In article ,
mentioned...
"A E" wrote in message
...
Paul Burridge wrote:
On Thu, 07 Aug 2003 12:33:24 GMT, "Harris"
wrote:
Several people have and of course they are all dead.
Well I don't believe the answer's that simple. I'll explain in due
Yes it is. 'Fatal' doesn't have any slack in its definition. You could
modify it
by adding 'near' as a prefix.
course, but would like to give a few others a chance to guess what I'm
driving at (this isn't some sort of joke BTW).
--
but you can be clinicaly death and restarted can't you? so does fatal imply
permenent death or can it be temporary?
Pat
Fatal is fatal. You're brain dead, which is the definition of death.
If you have a near-death experience, then that's when you can live to
tell about it.
"He's dead, Jim."
--
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Just when you thought you had all this figured out, the gov't
changed it:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
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