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Napoleon Bonaparte

Napoleon Bonaparte is one my Idols and Heroes. He was such a great man, in fact our modern military structure was thanks to him. the Corps structure was created by him, which was the demon he unleased to Europe that crushed virtually all his enemies. Yes, he failed to conquer Russia, and yes he was defeated at Waterloo. But he was the most successful General/Commander of all time. He has won more decisive battles than Alexander, Julius Cesar and Hannibal combined.

Even today I can feel his electric personality as I read his stories.

In April 1796 the twenty-six year old Napoleon Bonaparte was named commander of the French Forces fighting the Austrains in Italy. For many officers his appointment was something of a joke : they saw thier new leader as too short, too young, too inexperienced, and even too badly groomed to play the part of “general”. His soldiers, too, were underpaid, underfed, and increasingly disillusioned with the cause they are fighting for, the French revolution. In the first few weeks of the campaign, Napoleon did what he could to make them fight harder, but they were largely resistant to him.

On May 10, Napoleon and his weary forces came to the Bridge of Lodi, over the river Adda. Despite his uphill struggle with his troops, he had the Austrians in retreat, but the bridge was a natural place to take a stand, and they had manned it with soldiers on either side and with well-placed artillery. Taking the bridge would be too costly– suddenly the French soldiers saw Napoleon riding up in front of them, in a position of extreme personal risk, directing the attack. He delivered a stirirng speech, then launched his grenadiers at the Austrian lines to cries of “Vive la Republique!!” Caught up in the spirit, his senior officers led the charge.

The French took the bridge, and now, after this relative minor operation, Napoleon’s troops now suddenly saw him as a different man. In fond recognition of his courage, they gave him the nickname : “Le Petit Caporal”.

Napoleon’s soldiers did not see him often, but when they did, it was as if an electrical charge passed through them. It was not just his presence ; he knew exactly to show up.

If a squad were about to lead a charge or seemed in trouble, he would ride over and yell, ” Thirty-eighth : I know you ! Take me that village — at the charge! His soldiers felt they weren’t just obeying orders, they were living out a great drama.

Napoleon rarely showed anger, but when he did, his men felt worse than just guilty or upset. Late in the first Italian campaign, Austrian troops forced some of his troops into a humiliating retreat in which there was no excuse. Napoleon visited thier camp personally. “Soldiers, I am not satisfied with you,”"You have shown neither bravery, discipline, nor preserverance. . . You have allowed yourselves to be driven from positions where a handful of men could have stopped an army. Soldiers from the Thirty-ninth and Eighty-Fifth, You Are Not French Soldiers. General, chief-of-staff, let it be inscribed on thier colors : ‘They no loner form part of the Army of Italy!’ “ he told them, his very large grey eyes seemingly on fire. . The soldiers were astounded. Some cried; others begged for another chance. They repented their weakness and turned completely around: the Thirty-ninth and Eighty-Fifth would go on to distinguish themselves for strenghts they have never shown before.

Lakbayan Grade

I am quite surprised I got a C+ considering the size of the Philippines. I plan to get an A+ before I die :D hahaha


My Lakbayan grade is C+!

How much of the Philippines have you visited? Find out at Lakbayan!

Created by Eugene Villar.

The reed and the Olive tree were arguing over their steadfastness, strength and ease.

The olive taunted the reed for his powerlessness and pliancy in the face of all the winds.

The Reed kept quiet and didn’t say a word.

Then, not long after this, the wind blew violently. The reed, shaken and bent, escaped easily from it, but the olive tree resisting the wind, was snapped by its force.

 > The story shows that people who yield to circumstances and to superior power have advantages over their stronger rivals

From Fables, Aesop, 6th Century

We’re open for business again, and this time everyone can join in and post their insanity. Here’s what happened when I showed the new look of the site to Mirai.

licorne: michan..?
michan: hai?
licorne: don’t… make fun of it ok?.. constructive criticism.. tell me if it’s a no-go..
licorne: http://winglica.com/
licorne: T____________________T
michan: *opens*
michan: OHMYGODTHESMILEYSARESOCUTE!!!!!!!!
michan: AAAAAAAAHHH!!!!!!!
michan: PUT THEM ON THE FORUM KACHOU-SAMA!!!! PUT THEM ON THE FORUM!!!!!!!!!
licorne: XDDD
michan: AAAAAHHHHH SO CUUUTTEE!!!! >U<
licorne: honto? we’ll open it as an free-for-all posting site where all can post crazy stuff….
michan: i can’t decide which i like the most… (cries)
licorne: XDD
licorne: it was worst for me.. i had to pick a line-up for the banner.. i dare say the other smilies who were excluded are not happy with me..
michan: O_____O THERE ARE MORE?!??!?!?!?!
licorne: hai..loads…
licorne: argg.. the smilie who got hit by a brick isn’t there… T_T
michan: FORUUMMM FORUM NOOOWWW (cries)
licorne: XDDDDD
michan: this will open up
michan: a whole new dimension
licorne: XDDD
michan: in the smiley wars
licorne: XDD
licorne: Smiley Wars: The Next Generation
michan: (lol)
michan: Smiley Wars: Episode Two
michan: Smiley Wars: The Return of the Grin
licorne: The Smilie Menace
licorne: XDD
michan: (lol)
licorne: The Toothless Terror
michan: i’m too giggly to think about any more smiley titles XDDD
licorne: XDDD

