User talk:Intersofia
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Welcome!
Hello, Intersofia, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are a few good links for newcomers:
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I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Please sign your name on talk pages using four tildes (~~~~); this will automatically produce your name and the date. If you need help, check out Wikipedia:Where to ask a question, ask me on my talk page, or place {{helpme}}
on your talk page and someone will show up shortly to answer your questions. Again, welcome! -- Longhair | Talk 14:48, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Contents |
[edit] Image:Terminal-Island.jpg
Image:Terminal-Island.jpg, which you added to the Terminal Island article, is a photo of only a very small portion of Terminal Island, so I've corrected the description in the Terminal Island article, and also added a better description to the Image page. BlankVerse ∅ 03:41, 17 July 2005 (UTC)
- Since what the photo showed best was the prison, I added the picture to the Federal Correctional Institution, Terminal Island article. Did you take the photo yourself and do you have any other photos of the Terminal Island area? BlankVerse ∅ 00:50, 20 July 2005 (UTC)
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- re:Image:San-Pedro.jpg: It's a shame that it not a wider view. That picture only shows about half of the Port of Los Angeles portion of Terminal Island. I want to track down the photo that's used on this page: [1], which is a better aerial photo than the one at Microsoft's TerraServer [2]. BlankVerse ∅ 06:53, 20 July 2005 (UTC)
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- re: The clui.org photo. That picture is almost certainly a picture from an airplane. I've noticed that satellite pictures, even though they can show great detail, tend to have much of the color washed out of them. You can also see that they "cheated" a bit with the photo and blacked out some of the rest of the harbor so the photo ONLY shows Terminal Island.
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- Do you live in the LA area? Although it's short notice, there is the very first LA-area Wiki meetup happening in the Chinatown area of downtown LA on Monday night, July 25, 2005 (see Wikipedia:Meetup/LA/1 for more details). There is also a newly created Southern California WIkiProject and California WikiProject that you might want to check out.
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- Also: I noticed that a Cesna photo you added was taken at the Catalina Island airport. You didn't take any pictures of the airport did you? BlankVerse ∅ 12:13, 21 July 2005 (UTC)
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[edit] Bichon Frisé image
Could you clarify using the appropreate image copyright tag exactly what sort of public domain this image is? Has it been released by the author? Is it from a public source? Is it in fact copyrighted free use?
- I edited the image from a friend's snapshot. She would prefer to remain anonymous, but has given consent to release into the public domain, therefore, I release it into the public domain. Intersofia 06:29, 15 August 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Thank you!
Thank you for your support on my RfA. It is sincerely appreciated. ≈ jossi fresco ≈ t • @ 15:42, 15 October 2005 (UTC) |
[edit] Del Mar Fairgrounds
07:43, 31 October 2005 Wayward deleted "Del Mar Fairgrounds"
Hey Weyward, why did you delete the Del Mar Fairgrounds article ? There are several pages that point to this now non-existent article, including Del Mar, California I commenced it by supplying a nice photograph of the fair grounds. Can you be more constructive and less destructive ? Signal it as a stub, contribute a paragraph or something. I think a good picture is a fine way to start an article. Anything the matter with that ? Intersofia 05:04, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
Defend the wiki spirit ! Commencing an article, particularly one referenced by other pages, with a photograph seems to me a reasonable way to invite further contributions. 07:43, 31 October 2005 Wayward deleted "Del Mar Fairgrounds" (content was: '{{db}}Del Mar Racetrack and Fairgrounds')
- Hi, Intersofia. The article Del Mar Fairgrounds qualified for speedy deletion. Please feel free to recreate the article when you can provide some context (see stub). —Wayward Talk 07:37, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
- The stated reason for the delete was "CSD A1 - very short articles without context". A picture is worth a thousand words (although it took words to say that, granted ;-)
- and Del Mar Fairgrounds is crying out to exist - pointed to a priori by other articles. I advanced the cause of wikipedia by contributing a picture. So if you think the article is too short, offer some constructive help! Destruction is cheap, easy and leads nowhere. Thank you. Intersofia 05:13, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
- Someone else or myself would soon supply the text. Intersofia 05:15, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
(Wayward says) Hi, Intersofia. The article Del Mar Fairgrounds qualified for speedy deletion. Please feel free to recreate the article when you can provide some context (see stub). —Wayward Talk 07:37, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
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- Are you confusing context with content ? There is plenty of context for an article on the Del Mar Fairgrounds - since there were other articles that pointed to it prior to its creation (Links that take you to an "edit this article" page) I think this is the very definition of referential context. This is not the unrelated story of some José Nobody who had an Hacienda who know where and a Factory in Lower Obscuria. (see [[3]] ) I provided complete illustrative content: a photograph. Your deletion of this article makes me and others who could soon write the text loose time. I am recreating it and signaling it as a stub, and providing what little text content I can, in the hope that others can soon shed some more literary light on the matter. It is my opinion that visual descriptions alone of a an article needing creation and existence are a positive step forward and should be respected. Intersofia 16:21, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
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- Done. Article re-created with literary AND photographic content. Context provided a-priori by the encyclopedic environment that pointed to this (formerly) non-existing article. Best Regards, Intersofia 17:14, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
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- Please feel free to contribute to the article Del Mar Fairgrounds, as it is only a short stub, needing the constructive work of wikipedians. Intersofia 17:16, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
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[edit] San Diego Neighborhoods
Curious as to why you are deleting these references ? Intersofia 17:01, 11 November 2005 (UTC)
