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Topic: Explorer (disambiguation)


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In the News (Thu 31 Dec 09)

  
 Tab - Uncyclopedia
Tabbed browsing is one of the features of the Microsoft Internet Explorer browser.
This is why most Russians use Internet Explorer.
TAB is also the predecessor of diet coke.
www.uncyclopedia.org /wiki/Tab   (117 words)

  
 Mary Ellen Bates - Tip of the Month
Yes, you can do a version of this with Internet Explorer, opening up a new IE window for each page, but I find that having to alt-tab through all those windows, along with all the other applications I have open at once, to be difficult at best.
This can be a useful way of identifying additional useful resources, and it's a lot quicker to see the list of links by using Site Explorer than it would be to go to every page on the Humane Society's web site, looking for out-going links.
While I could always set up a blog, a different approach is to let my friends and colleagues subscribe to an RSS feed of the Furled bookmarks (and my associated annotations) I chose to make publicly available.
www.batesinfo.com /tip.html   (7862 words)

  
 Mac Remover Spyware
Disambiguation: this article is about the canned mac remover spyware meat.
Graham 22:31, 17 Feb 2004 (UTC) Just to clarify what I was saying mac remover spyware about Windows Explorer and Internet Explorer, go open My Computer, and type a URL into the address bar.
But the serial lived on, moving instead to the small screen and the world of dvdfab remover serial spyware TV reruns.
spyware-remover.hostrim.com /mac-remover-spyware.html   (864 words)

  
 WakkaWiki.com
However, the earlier Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazano explored New York harbor in 1524, and a few months later so did the Portuguese Estevan Gomez; the latter also recognized the Hudson River (calling it the Rio de San Antonio), and both, in all likelihood, saw Manhattan island while in New York Harbor.
The first European discovery of Manhattan is generally credited to English explorer Henry Hudson sailing for the Dutch, who first entered Upper New York Bay on September 11, 1609, and sailing up the lower Hudson River, anchored off the tip of northern Manhattan that night.
It occupies the whole of Manhattan Island, surrounded by the East River, the Harlem River, and the Hudson River.
www.wakkawiki.com /index.php?title=Manhattan   (864 words)

  
 Mozilla Firefox - the free encyclopedia
This was bolstered by numerous media reports on the subject around the same time thatrepresentative Art Manion of the United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) suggested thatusing a web browser other than Internet Explorer would mitigate security risks.
Some security experts and technology columnists have recommended that users stop using Internet Explorer for normal browsing,and switch to a different browser instead; a few have specifically mentioned Firefox.
On June6, 2004, before the release of Windows XP Service Pack 2, CERT Vulnerability Note(VU#713878) stated as one of seven solutions that switching to analternate browser would avoid this vulnerability, and possibly others.
www.encyclopedia-of-knowledge.com /?t=Mozilla_Firefox   (864 words)

  
 16 Bit Adc
This article is about the unit of information, see Bit (disambiguation) for other meanings.
Commonly appearing connections are : 150, 128 Bit Internet Explorer, 1000 Watt Amps, 100 Base Fx, Zoom Explorer, Zircon Jewelry, Zippo Wholesale, Zion Utah, Zion Illinois, Zara Fashion, Zapper Phone, Zachary Homes, Yves Saint Laurent Perfume, Youth Leadership, Youth Hostels In Europe, Yosemite Weather, Yorkshire Terrier For Sale, York Pennsylvania, Yohimbe Bark Extract, Yoga Beginners
A bit (abbreviated b) is the most basic information unitused in computing and information theory.
www.altvetmed.com /face/15446-16-bit-adc.html   (864 words)

  
 1984 Caprice
For other uses of 1984, see 1984 (disambiguation).
Commonly appearing connections are : 1983 Oldsmobile Cutlass, 1982 Firebird, 1977 Corvettes, 1972 Monte Carlo, 18 Bandsaw, 16 Mm, 16 Bit Adc, 150, 128 Bit Internet Explorer, 1000 Watt Amps, 100 Base Fx, Zoom Explorer, Zircon Jewelry, Zippo Wholesale, Zion Utah, Zion Illinois, Zara Fashion, Zapper Phone, Zachary Homes, Yves Saint Laurent Perfume
Similar searches have yielded these phrases 1984 Caprice: 1996 Caprice, 1993 Caprice, Caprice Cars, 1984 Monte Carlo, 1994 Chevy Caprice, Chevy Caprice, Chevrolet Caprice Parts, 1984 Cadillac Deville, 1984 Gmc, Chevy Caprice For Sale
www.altvetmed.com /face/15439-1984-caprice.html   (864 words)