The University of Hertfordshire recently concluded a research project to find the best jokes in the world. Here they are :

Best Joke in the world
A couple of New Jersey hunters are out in the woods when one of them falls to the ground. He doesn’t seem to be breathing, his eyes are rolled back in his head. The other guy whips out his cell phone and calls the emergency services. He gasps to the operator: “My friend is dead! What can I do?”

The operator, in a calm soothing voice says: “Just take it easy. I can help. First, let’s make sure he’s dead.” There is a silence, then a shot is heard.

The guy’s voice comes back on the line. He says: “OK, now what?“

Second Place
Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson go on a camping trip. After a good dinner and a bottle of wine, they retire for the night, and go to sleep.

Some hours later, Holmes wakes up and nudges his faithful friend. “Watson, look up at the sky and tell me what you see.”

“I see millions and millions of stars, Holmes” replies Watson.

“And what do you deduce from that?”

Watson ponders for a minute. “Well,

Astronomically, it tells me that there are millions of galaxies and potentially billions of planets.

Astrologically, I observe that Saturn is in Leo.

Horologically, I deduce that the time is approximately a quarter past three.

Meteorologically, I suspect that we will have a beautiful day tomorrow.

Theologically, I can see that God is all powerful, and that we are a small and insignificant part of the universe.

But what does it tell you, Holmes?”

Holmes is silent for a moment.

“Watson, you idiot!” he says. “Someone has stolen our tent!”

Top joke in USA
A man and a friend are playing golf one day at their local golf course. One of the guys is about to chip onto the green when he sees a long funeral procession on the road next to the course. He stops in mid-swing, takes off his golf cap, closes his eyes, and bows down in prayer.

His friend says: “Wow, that is the most thoughtful and touching thing I have ever seen. You truly are a kind man.”

The man then replies: “Yeah, well we were married 35 years.”

Top joke in Canada
When NASA first started sending up astronauts, they quickly discovered that ballpoint pens would not work in zero gravity. To combat the problem, NASA scientists spent a decade and $12 billion to develop a pen that writes in zero gravity, upside down, underwater, on almost any surface including glass and at temperatures ranging from below freezing to 300°C.

The Russians used a pencil.

Top joke in Belgium
Why do ducks have webbed feet?

To stamp out fires.

Why do elephants have flat feet?

To stamp out burning ducks

Top joke in Germany
A general noticed one of his soldiers behaving oddly. The soldier would pick up any piece of paper he found, frown and say: “That’s not it” and put it down again. This went on for some time, until the general arranged to have the soldier psychologically tested. The psychologist concluded that the soldier was deranged, and wrote out his discharge from the army.

The soldier picked it up, smiled and said: “That’s it.”

Top joke in UK
A woman gets on a bus with her baby. The bus driver says: “That’s the ugliest baby that I’ve ever seen. Ugh!” The woman goes to the rear of the bus and sits down, fuming. She says to a man next to her: “The driver just insulted me!”

The man says: “You go right up there and tell him off – go ahead, I’ll hold your monkey for you.”

Top Joke in England
Two guys are sitting on a bar stool. One starts to insult the other one. He screams, “I slept with your mother!” The bar gets quiet as everyone listens to see what the other weasel will do. The first again yells, “I SLEPT WITH YOUR MOTHER!”

The other says, “Go home dad you’re drunk.”

Top Joke in Wales
A turtle was walking down an alley in New York when he was mugged by a gang of snails. A police detective came to investigate and asked the turtle if he could explain what happened.

The turtle looked at the detective with a confused look on his face and replied “I don’t know, it all happened so fast.”

Top Joke in Northern Ireland
A doctor says to his patient, “I have bad news and worse news”.

“Oh dear, what’s the bad news?” asks the patient.

The doctor replies, “You only have 24 hours to live.”

“That’s terrible”, said the patient. “How can the news possibly be worse?”

The doctor replies, “I’ve been trying to contact you since yesterday.”

