat Apr 29, 2006 12:45 pm
Re: best pm ever
BORED 
papa says:
bebs
papa says:
man that guy makes me miss mukasa
TLE - This is my family


FOR THE LULZ
papa says:
bebs
papa says:
man that guy makes me miss mukasa
TLE - This is my family


FOR THE LULZ
-
Nimras
- Forum Addict
- Posts: 3548
- Joined: Mon Sep 04, 2006 6:27 am
- Alliance: Yggdrasil
- Race: Viking
- ID: 30667
- Location: Farum, Denmark
- bebita
- Forum Zombie
- Posts: 5852
- Joined: Sun Apr 15, 2007 6:40 am
- Alliance: Familly
- Race: brothers
- ID: 0
Re: best pm ever
o my god zesh
you will be banned
indeed best pm ever
you will be banned
indeed best pm ever
Spoiler
Tziki wrote:
Bebita a known Spy from the server war, who joined TO under false pretences yet again has a filthy trick up his sleave. In fact it appears the Filth up his sleave is DDE and Mayhem. When confronted about them supporting Bebita and Rob3rt (as there were suspicions as to be a tiny account got his MS and Naq / Turns etc) neither deny their involved behind the scenes but instead hint towards it being a coincidence.
R8 wrote:the shock of seeing bebita in my attack logs after so long was too much to handle so I had to hit vac mode to try and recover for a few days
catch ya later
-
Fallout
- Forum Regular
- Posts: 537
- Joined: Mon Aug 21, 2006 2:18 am
- Location: Estonia
- Contact:
Re: best pm ever
nice PM indeed but for the future; don't save pictures in bmp format, it takes too much space, jpg or png are much better ones;)
- *zesh*
- Forum Expert
- Posts: 1189
- Joined: Sat Apr 29, 2006 12:45 pm
Re: best pm ever
ah but its harder to accuse of doctoring a bmp 
as it shows up more
as it shows up more
BORED 
papa says:
bebs
papa says:
man that guy makes me miss mukasa
TLE - This is my family


FOR THE LULZ
papa says:
bebs
papa says:
man that guy makes me miss mukasa
TLE - This is my family


FOR THE LULZ
-
Balhaar
- Forum Spammer
- Posts: 888
- Joined: Fri May 13, 2005 12:39 pm
- Alliance: TSA
- Race: Tollan
- ID: 16602
Re: best pm ever
Zesh that was awesome hahaha
I have never had anything like that
I have been called a pr*ck before and asked if i knew how to play te game when i farmed someone but that takes the cake!
I have never had anything like that
I have been called a pr*ck before and asked if i knew how to play te game when i farmed someone but that takes the cake!
Blessed be those who carry out the will of Balhaar, heretics be those who do not
-
Mystake
- Forum Addict
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- Location: Ontario, Canada
- Contact:
Re: best pm ever
*zesh* wrote:ah but its harder to accuse of doctoring a bmp
as it shows up more
actually bitmaps are easier to doctor because there isn't any pixel compression that "gives you away"
TRADE FEEDBACK - I am an A+ trader! Safest $ trades in all of SGW. I do escrow services too!
http://stargatewars.herebegames.com/vie ... 48&t=83709
Former member of what became the Alliance of the Year of 2009, Nemesis Sect.


http://stargatewars.herebegames.com/vie ... 48&t=83709
Former member of what became the Alliance of the Year of 2009, Nemesis Sect.

Mathlord wrote:The Reclaimer has been descended as a result of the battle!!!
Good times
-
madcat
- Forum Intermediate
- Posts: 965
- Joined: Fri Jan 13, 2006 9:36 am
Re: best pm ever
who is it zesh?
i wanna help him try n get u banned
i wanna help him try n get u banned

NO LONGER A TDL MEMBER - but i still like the sig

- Draleg
- Forum Expert
- Posts: 1406
- Joined: Wed Aug 10, 2005 10:44 am
- Alliance: Judgement
- Race: Ancient Bender
- Location: Bending Belgium
- Contact:
Re: best pm ever
Send him this --> [spoiler]
[/spoiler]
[/spoiler]Evil bending Draleg

Bender: Bite my shiny metal ass!
Hookerbot: Honey, you couldn't afford it.
Hookerbot: Honey, you couldn't afford it.
Bender: Empire Stronghold: 33.300,242,317,098,155 , she is not cheap !
-
JediMasterX
- Forum Zombie
- Posts: 5947
- Joined: Fri Jan 13, 2006 5:37 pm
- Alliance: The Legion
- Race: Jedi
- ID: 101050
- Location: In a galaxy far, far away...
Re: best pm ever
love the pic Draleg, lol.


