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kimbest

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Everything posted by kimbest

  1. Look at the point where the red and green triangles meet in the first figure. Call it point D. Now look for point D in the second figure. You will see it is slightly inside the red triangle. Now draw a line from point D to the top point of the red triangle. Draw a second line from point D to the left most point of the green triangle. If you cut along these two lines, you will have a long slender sliver, whose volume is the save as the little square gap at the bottom.
  2. Look at the point where the red and green triangles meet in the first figure. Call it point D. Now look for point D in the second figure. You will see it is slightly inside the red triangle. Now draw a line from point D to the top point of the red triangle. Draw a second line from point D to the left most point of the green triangle. If you cut along these two lines, you will have a long slender sliver, whose volume is the save as the little square gap at the bottom.
  3. quote: What a great idea! And then someone can collect all the pins/passwords in his area, write them in a notebook and put it into a level 1/1 cache somewhere. Ok, I realise this can be easily comprimised. But I really wanted it for cases where the cacher might not get it. Not to stop people who might want to cheat.
  4. One way I've done similiar is to go to the map of geocaches. Since it shows major highways this isn't to bad. Then when you bring up a cache, you can click "Near by caches"
  5. Are you in favor of having the option of putting a password on the "I found it" button on your cache page. No password would be the default.
  6. Just a little clarification. I wasn't suggesting that all 'found it' logs be password protected. There could be a radio button the cache owner could click, with the default being off.
  7. After reading some of the wish lists for new features, I came up with mine. The ability to Password protect the 'I Founded it' button on the cache logs. So if someone clicked a find on the cache, when they clicked the 'Submit' button a page will come up asking them to enter the password. This would be great for virtual caches where the finder must answer a question to log the find. The finder could e-mail the owner and the owner would send them the password, or the answer to the question itself could be the password. This would end the dilima. Some one posted a find on my virtual cache but they didn't follow the rules. Do I delete it. Do I ask them to delete it? Or do I just ignore it, and let my whole concept go to pot
  8. Ok, raise of hands. How many of you clicked on Geoffrey's link just to see if it worked. Oh, I see the same ones who admitted they often trade down at geocaches. This kind of reminds me of a discussion that took place in another forum I've been in. Should there be Adult oriented origami? The end result was there is adult orient origami and it is available on the internet. But, in the process, a lot of people have become upset. Should there be adult oriented origami, then? I think the answer is yes. Origami is an art form and art should explore all avenues of human existance. If some people are upset thats the price we pay for freedom. So should adult oriented cache sites exist. Is Geocaching an art form? Well looking at some of the inovative caches I've seen I'd say it could be. Seeing how there are many caches set up around a theme, it seems to me that thing of an adult nature are just as valid as any other. But does it add anything to the sport? Not really, the search and find is the same. The only thing different is the actual trade. Trading can be done in other ways. So the price of upsetting people is not worth it to me. Not doubt there probably be some adult caches set up. But there will probably be no adult geocaching site. The just won't be enough to justify the site. More likely they will be passed around by private e-mail and word of mouth. Maybe there are some right now. Most of us just don't know about it.
  9. Ok, raise of hands. How many of you clicked on Geoffrey's link just to see if it worked. Oh, I see the same ones who admitted they often trade down at geocaches. This kind of reminds me of a discussion that took place in another forum I've been in. Should there be Adult oriented origami? The end result was there is adult orient origami and it is available on the internet. But, in the process, a lot of people have become upset. Should there be adult oriented origami, then? I think the answer is yes. Origami is an art form and art should explore all avenues of human existance. If some people are upset thats the price we pay for freedom. So should adult oriented cache sites exist. Is Geocaching an art form? Well looking at some of the inovative caches I've seen I'd say it could be. Seeing how there are many caches set up around a theme, it seems to me that thing of an adult nature are just as valid as any other. But does it add anything to the sport? Not really, the search and find is the same. The only thing different is the actual trade. Trading can be done in other ways. So the price of upsetting people is not worth it to me. Not doubt there probably be some adult caches set up. But there will probably be no adult geocaching site. The just won't be enough to justify the site. More likely they will be passed around by private e-mail and word of mouth. Maybe there are some right now. Most of us just don't know about it.
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