Yes, it’s come to this. The same people you raked on in high school now run the world and control every gizmo you own or want to own. And, as you hold your “normal” identity throughout your life, there are times when it may be advantageous to pose as a geek. Maybe to convince your first date that you have job prospects beyond “Walmart clerk”. Maybe to slip in the door at Comdex. Perhaps even to escape being hacked to death by the evil-looking punks at the Internet cafe, the ones with the Tux penguin tattoos and the Mohawks who are eying your laptop. Hint: They don’t like you because of the suit and tie; they HATE that!

Well, fear not, hopeless lamer, I, a certified geek, will give you a rundown of how to pass as a geek for brief moments. Understand, these tactics will in no way work over the long term, like, say, a marriage. But in quick social exchanges, or to bamboozle your cow-orker, these tricks should work sufficiently to help you fool the rest of us into thinking that you’re one of us:

One of the chief attributes of geeks, and intellectuals in general, is attitude. No, attitude doesn’t MAKE you a geek, but that’s not the point of this article. The point here is to FAKE it. And to fake it, you have to feign interests and opinions, and then be smugly confident that your “choices” are superior to the mainstream’s.

Scott Adams, creator of the “Dilbert” comic strip, has a chapter in one of his books about enhancing your aura at work by posing as a “prima-donna”, which is very similar in tactics to this article. Here again, it’s all about the pretended-to attitude.

What defines geeks the most is the range of interests. Use these tricks to speak in the tribal tongue of geeks:

Math: Of course, if you have a calculator, use it. Geeks do that, too. It isn’t about being able to do complex calculations in your head; it’s about using the techie tools to free up your brain for less mundane functions. And by all means, top the other person in arcanity of equipment. If they have a Radio Shack, whip out a Texas Instruments. If they have a Texas Instruments, unclip your slide-rule. Facing a slide-rule? They make portable abacuses! Slide your beads around on your abacus and comment how you saw these things in a whole new light after you read Feynman about computing cube roots on them.

Primes: All prime numbers end in 1, 3, 7, and 9. Just remember those numbers, and look at the last digit of prices, bus numbers, etc. When you encounter one, remark to your companion, “Hey, I think that’s prime”. Odds are good, provided the number is short enough, that you’ll be right. When you work it out on the calculator, even if you were wrong, you will at least get points for the informed hunch.

Counting bases: Learn these words: Binary, Octal, Hexadecimal. Binary is ones and zeros. Octal uses zero thru seven. Hexadecimal uses all the standard numbers, plus the letters A through F. Upon encountering, say, a phone number 455-6102, ask, “Is that in decimal or octal?” Point at the license plate AD3 61F and comment that that’s a number in “hex”. Motel rooms on the first floor, such as 101, 110, etc. are prompts to point and chuckle: “Look, they even number in binary!” It doesn’t matter that you have no idea what you’re talking about. Don’t go out on a limb and try to convert to normal numbers.

Computer Systems: That elite snobbery comes out the hardest in this subject. It’s easy, all you have to do is pretend to hate the mainstream choices: Windows, AOL, Intel. Assert Windows is inferior to (pick one or more) Linux, Unix, BeOS, or Macintosh. Act sympathetic upon hearing an email addy ending in “@AOL.com” and say, “Any idea when they’re gonna put cable modem in your area?” Snort at Intel commercials and chortle “Give me an AMD Duron any day!” It doesn’t matter, again, that you have no idea what you’re talking about. When challenged for an explanation, pick any random nonsense and string it together. Insist that your choice is faster, more secure, less expensive, conductive to open source, more efficient, or whatnot. This is exactly how real live conversations between geeks defending their favorite software/hardware go all the time. The point is that you’re faking an opinion. Like any random geek, you could still be full of hooey.

Now, when it comes to operating systems, the Geekosphere (I coined it! It’s mine! You heard it here first!) has jelled around Linux and BSD. When it comes to Linux distros, you win points the older and more obscure your distro is. Simply look up the history of computing and pick machines and systems going back in 5-year increments; or just learn this phrase: “I run Yggdrasil on a PDP-11. Boy, it was a bitch installing all that from tape!” You’ll need a snorkel to breathe underneath the pile of groupies that will sack you. *Any* BSD distro is obscure. The mere name “BSD 386″ instantly repels suits like garlic repels vampires.