  
 Mary Ellen Bates - Tip of the Month
And if you search for "Mercury", you will be shown a "disambiguation" page that lists the various entries for Mercury, including the planet, the element, the car, and even the singer Freddie Mercury.
Although I love the tabbed browsing, what got me to install Firefox in the first place was its enhanced security, particularly when compared to Internet Explorer.
Yes, you can do a version of this with Internet Explorer, opening up a new IE window for each page, but I find that having to alt-tab through all those windows, along with all the other applications I have open at once, to be difficult at best.
www.batesinfo.com /tip.html   (8405 words)

  
 Christian Bauer
Key Words: Christian, Bauer, Dior, Eddie, Book, Hockey, Vapor, Supreme, Skates, Ford, Music, Bookstores, Home, 5000, Missions, Explorer, Web, Store, School, Ice
Internet users who seek Christian Bauer often also seach for: Christian, Bauer, Dior, Eddie, Book, Hockey, Vapor, Supreme, Skates, Ford, Music, Bookstores, Home, 5000, Missions, Explorer, Web, Store, School, Ice Hotel Bauer Venice, Christian Books Distributor, Bauer Hockey, Christian Businesses, Christian Retailing, Christian Family Bookstores, Bauer Supreme 1000, Christian Children, Christian Singles, Bauer Skate
Some famous Christian teachers include Paul of Tarsus, Clement of Rome, Ignatius of Antioch, Augustine ofHippo, Athanasius of Alexandria, Saint Patrick, ThomasAquinas, Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Knox, Jonathan Edwards, Charles Spurgeon, and Joseph Smith.
www.altvetmed.com /face/11451-christian-bauer.html   (8405 words)

  
 Oceania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Oceania has been traditionally divided into Micronesia, Melanesia and Polynesia (originally by the French explorer Dumont d'Urville in 1831).
Oceania is the smallest continental grouping in land area and the second smallest, after Antarctica, in population.
Oceania is a geographical (often geopolitical) region consisting of numerous countries and territories – mostly islands – in the Pacific Ocean.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Oceania   (816 words)

  
 Louisiana - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Louisiana was named by the French explorer Robert Cavelier de La Salle in honor of Louis XIV in 1682.
The first European explorers to visit what is now Louisiana were a 1528 Spanish expedition (led by Panfilo de Narváez) that located the mouth of the Mississippi River.
The rest of Louisiana became a colony of Spain by the Treaty of Fountainebleau of 1762.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Louisiana   (816 words)

  
 Boot (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boots, the talking monkey on the children's television series, Dora the Explorer
Boots (bishop), the youngest bishop of the House of Lords, whose duty it is to read prayers.
Not be confused with the homophone "booth", or the homonymous German and Dutch words "Boot" and "boot" (which mean and are pronounced as "boat").
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Boots   (391 words)

  
 Berry (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexander Berry (1781-1873), Scottish surgeon, merchant, and explorer after whom the Australian town is named.
This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title.
Berry is a town in New South Wales, Australia.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Berry_(disambiguation)   (160 words)

  
 Renaissance LANGUAGE SCHOOL EXPLORER
The Italian Renaissance was intertwined with the intellectual movement known as Renaissance humanism and with the fiercely independent and combative urban societies of the city-states of central and northern Italy in the 13th to 16th centuries.
The traditional view is that the Renaissance of the 15th century in Italy, spreading through the rest of Europe, represented a reconnection of the west with classical antiquity, the absorption of knowledge—particularly mathematics—from Arabic, the return of experimentalism, the focus on the importance of living well in the present (e.g.
The Renaissance is usually considered to have originated in the 14th century in northern Italy and begun in the late 15th century in northern Europe.
language.school-explorer.com /info/Renaissance   (2825 words)