(11:31 PM) Biscuit: I wish it was Jedi that massed me instead of a noob!
Tweety Girl says (11:48 PM)
.. i'm gonna come off vac mode just to mass JediMasterX so i can say "i hit it" .. damn that boy is smokin hot
2,454,890 Untrained ware taken from the realm of Oma Dasala.
{TAF DESCENTIONS}

-
demonicwolf
- Forum Intermediate
- Posts: 890
- Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2007 6:27 pm
- Race: Dragon Slayer
- Alternate name(s): FD3s
- Location: Getting sideways
Re: best pm ever
:-\ ur kidding me right ? u educate this person yet they need it or something :\
aslo png is prolly the hardest to fake or jpg, png allows one the quality of DMP but the compression of a JPG and is alot smaller but use what u want.
lol nice zesh btw this def takes the cake on best pm
aslo png is prolly the hardest to fake or jpg, png allows one the quality of DMP but the compression of a JPG and is alot smaller but use what u want.
lol nice zesh btw this def takes the cake on best pm



-
demonicwolf
- Forum Intermediate
- Posts: 890
- Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2007 6:27 pm
- Race: Dragon Slayer
- Alternate name(s): FD3s
- Location: Getting sideways
Re: best pm ever
Jack wrote:*zesh* wrote:[spoiler][/spoiler]
Screenie in the spoiler
Fallout wrote:nice PM indeed but for the future; don't save pictures in bmp format, it takes too much space, jpg or png are much better ones;)
JPG's is an atrocious format! Never use JPG! Always use PNG!
P.S. Fix'd yer spoiler Zesh
ur right and ur wrong jpg does kill a image and is really bad, but jpg is good for something but png is like the best choice.
jpegs like a porsche and png is like the super bowl each has its qualitys over the other
sorry i ment BMP not DMP thats a alliance i think



