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...
Posted: Tue Nov 03, 2009 9:59 am
Guest
How to model natural full body conversations between humans and
chatbots, agents and humanoids? What elements are important from the
very first moment a conversation seems to start until a real almost
intimate relationship has been built (or is it time to say goodbye)?

At Chatbots.org, we’re extremely interested in these elements as we’re
trying to structure current and future parts of the website based on
those elements. Therefore we've worked quite extensively to find a
proper structure. Please click http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/
to discover the 64 elements we've found or read the summary below. We
have defined the following 9 'stages':

1. Identity: The agent’s identity. The ‘who’. Not based on any
conversation, it's about its behaviour, its personality, its
knowledge, its social background like, and which sensors does this
agent have to sense its environment?
2. Identification: How can an agent distinguish a human being
from other living (and non-living) entities by observing its sensors
and how can an agent identify them: does the agent already know this
person?
3. Perception: Is something different than the last time the
human being and virtual agent communicated? What does the body posture
and facial geography say? Would the agent already be capable to say
something about its conversational partner, the human being, without
any communication, just by observing? The filtering process, which
information is relevant, is extremely important in this phase.
4. Processing: During this phase, the communication has been
started and the agent is processing the verbal and non-verbal input
from the human, creates associations and intentional behavior.
5. Expression: At this stage the agents knows what to express,
and choses from ther the thousand ways to express it. Using gestures?
Body posture? Words? Intonation. It’s all part of this phase.
Actually, this is the last phase of the communication loop as it’s now
time for the human being to respond.
6. Appearance: Where and in what form do the agents appear? On
screens? As holographic projections? Augmented reality? Embedded in
humanoids?
7. Skills: Independent of its communication skills: what can
this agent do for human beings? Is he a good coach? A trainer? A role
player/actor? A friend? A translator?
8. Societal impact: An interesting category with discussions on
the impact of embedding of conversational AI in our society.
Sociological, psychological and philosophical.
9. Integrate: How to integrate all those concepts into a working
environment that feels natural and normal to human beings?

Curious what you think! Let us know below or via:
http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/ (<a
href="http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/
categorisation/">link</a>

Erwin Van Lun
 
N...
Posted: Fri Nov 06, 2009 11:57 pm
Guest
On 3 Nov, 09:59, newsgrp2... at (no spam) chatbots.org wrote:
Quote:
How to model natural full body conversations between humans and
chatbots, agents and humanoids? What elements are important from the
very first moment a conversation seems to start until a real almost
intimate relationship has been built (or is it time to say goodbye)?

At Chatbots.org, we’re extremely interested in these elements as we’re
trying to structure current and future parts of the website based on
those elements. Therefore we've worked quite extensively to find a
proper structure. Please clickhttp://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/
to discover the 64 elements we've found or read the summary below. We
have defined the following 9 'stages':

1.       Identity: The agent’s identity. The ‘who’. Not based on any
conversation, it's about its behaviour, its personality, its
knowledge, its social background like, and which sensors does this
agent have to sense its environment?
2.       Identification: How can an agent distinguish a human being
from other living (and non-living) entities by observing its sensors
and how can an agent identify them: does the agent already know this
person?
3.       Perception: Is something different than the last time the
human being and virtual agent communicated? What does the body posture
and facial geography say? Would the agent already be capable to say
something about its conversational partner, the human being, without
any communication, just by observing? The filtering process, which
information is relevant, is extremely important in this phase.
4.       Processing: During this phase, the communication has been
started and the agent is processing the verbal and non-verbal input
from the human, creates associations and intentional behavior.
5.       Expression: At this stage the agents knows what to express,
and choses from ther the thousand ways to express it. Using gestures?
Body posture? Words? Intonation. It’s all part of this phase.
Actually, this is the last phase of the communication loop as it’s now
time for the human being to respond.
6.       Appearance: Where and in what form do the agents appear? On
screens? As holographic projections? Augmented reality? Embedded in
humanoids?
7.       Skills: Independent of its communication skills: what can
this agent do for human beings? Is he a good coach? A trainer? A role
player/actor? A friend? A translator?
8.       Societal impact: An interesting category with discussions on
the impact of embedding of conversational AI in our society.
Sociological, psychological and philosophical.
9.       Integrate: How to integrate all those concepts into a working
environment that feels natural and normal to human beings?