- I deleted San Diego neighborhoods from the list of unincorporated places in the county. There is a full list of neighborhoods in the city article, San Diego, California. Maybe we should have the neighborhood list in both places, or at least a pointer from the county article. -Willmcw 18:38, 11 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Commons images
If you upload images to the Commons please make sure you add them to a category or article so other users are able to find and use them. Use Commons:Commons:Categories to find cats you need. --Denniss 09:39, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Contact Consequences
Hi. In the AfD for Contact Consequences you voted merge as a valid suibject. Have you seen first contact (science fiction)? You might be interested in contributing to it. My delete vote on Contact Consequences was largely on the basis that the other article is better (although CC has now been cleaned up; however, it is still questionable in my view whether it actualy adds anything). - Just zis Guy, you know? [T]/[C] (W) AfD? 09:25, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Image:La-Jolla-Red-Tide.780.jpg
Please upload your images to Wikimedia Commons. --Saperaud 01:00, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Shock cooling (engines)
Thanks for catching my mistake on the shock cooling article. I missed that study where they were actually able to cause a stuck valve in the Lycoming engines, so I'm glad you caught that and was able to make a correction. As a side note, I used to work in a maintenance facilty for a large training fleet (~30 aircraft) and we rarely (never actually, IIRC) had problems with cylinders cracking. The last engine I pulled and overhauled was an O-320 that had ~3400 hours on it, despite the training environment of students jamming the power in and out, engine kills with the mixture, inexperienced leaning, hours of pattern work, etc. We were always on the lookout for studies that proved shock cooling was a real danger but never found anything solid. Take care, Mexcellent 21:12, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks, thats really most reassuring.... I often fly a '79 TR182 (Turbo Skylane Retractable) and I was concerned that I couldn´t just yank back the power to come down in a hurry like you can on that trusty workhorse of complex training, the Cessna Cutlass, 172RG. The basic theory makes sense though, in general. That is, cooling implies dimensional changes in blocks of metal (of all and any shapes and sizes) rapid (read: shock) cooling logically translates into rapid dimensional changes - since stuck valves have been proven to occur, a certain respect to rapid power regime changes should be developped. For example, I was always taught to smoothly, surely but gently, advance the throttle to full power for takeoff, and to wait until a minimum altitude above ground level Above_Ground_Level_(aviation), to reduce power, because engine failures, if they occur, are more likely to occur when the power output of the engine is changed. So I am more confident in reducing power to come down, but I still learned that descent planning is important. And a healthy respect for an engine and it´s care.... Thanks again !! Intersofia 05:24, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
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- I would baby the turbo myself, since there are a lot higher temps and pressures with those engines. And a lot more expensive to fix, of course. :)
Mexcellent 00:24, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Red Tide image
Hi Intersofia,
I work for a publishing company and I came across a red tide on Wikipedia and it says it was uploaded by you. Following is the link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:La-Jolla-Red-Tide.780.jpg I would like to use this image in an educational science textbook I am working on. Unfortunately the size on the web is too small for print and I was wondering if you had any higher-res image of this red tide. Give me an email at athos2001@gmail.com
All the best,
Christine :-)
[edit] Thiomersal (Mercury containing compound in vaccines)
Hi. Thanks for helping out with mercury. I may have been too hasty in some of my edits today. I am proposing a centralized article on Mercury toxicity but have only been collecting quotes on its talk page so far.
For now, can we say that thiomersal has "neither been proven safe nor unsafe"? Or that its toxicity is a matter of dispute? Or something like that. I want to be neutral; I don't want to downplay hazards any more than I want to exaggerate them. ^_^ --Uncle Ed 03:11, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
- Ed, I think the fact that thiomersal, as a mercury containing compound, is hazardous to life is clear. That is the reason it was ever included in vaccines, is as a bacteriostatic, a "bacteria killer". It outright kills these simpler life forms. In humans, it has been conclusively demonstrated that even small very small amounts inhibit the myelin sheath formation around nerves, eventually causing the nerve to wither and die. The increase in autism spectrum manifestations concurrent with the increased number of vaccines on children's schedules in the 1990's (previous autism incidence of 1 in 10,000 shooting up to 1 in 150) leaves no doubt, at least in my mind that thiomersal is NOT safe. Some attribute this to better diagnosis, and perhaps that accounts for some increased cases, but not for a 2 order of magnitude increase.
- Statistic proof of its un-safety exists, (read David Kirby's "Evidence of Harm") but has been disputed by the pharmaceuticals companies whose monstrous liablility exposure would certainly bankrupt them. In fact, these pharmaceuticals have been heavily lobbying for legislative exemption from liability concerns, and in some cases have gotten it.
- The only "testing" ever done on thiomersal was to administer it to terminal meningitis patients in the 30's. Since they didn't seem to show any adverse effects in the following two weeks, it was assumed that thiomersal was safe. All of these test subjects died within a year or two from their meningitis. All were adults.
- No testing to prove safety was ever done in a manner that would pass muster today, and never on very young, suceptible developping children, and so evidently not tracing it's effects on them over a term of years.
- It is generally and widely recognized that mercury is neurotoxic. I think the most accurate statement that can be made about thiomersal is that it has never been proven safe, (certainly not to the rigor that new medications would), that companies involved in it's manufacture have sought legal exemption from liability, and that it is being retired from active use. To say it has not been proven unsafe is more than a stretch. The statistical evidence is overwhelming.
- Best Regards,
- Intersofia 14:07, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
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- Concur with your points above, Intersofia, and thanks for pointing them out! Ombudsman 23:12, 9 December 2006 (UTC)