-
demonicwolf
- Forum Intermediate
- Posts: 890
- Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2007 6:27 pm
- Race: Dragon Slayer
- Alternate name(s): FD3s
- Location: Getting sideways
Re: best pm ever
porsche isnt really a amazeing machine in my eyes but a lambo is (lambogini = super bull)
[spoiler]The Story of PNG actually begins way back in 1977 and 1978 when two Israeli researchers, Jacob Ziv and Abraham Lempel, first published a pair of papers on a new class of lossless data-compression algorithms, now collectively referred to as ``LZ77'' and ``LZ78.'' Some years later, in 1983, Terry Welch of Sperry (which later merged with Burroughs to form Unisys) developed a very fast variant of LZ78 called LZW. Welch also filed for a patent on LZW, as did two IBM researchers, Victor Miller and Mark Wegman. The result was...you guessed it...the USPTO granted both patents (in December 1985 and March 1989, respectively).
Meanwhile CompuServe--specifically, Bob Berry--was busily designing a new, portable, compressed image format in 1987. Its name was GIF, for ``Graphics Interchange Format,'' and Berry et al. blithely settled on LZW as the compression method. Tim Oren, Vice President of Future Technology at CompuServe (now with Electric Communities), wrote: ``The LZW algorithm was incorporated from an open publication, and without knowledge that Unisys was pursuing a patent. The patent was brought to our attention, much to our displeasure, after the GIF spec had been published and passed into wide use.'' There are claims [1] that Unisys was made aware of this as early as 1989 and chose to ignore the use in ``pure software''; the documents to substantiate this claim have apparently been lost. In any case, Unisys for years limited itself to pursuit of hardware vendors--particularly modem manufacturers implementing V.42bis in silicon.
All of that changed at the end of 1994. Whether due to ongoing financial difficulties or as part of the industry-wide bonk on the head provided by the World Wide Web, Unisys in 1993 began aggressively pursuing commercial vendors of software-only LZW implementations. CompuServe seems to have been its primary target at first, culminating in an agreement--quietly announced on 28 December 1994, right in the middle of the Christmas holidays--to begin collecting royalties from authors of GIF-supporting software. The spit hit the fan on the Internet the following week; what was then the comp.graphics newsgroup went nuts, to use a technical term. As is the way of Usenet, much ire was directed at CompuServe for making the announcement, and then at Unisys once the details became a little clearer; but mixed in with the noise was the genesis of an informal Internet working group led by Thomas Boutell [2]. Its purpose was not only to design a replacement for the GIF format, but a successor to it: better, smaller, more extensible, and FREE.
The Early Days (All Seven of 'Em)
The very first PNG draft--then called ``PBF,'' for Portable Bitmap Format-- was posted by Tom to comp.graphics, comp.compression and comp.infosystems.www.providers on Wednesday, 4 January 1995. It had a three-byte signature, chunk numbers rather than chunk names, maximum pixel depth of 8 bits and no specified compression method, but even at that stage it had more in common with today's PNG than with any other existing format.
Within one week, most of the major features of PNG had been proposed, if not yet accepted: delta-filtering for improved compression (Scott Elliott and Mark Adler); deflate compression (Tom Lane, the Info-ZIP gang and many others); 24-bit support (many folks); the PNG name itself (Oliver Fromme); internal CRCs (myself); gamma chunk (Paul Haeberli) and 48- and 64-bit support (Jonathan Shekter). The first proto-PNG mailing list was also set up that week; Tom released the second draft of the specification; and I posted some test results that showed a 10% improvement in compression if GIF's LZW method was simply replaced with the deflate (LZ77) algorithm. Figure 1 is a timeline listing many of the major events in PNG's history.[/spoiler]
[spoiler]HISTORY OF JPEG
The DCT is the transform used in JPEG compression. "Joint Photographic Experts Group" is the original name of the committee that created the JPEG format. The standard was a joint effort by three of the world's largest standards organizations: The International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee (CCITT), and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). The JPEG project began back in 1982. The goal was to create a data compression standard that would display an image within one second down a 64 Kbits/sec ISDN line. Eventually, the format would be able to send loss-less images. The standard was intended for natural, real world scenes. It was designed to compress natural pictures that are smooth and curved and have no jagged edges.
The project began under ISO as Working Group 8 but later merged with CCITT. The Joint Photographic Experts Group, actually a subcommittee of ISO, was then formed in 1986 in order to avoid competing standards among the three standards organizations. After testing of numerous schemes, the Adaptive Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) was chosen to be the core of the JPEG format. Three years later, the merged ISO/IEC committee gave their approval to make the JPEG the standard. It was drafted as the ISO Committee Draft 10918 or Digital Compression and Coding of Continuous-Tone Still Images. It was officially standardized as the International Standard ISO 10918-1.
JPEG has been in existence for nearly a decade. Revisions updating JPEG to make use of our current text-based technologies are in progress. This project has been in progress since August 1998. The project team isdeveloping a JPEG format that provides more compression options and better images which take up the same amount of space. It is said that the core of
JPEG 2000 is Wavelet technology. The release date has been set for January
2000, but implementation will probably take some time.[/spoiler]
jpeg can take advantage of text conscripts mentioned in the history which png cant, also png increases the image simply because the way it compressions.
i like jpg's when i need fast compressed images and need them quickly i love png's becuase the quality but the compression takes a bit more time tho now adays with duo core processing and quad core processing the time isnt even noteable but back in the day when hdd's only held 40megs of space this is what jpg and png was ment for.
sorry im not clear on boths historys since its been a while, but honestly if ur dealing with low space and image quality dosent matter jpeg is the way