Curious what you think! Let us know below or via:http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/(<a
href="http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/
categorisation/">link</a

Erwin Van Lun

Yipee! send it to Cheshire first so they can brag all over it (I'll be
someplace else getting down slumming like..but what the hell! :p)
Cheshire ARE THE WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN EUROPE if you happen to like
whores!
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Sat Nov 07, 2009 12:52 am
Guest
On Nov 6, 5:57 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
Quote:
On 3 Nov, 09:59, newsgrp2... at (no spam) chatbots.org wrote:



How to model natural full body conversations between humans and
chatbots, agents and humanoids? What elements are important from the
very first moment a conversation seems to start until a real almost
intimate relationship has been built (or is it time to say goodbye)?

At Chatbots.org, we’re extremely interested in these elements as we’re
trying to structure current and future parts of the website based on
those elements. Therefore we've worked quite extensively to find a
proper structure. Please clickhttp://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/
to discover the 64 elements we've found or read the summary below. We
have defined the following 9 'stages':

1.       Identity: The agent’s identity. The ‘who’. Not based on any
conversation, it's about its behaviour, its personality, its
knowledge, its social background like, and which sensors does this
agent have to sense its environment?
2.       Identification: How can an agent distinguish a human being
from other living (and non-living) entities by observing its sensors
and how can an agent identify them: does the agent already know this
person?
3.       Perception: Is something different than the last time the
human being and virtual agent communicated? What does the body posture
and facial geography say? Would the agent already be capable to say
something about its conversational partner, the human being, without
any communication, just by observing? The filtering process, which
information is relevant, is extremely important in this phase.
4.       Processing: During this phase, the communication has been
started and the agent is processing the verbal and non-verbal input
from the human, creates associations and intentional behavior.
5.       Expression: At this stage the agents knows what to express,
and choses from ther the thousand ways to express it. Using gestures?
Body posture? Words? Intonation. It’s all part of this phase.
Actually, this is the last phase of the communication loop as it’s now
time for the human being to respond.
6.       Appearance: Where and in what form do the agents appear? On
screens? As holographic projections? Augmented reality? Embedded in
humanoids?
7.       Skills: Independent of its communication skills: what can
this agent do for human beings? Is he a good coach? A trainer? A role
player/actor? A friend? A translator?
8.       Societal impact: An interesting category with discussions on
the impact of embedding of conversational AI in our society.
Sociological, psychological and philosophical.
9.       Integrate: How to integrate all those concepts into a working
environment that feels natural and normal to human beings?

Curious what you think! Let us know below or via:http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/(<a
href="http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/
categorisation/">link</a

Erwin Van Lun

Yipee! send it to Cheshire first so they can brag all over it (I'll be
someplace else getting down slumming like..but what the hell! :p)
Cheshire ARE THE WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN EUROPE if you happen to like
whores!

Well known for their cats, too.
 
N...
Posted: Wed Nov 11, 2009 10:31 pm
Guest
On 7 Nov, 00:52, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Nov 6, 5:57 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:





On 3 Nov, 09:59, newsgrp2... at (no spam) chatbots.org wrote:

How to model natural full body conversations between humans and
chatbots, agents and humanoids? What elements are important from the
very first moment a conversation seems to start until a real almost
intimate relationship has been built (or is it time to say goodbye)?

