Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Ass Art, Unscrewed with Martin Sargent

Have you ever seen ass art? Let's see a video. Here are some comments for this video clip on Youtube.

that reminds me of a story i read about about a guy who wanted people to have a orgasm all at ones on christmaseve to stop the wars in the world.... i mean come on when you hear that. all that should come to mind is... boy is he gonna burn in hell. turning a holy day into a mockery.
ps.. did the wars stop ... i dont think so
...try to open your eyes you and learn!

i used to love america for how open the people are there.. but the list why i used to like america really started to shrink. because of lowlifes like this who can take the most special thing in the world and degrade it into a piece of garbage... the way he acts and how he does things is because he is like that. he is a brainless jackASS. heaven has no hope for him.

Oh yeah, and did you see some of his paintings? That looked like skill to me. Even if you don't buy that, there's no ground to support your statement. Saying that the guy doesn't work hard or deserve to teach JUST because he paints with his ass is unfair.

Why are christians getting blamed for this? I'm just curious



How to turn off the debug function in IE

Internet Explorer users often receive an dialog box with a message like this ("Error. A Runtime Error has occurred. Do you want to debug?"), which pops up whenever there's a bug in the JavaScript you run into on a website. It makes many people be tired of using IE. This is a function of IE which Microsoft gives us. If you're an IE's user, perhaps you've already know what I'm taking about and you might see that message at less once. When you accepted to debug by clicking Debug, you had no idea what to do with that information. Many users feel annoyed when they see that message box. Fortunately, because it is a function of IE, it's an option, we can turn off it easily.

In either IE6 or IE7, you click the Tools menu > Internet Options, then click the Advanced tab.
Make sure there are check marks next to "Disable Script Debugging (Internet Explorer)" and "Disable Script Debugging (Other)." as you can see in the image. Then the final step you have to do is to uncheck the box next to "Display a notification about every script error."

Each time IE crashes, Window places an error reporting on your computer. You can disable this task too. In Windows XP, you can go to the Control Panel > choose System, continue by clicking Advanced tab, then click "Error Reporting" at the bottom of the screen. Click the radio button next to "Disable error reporting." You can turn off "But notify me when critical errors occur" by unchecking it if you want.

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