if you need medium spaced quick compressed interlaced quality images PNG is ur freind.
http://info.eps.surrey.ac.uk/FAQ/standards.html
[spoiler]The Story of PNG actually begins way back in 1977 and 1978 when two Israeli researchers, Jacob Ziv and Abraham Lempel, first published a pair of papers on a new class of lossless data-compression algorithms, now collectively referred to as ``LZ77'' and ``LZ78.'' Some years later, in 1983, Terry Welch of Sperry (which later merged with Burroughs to form Unisys) developed a very fast variant of LZ78 called LZW. Welch also filed for a patent on LZW, as did two IBM researchers, Victor Miller and Mark Wegman. The result was...you guessed it...the USPTO granted both patents (in December 1985 and March 1989, respectively).
Meanwhile CompuServe--specifically, Bob Berry--was busily designing a new, portable, compressed image format in 1987. Its name was GIF, for ``Graphics Interchange Format,'' and Berry et al. blithely settled on LZW as the compression method. Tim Oren, Vice President of Future Technology at CompuServe (now with Electric Communities), wrote: ``The LZW algorithm was incorporated from an open publication, and without knowledge that Unisys was pursuing a patent. The patent was brought to our attention, much to our displeasure, after the GIF spec had been published and passed into wide use.'' There are claims [1] that Unisys was made aware of this as early as 1989 and chose to ignore the use in ``pure software''; the documents to substantiate this claim have apparently been lost. In any case, Unisys for years limited itself to pursuit of hardware vendors--particularly modem manufacturers implementing V.42bis in silicon.
All of that changed at the end of 1994. Whether due to ongoing financial difficulties or as part of the industry-wide bonk on the head provided by the World Wide Web, Unisys in 1993 began aggressively pursuing commercial vendors of software-only LZW implementations. CompuServe seems to have been its primary target at first, culminating in an agreement--quietly announced on 28 December 1994, right in the middle of the Christmas holidays--to begin collecting royalties from authors of GIF-supporting software. The spit hit the fan on the Internet the following week; what was then the comp.graphics newsgroup went nuts, to use a technical term. As is the way of Usenet, much ire was directed at CompuServe for making the announcement, and then at Unisys once the details became a little clearer; but mixed in with the noise was the genesis of an informal Internet working group led by Thomas Boutell [2]. Its purpose was not only to design a replacement for the GIF format, but a successor to it: better, smaller, more extensible, and FREE.
The Early Days (All Seven of 'Em)
The very first PNG draft--then called ``PBF,'' for Portable Bitmap Format-- was posted by Tom to comp.graphics, comp.compression and comp.infosystems.www.providers on Wednesday, 4 January 1995. It had a three-byte signature, chunk numbers rather than chunk names, maximum pixel depth of 8 bits and no specified compression method, but even at that stage it had more in common with today's PNG than with any other existing format.
Within one week, most of the major features of PNG had been proposed, if not yet accepted: delta-filtering for improved compression (Scott Elliott and Mark Adler); deflate compression (Tom Lane, the Info-ZIP gang and many others); 24-bit support (many folks); the PNG name itself (Oliver Fromme); internal CRCs (myself); gamma chunk (Paul Haeberli) and 48- and 64-bit support (Jonathan Shekter). The first proto-PNG mailing list was also set up that week; Tom released the second draft of the specification; and I posted some test results that showed a 10% improvement in compression if GIF's LZW method was simply replaced with the deflate (LZ77) algorithm. Figure 1 is a timeline listing many of the major events in PNG's history.[/spoiler]
[spoiler]HISTORY OF JPEG
The DCT is the transform used in JPEG compression. "Joint Photographic Experts Group" is the original name of the committee that created the JPEG format. The standard was a joint effort by three of the world's largest standards organizations: The International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee (CCITT), and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). The JPEG project began back in 1982. The goal was to create a data compression standard that would display an image within one second down a 64 Kbits/sec ISDN line. Eventually, the format would be able to send loss-less images. The standard was intended for natural, real world scenes. It was designed to compress natural pictures that are smooth and curved and have no jagged edges.
The project began under ISO as Working Group 8 but later merged with CCITT. The Joint Photographic Experts Group, actually a subcommittee of ISO, was then formed in 1986 in order to avoid competing standards among the three standards organizations. After testing of numerous schemes, the Adaptive Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT) was chosen to be the core of the JPEG format. Three years later, the merged ISO/IEC committee gave their approval to make the JPEG the standard. It was drafted as the ISO Committee Draft 10918 or Digital Compression and Coding of Continuous-Tone Still Images. It was officially standardized as the International Standard ISO 10918-1.
JPEG has been in existence for nearly a decade. Revisions updating JPEG to make use of our current text-based technologies are in progress. This project has been in progress since August 1998. The project team isdeveloping a JPEG format that provides more compression options and better images which take up the same amount of space. It is said that the core of
JPEG 2000 is Wavelet technology. The release date has been set for January
2000, but implementation will probably take some time.[/spoiler]
jpeg can take advantage of text conscripts mentioned in the history which png cant, also png increases the image simply because the way it compressions.
i like jpg's when i need fast compressed images and need them quickly i love png's becuase the quality but the compression takes a bit more time tho now adays with duo core processing and quad core processing the time isnt even noteable but back in the day when hdd's only held 40megs of space this is what jpg and png was ment for.
sorry im not clear on boths historys since its been a while, but honestly if ur dealing with low space and image quality dosent matter jpeg is the way
if you need medium spaced quick compressed interlaced quality images PNG is ur freind.
http://info.eps.surrey.ac.uk/FAQ/standards.html





[/spoiler]