At Chatbots.org, we’re extremely interested in these elements as we’re
trying to structure current and future parts of the website based on
those elements. Therefore we've worked quite extensively to find a
proper structure. Please clickhttp://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/
to discover the 64 elements we've found or read the summary below. We
have defined the following 9 'stages':

1.       Identity: The agent’s identity. The ‘who’. Not based on any
conversation, it's about its behaviour, its personality, its
knowledge, its social background like, and which sensors does this
agent have to sense its environment?
2.       Identification: How can an agent distinguish a human being
from other living (and non-living) entities by observing its sensors
and how can an agent identify them: does the agent already know this
person?
3.       Perception: Is something different than the last time the
human being and virtual agent communicated? What does the body posture
and facial geography say? Would the agent already be capable to say
something about its conversational partner, the human being, without
any communication, just by observing? The filtering process, which
information is relevant, is extremely important in this phase.
4.       Processing: During this phase, the communication has been
started and the agent is processing the verbal and non-verbal input
from the human, creates associations and intentional behavior.
5.       Expression: At this stage the agents knows what to express,
and choses from ther the thousand ways to express it. Using gestures?
Body posture? Words? Intonation. It’s all part of this phase.
Actually, this is the last phase of the communication loop as it’s now
time for the human being to respond.
6.       Appearance: Where and in what form do the agents appear? On
screens? As holographic projections? Augmented reality? Embedded in
humanoids?
7.       Skills: Independent of its communication skills: what can
this agent do for human beings? Is he a good coach? A trainer? A role
player/actor? A friend? A translator?
8.       Societal impact: An interesting category with discussions on
the impact of embedding of conversational AI in our society.
Sociological, psychological and philosophical.
9.       Integrate: How to integrate all those concepts into a working
environment that feels natural and normal to human beings?

Curious what you think! Let us know below or via:http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/(<a
href="http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/
categorisation/">link</a

Erwin Van Lun

Yipee! send it to Cheshire first so they can brag all over it (I'll be
someplace else getting down slumming like..but what the hell! :p)
Cheshire ARE THE WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN EUROPE if you happen to like
whores!

Well known for their cats, too.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

hi Don...still married? have U had your boyfriends in it?
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Thu Nov 12, 2009 12:27 am
Guest
On Nov 11, 4:31 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
Quote:
On 7 Nov, 00:52, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:



On Nov 6, 5:57 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

On 3 Nov, 09:59, newsgrp2... at (no spam) chatbots.org wrote:

How to model natural full body conversations between humans and
chatbots, agents and humanoids? What elements are important from the
very first moment a conversation seems to start until a real almost
intimate relationship has been built (or is it time to say goodbye)?

At Chatbots.org, we’re extremely interested in these elements as we’re
trying to structure current and future parts of the website based on
those elements. Therefore we've worked quite extensively to find a
proper structure. Please clickhttp://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/
to discover the 64 elements we've found or read the summary below. We
have defined the following 9 'stages':

1.       Identity: The agent’s identity. The ‘who’. Not based on any
conversation, it's about its behaviour, its personality, its
knowledge, its social background like, and which sensors does this
agent have to sense its environment?
2.       Identification: How can an agent distinguish a human being
from other living (and non-living) entities by observing its sensors
and how can an agent identify them: does the agent already know this
person?
3.       Perception: Is something different than the last time the
human being and virtual agent communicated? What does the body posture
and facial geography say? Would the agent already be capable to say
something about its conversational partner, the human being, without
any communication, just by observing? The filtering process, which
information is relevant, is extremely important in this phase.
4.       Processing: During this phase, the communication has been
started and the agent is processing the verbal and non-verbal input
from the human, creates associations and intentional behavior.
5.       Expression: At this stage the agents knows what to express,
and choses from ther the thousand ways to express it. Using gestures?
Body posture? Words? Intonation. It’s all part of this phase.
Actually, this is the last phase of the communication loop as it’s now
time for the human being to respond.
6.       Appearance: Where and in what form do the agents appear? On
screens? As holographic projections? Augmented reality? Embedded in
humanoids?
7.       Skills: Independent of its communication skills: what can
this agent do for human beings? Is he a good coach? A trainer? A role
player/actor? A friend? A translator?
8.       Societal impact: An interesting category with discussions on
the impact of embedding of conversational AI in our society.
Sociological, psychological and philosophical.
9.       Integrate: How to integrate all those concepts into a working
environment that feels natural and normal to human beings?