Software: Games: Any popular computer game will do just fine here, but tend to shy away from the “Sim” genre. Some geeks like Sims, some don’t. But almost any geek has at least taken a crack at any game ending in “quest” or “craft”, and first-person-shooters. Bonus for enthusing about Myst, Schizm, etc. Claim to have solved Riven in a single day. RPGs stand for Role Playing Games, and there’s about 999 flavors of them, and they all copy the original Dungeons and Dragons game. The upshot is that if you mumble something about your level 97 (human | troll | elf | hobbit | orc | halfling) (rogue | ranger | warrior | wizard | mage | necromancer | priest | dunadin | paladin), you will easily pass for a devotee of (Rogue | Nethack | Angband | Diablo | DandD-Classic) without too much trouble.

Applications: While there is the obvious prejudice for emacs, vi, Gimp, Adobe, Mozilla, Firefox, and etc., you’re just as well off here letting the other person name a software tool that they use, then caw, “Get a REAL program!”

Programming: Learn not only the names of these programming languages, but the order in which I present them: Basic, Cobol, Pascal, Ada, C, Java, Lisp, Perl, Python, Ruby, Assembler. These are listed in order of “least cool” to “most cool”. Now you know what to do. Whenever the person you’re talking to name-drops any language on this list, simply pick the next one and assert that this is what YOU prefer. What to do if you meet an assembler programmer? Act like any other geek: impressed! Bug them to teach you how to write a tic-tac-toe game that uses artificial intelligence in assembler. Stand and pretend to absorb their explanation in one shot. Shake your head in marvel and mutter, “And all that time, I was trying to do it the hard way!”

Here’s another thing if you’re out-trumped by somebody who knows multiple programming languages, including the coolest: make one up! Yes, it’s true, there are more languages and variants out there than any human being could possibly keep track of, and new ones get invented all the time. Just call it something like “B/arg3″ or “Modico” and claim that it combines the best features of (insert random language #1) and (insert random language #2). The geek you’re talking to will simply assume that they’ve missed the relevant Slashdot articles. Cover up line: “It just reached ‘break-even’ point last month.”

Pretend you like these: TV shows: Babylon V, Star Trek, Carnivale. When you meet a B5 fan, claim ST. Claim B5 to ST fans. Meet a fan of both, ask if they’ve seen Carnivale. No, Carnivale isn’t true geek fare, but it’s high-brow enough that you’ll pass as one who has “burnt out” on the science fiction genre temporarily. Gain extra points by dropping “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” or “X-Files” into the conversation. Avoid “Sliders” and “Quantum Leap”, they died on cancellation. Don’t even claim affection for “Firefly”, because Firefly is so supercool, even it’s fans disown it for fear of being flamed by the other fans. It’s like the name of a diety: never say it out loud.

Movies: Original Star Trek movies, Lord of the Rings movies (but be sure to mention that they came CLOSE to re-creating the books), Highlander, the Fifth Element, Minority Report, Blade Runner, Alien (deny ever having seen the sequels), Sneakers, marginal reference to the Star Wars series (all geeks have seen Star Wars movies, but seldom RAVE about them), any Monty Python movie, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and anime. Beware of wanna-be fodder that’s marketed to geeks (and which some geeks, sadly, fall for), such as Hackers, Trekies, Wargames, Short Circuit, and The Matrix series. And whatever you do, don’t use the Rocky Horror one unless you’re sure that the other person _isn’t_ a Rocky Horror fan, because the last thing you want to do is be caught not having every single line, song, and nuance from this movie memorized.

Hobbies: The more obscure, the better. You can always start out with the standard model-building, model railroads, chess, Medievalism. But since geeks love being narrow, beleaguered minorities, don’t let that stop you from picking increasingly more esoteric interests, until you’re assured that the person you’re talking to will never be able to trip you up on cross examination. Instead of crossword, say cryptic. Instead of chess, say go. Instead of tennis, say fencing. Best is to find something that NOBODY ELSE IN THE ROOM HAS HEARD OF. Including interests of your own sole invention. Tell me “I collect cephalopod footprint fossils.” doesn’t hush the room.

Books to leave out on the coffee table: Comics: Dilbert, Bloom County, The 5th Wave, The Far Side, and ANY super-hero comic, Marvel being preferably cooler to DC. What matters in comic books isn’t which one, but that you, a grown adult with a job, like ANY of them enough to own one.

Other: Any book with pictures of the following on the cover: robots, vampires, barbarians, castles, aliens, UFOs, other planets, mythical beings (i.e. elves, unicorns, dragons), galaxies, spaceships, and equations. Bonus points acquire for each of these items on the cover of the same book. It doesn’t matter what the title is, or whether it’s fiction or non-fiction.

Science names to drop: Buckminster Fuller, Richard Feynman, Stephen W. Hawking, Isaac Asimov, Benjamin Franklin, Blaise Pascal. Einstein is too mainstream.

Good luck, and remember to think of me when you get to third base with that Silicon Valley groupie!

Source: How to Totally Fake Being a Geek