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  • Snit Digest: Cola flooding
    So, Snit has been flooding the group lately using his tmelmosfire sock puppet. And he naturally want to blame this flooding on someone else to play the victim, so he posted this:
  • Snit Digest: Latest sock puppets exposed (meat and tmelmosfire)
    The problem with using so many sock puppets is that you have to remember who you're posting as, this has been a common thing with Snit, where he accidentally posts a sock puppet post with his Snit handle, or posts a Snit post with a sock puppet handle. This last mistake was with the sock puppet "meat". Now, to be perfectly honest, this particular sock puppet had me fooled. Not that I had given it much thought really, but people started to call...
  • Snit Digest: Wife denial
    Hello and welcome to another Snit digest. Here we will quote and document one of his latest lies - that his wife is not his wife!
  • Flint digest: Broken email address
    So, me and Flint had this inane discussion about whether a single word could be a sentence and it got sidetracked into what I think is the funniest thing for a long time in csma, and I haven't had anything worth digestifying for a while so I was delighted! Flint ignorantly claimed one word could not be a "proper sentence" (as if to suggest that there are sentences that are improper, but still sentences):
  • Nasthon Digest: Read Reciept
    So, Nashton posted this:
  • Snit Digest: Omar sock puppet
    So there was a "new" poster in CSMA (and usenet); Omar Murad Asfour. He posted this:
  • Snit Digest: Gibberish
    So, Michael is busy playing his games in csma, of course. This is a small recap of the latest game. He got in to a discussion with Wally about whether a passage of text is "gibberish" or not. A pretty stupid thing to argue about, of course, but wait, there is a hidden agenda as usual.
  • Snit Digest: CSS validation
    This is one of the longest running trolls Michael Glasser has had going in csma. No one knows why, but this is a very important troll for him.
  • Snit Digest: Quote forging
    We all know forging material is standard procedure with Snit. This latest digest shows how he forges some quotes.
  • Snit Digest: Tilde
    This took place a long time ago, but since Michael is still bringing it up again and again, here is a summary of the issue:
  • Snit Digest: Exclamation Point
    This is yet another digest about a subject which Snit blew way out of proportion. It all began with Steve Carroll describing some problems with his Leopard install:
  • Snit Digest: TOR proxies
    His lying never ends. Even though I have him killfiled I get to see most of the wild claims he make. Even though Edwin will project his love/jealousy for Snit on me, I can't resist posting about Snits latest screwup.
  • Nashton: Walmart iPods
    Right, it's no secret that Nicolas is having severe problem reading and writing English, or that he is having lots of problem doing simple addition. But it gets extra funny when he tries to be arrogant about it and claim that others are bad at it.
  • Edwin Digest, 830 million workstations
    Welcome to the lastest Edwin digest, where we focus on Edwins latest roundup of a number found in a report regarding the number of workstations sold.
  • Snit Digest, screenshot edition
    Recently, Michael has engaged in even more obfuscation of this entire PDF issue discussed in an earlier digest.
  • Edwin Digest, SETI edition
    Alan Baker has written a good digest on the issue of Seti and Edwin
  • Snit Digest, email.pdf edition
    This digest is about the PDF forgeries performed by Michael in order to try to save face in the sigmond debate. An interesting read.
  • Edwin Digest, FlashPath edition
    A digest that focuses on Edwins misinformation regarding a discontinued product called FlashPath.
  • Snit Digest: Sigmond sock puppet
    So Sigmond was a new poster that appeared early in January 2004, and was quickly pegged as a sock puppet of Snit. Here is his first post ever:
  • Edwin Digest, HD wakeup time edition
    In this digest, we'll go over some claims from Edwin about hard drive wakeup time. Any Apple laptop owner knows that the laptop wakes up from sleep in about one second. Edwin - not having actually used a Mac laptop - claims this is impossible:

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Digests of lengthy topics on comp.sys.mac.advocacy