  
 Rape Health Explorer
Rape, as an adjunct to warfare, was prohibited by the military codices of Richard II and Henry V (1385 and 1419 respectively).
Typical rape shield laws prohibit cross-examination of the victim with respect to issues, such as his or her prior sexual history, or the manner in which he or she was dressed at the time of the rape.
The rape of Chrysippus by Laius, however, is represented in darker terms, and was known in antiquity as "the crime of Laius", a term which came to be applied to all male rape.
www.explorer.zielony.pl /travel/Rape   (7110 words)

  
 Pundit - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a disambiguation page, a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title.
A pundit or pandit, in the culture of India, is a master of traditional religious poetry and/or traditional music.
Pundit in contemporary English refers to an expert or opinion-leader, particularly in the field of political analysis.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Pundit   (7110 words)

  
 Armenia LANGUAGE SCHOOL EXPLORER
The Republic of Armenia, or Armenia (Armenian: Հայաստան, Hayastan, Հայք, Hayq), is a landlocked country in the southern Caucasus, between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, bordered by Turkey to the west, Georgia to the north, Azerbaijan to the east and Iran (Persia) and the Nakhichevan exclave of Azerbaijan to the south.
Armenia was the first nation to adopt Christianity as a state religion, in AD Over 95% of Armenian Christians belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church, a form of Oriental (Non-Chalcedonian) Orthodoxy, which is a very ritualistic, conservative church, roughly comparable to the Coptic and Syrian churches.
Armenia is interested in cooperating with other members of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS, a group of 12 former Soviet republics) and with members of the international community on environmental issues.
language.school-explorer.com /info/Armenia   (2780 words)

  
 Aberdeen, Washington - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Aberdeen, Washington
Aberdeen is the homeport of the tall ship Lady Washington, a reproduction of a smaller vessel used by the explorer Captain Robert Gray.
That "Aberdeen" in Scottish means "the meeting of two rivers" — in this case, the Wishkah and the Chehalis — was a coincidental poetic touch.
Aberdeen is sometimes called the "Gateway to the Olympic Peninsula" or the "Birthplace of Grunge", however locals generally term it "Hicktown, USA" or, as famous Aberdonian Kurt Cobain put it:
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Aberdeen-Washington.html   (921 words)

  
 CONK! Encyclopedia: Michigan
In 1701, French explorer and army officer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac founded Detroit on the straits between Lakes St.
Cadillac's wife, Marie Thérèse, soon moved to Detroit, becoming one of the first white women to settle in the Michigan wilderness.
Cadillac had convinced King Louis XIV's chief minister, Louis Phélypeaux, comte de Pontchartrain, that a permanent community at present-day Detroit would strengthen French control over the upper Great Lakes and repel British advances.
www.conk.com /search/encyclopedia.cgi?q=Michigan   (3395 words)

  
 Yazoo River
The Yazoo River was named by French explorer La Salle in 1682 in reference to a Native American tribe living near the river's mouth.
The Yazoo River is a river in the U.S. state of Mississippi and the second longest tributary of the Mississippi River that flows into that river from the east (the longest is the Ohio River).
This is due to the Yazoo being unable to join the Mississippi because of the natural levees that flank the Mississippi.
www.kiwipedia.com /en/yazoo-river.html   (3395 words)

  
 Xanadu - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, they opened up the empire to westerners, allowing travellers like Venetian explorer Marco Polo in 1275 to report the wonders of the Eastern capital to their fellow Europeans.
Xanadu or Shangdu (Chinese: 上都; pinyin: shàng dū) was the summer capital of Kublai Khan's Mongol Empire, which covered much of Asia.
The reported splendour of Xanadu later inspired Samuel Taylor Coleridge to write his great poem Kubla Khan and caused Xanadu to become a metaphor for opulence.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Xanadu   (226 words)

  
 wikien.info: Main_Page
Leonardo Fea (1852 - 1903) was an Italian explorer, zoologist, painter and naturalist.
Leonardo Carson, born February 11, 1977 in Mobile, Alabama, educated at Auburn University, is a NFL defensive tackle, formerly of the San Diego Chargers, signed by the Dallas Cowboys on October 18 2003.
Leonardo Nascimento de Araujo, known simply as Leonardo (born September 5, 1969 in Niteroi, Brazil) is a football midfielder, a World Champion for Brazil in the 1994 World Cup, during which he was suspended for a large part of the tournament.
mutluyasam.info /browse.php?title=L/LE/LEO   (11199 words)

  
 Elán LANGUAGE SCHOOL EXPLORER
On 28th February 2005, Élan announced that it was withdrawing its Tysabri drug, after reports that a patient died after usage.
Élan Corporation plc NYSE: ELN, LSE: ELA is a major drugs firm based in Athlone, County Westmeath, Ireland.
It is listed on the New York Stock Exchange as ELN, the Irish Stock Exchange as ELN.I, and the London Stock Exchange as ELN.L. Élan is currently focusing its research on a ground-breaking drug for Alzheimer's disease.
www.school-explorer.com /info/El%C3%A1n   (185 words)

  
 Hibernia - RecipeFacts
Ierne was the name given to Ireland Pytheas of Massilia, the Greek merchant and explorer from the 4th Century BC and may derive from Erin the mythological name for Ireland.
At this time Ireland, western and central Europe was home to several Celtic peoples, with their associated Celtic religion, supervised by the Druids.
Generally in Ireland, Roman material is rare and found in different contexts from the native La Tene material.
www.recipeland.com /encyclopaedia/index.php/Hibernia   (1450 words)

  
 British_Isles_(terminology) LANGUAGE SCHOOL EXPLORER
The Republic of Ireland is often referred to by Irish republicans by the term "the Twenty-six Counties", with the connotation that the state constituted as such forms only a portion of the ideal political unit, which would consist of all of the thirty-two counties into which the island is divided.
Being part of the British Isles does not imply that Ireland is British, although the majority of the population of Northern Ireland consider themselves British by virtue of being part of the United Kingdom.
Ireland (as a geographical term) = the second largest island of the British Isles; sometimes also the island of Ireland to distinguish from the political unit.
www.school-explorer.com /info/British_Isles_%28terminology%29   (3329 words)

  
 Hurricane_Ivan LANGUAGE SCHOOL EXPLORER
Hurricane Ivan was the ninth named storm, the sixth hurricane, the fourth major hurricane, and the strongest hurricane of the 2004 Atlantic hurricane season.
As Hurricane Ivan's sustained 125 mph (200 km/h) winds wreaked havoc in the Caribbean, the swirling eye of the hurricane was photographed on September 11, 2004 from aboard the orbiting International Space Station (ISS) at an altitude of about 230 miles (370 km).
Hurricane Ivan is also suspected of bringing spores of soybean rust from Venezuela into the United States, the first ever occurrences of soybean rust found in North America.
www.school-explorer.com /info/Hurricane_Ivan   (2722 words)

  
 Cape Fear
Giovanni da Verrazano, the Italian explorer sailing for France, made landfall at Cape Fear on his voyage to the New World in the spring of 1524 or 1525.
It is largely formed of barrier beaches and the silty outwash of the Cape Fear River as it drains the southeast coast of North Carolina through an estuary south of Wilmington.
Cape Fear is a prominent point of land on the Atlantic coast of North Carolina in the southeastern United States.
www.askfactmaster.com /Cape_Fear   (229 words)

  
 Explorer (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Explorer Scouts, part of the Scout Association in the United Kingdom.
HMS Explorer, a submarine of the Royal Navy.
USS Explorer, a patrol vessel of the United States Navy.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Explorer_(disambiguation)   (229 words)

  
 Caron LANGUAGE SCHOOL EXPLORER
The caron is used in Americanist phonetic notation as a diacritic to indicate various types of pronunciation.
The use of the caron (and the acute accent) for Latin characters was introduced into the Czech language in the 15th century by Jan Hus in his De Ortographia Bohemica (1412).
A caron (" ˇ "), also known as a háček (pronounced /hʌːʧɛk/), is a diacritic placed over certain letters to indicate present or historical palatalization or iotation in the orthography of Baltic languages and some Slavic languages, whereas some Finno-Lappic languages use it to mark postalveolar fricatives (sh, zh, ch).
www.school-explorer.com /info/Caron   (1344 words)

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