Curious what you think! Let us know below or via:http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/(<a
href="http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/
categorisation/">link</a

Erwin Van Lun

Yipee! send it to Cheshire first so they can brag all over it (I'll be
someplace else getting down slumming like..but what the hell! :p)
Cheshire ARE THE WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN EUROPE if you happen to like
whores!

Well known for their cats, too.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

hi Don...still married? have U had your boyfriends in it?

No.

Still posting nonsensical crap drunk, Nicola?????
 
N...
Posted: Fri Nov 13, 2009 11:52 pm
Guest
On 12 Nov, 00:27, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Nov 11, 4:31 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:





On 7 Nov, 00:52, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:

On Nov 6, 5:57 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

On 3 Nov, 09:59, newsgrp2... at (no spam) chatbots.org wrote:

How to model natural full body conversations between humans and
chatbots, agents and humanoids? What elements are important from the
very first moment a conversation seems to start until a real almost
intimate relationship has been built (or is it time to say goodbye)?

At Chatbots.org, we’re extremely interested in these elements as we’re
trying to structure current and future parts of the website based on
those elements. Therefore we've worked quite extensively to find a
proper structure. Please clickhttp://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/
to discover the 64 elements we've found or read the summary below.. We
have defined the following 9 'stages':

1.       Identity: The agent’s identity. The ‘who’. Not based on any
conversation, it's about its behaviour, its personality, its
knowledge, its social background like, and which sensors does this
agent have to sense its environment?
2.       Identification: How can an agent distinguish a human being
from other living (and non-living) entities by observing its sensors
and how can an agent identify them: does the agent already know this
person?
3.       Perception: Is something different than the last time the
human being and virtual agent communicated? What does the body posture
and facial geography say? Would the agent already be capable to say
something about its conversational partner, the human being, without
any communication, just by observing? The filtering process, which
information is relevant, is extremely important in this phase.
4.       Processing: During this phase, the communication has been
started and the agent is processing the verbal and non-verbal input
from the human, creates associations and intentional behavior.
5.       Expression: At this stage the agents knows what to express,
and choses from ther the thousand ways to express it. Using gestures?
Body posture? Words? Intonation. It’s all part of this phase.
Actually, this is the last phase of the communication loop as it’s now
time for the human being to respond.
6.       Appearance: Where and in what form do the agents appear? On
screens? As holographic projections? Augmented reality? Embedded in
humanoids?
7.       Skills: Independent of its communication skills: what can
this agent do for human beings? Is he a good coach? A trainer? A role
player/actor? A friend? A translator?
8.       Societal impact: An interesting category with discussions on
the impact of embedding of conversational AI in our society.
Sociological, psychological and philosophical.
9.       Integrate: How to integrate all those concepts into a working
environment that feels natural and normal to human beings?

Curious what you think! Let us know below or via:http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/(<a
href="http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/
categorisation/">link</a

Erwin Van Lun

Yipee! send it to Cheshire first so they can brag all over it (I'll be
someplace else getting down slumming like..but what the hell! :p)
Cheshire ARE THE WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN EUROPE if you happen to like
whores!

Well known for their cats, too.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

hi Don...still married? have U had your boyfriends in it?

No.

Still posting nonsensical crap drunk, Nicola?????- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Yours...
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Sat Nov 14, 2009 6:19 am
Guest
On Nov 13, 5:52 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
Quote:
On 12 Nov, 00:27, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:



On Nov 11, 4:31 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

On 7 Nov, 00:52, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:

On Nov 6, 5:57 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

On 3 Nov, 09:59, newsgrp2... at (no spam) chatbots.org wrote:

How to model natural full body conversations between humans and
chatbots, agents and humanoids? What elements are important from the
very first moment a conversation seems to start until a real almost
intimate relationship has been built (or is it time to say goodbye)?

At Chatbots.org, we’re extremely interested in these elements as we’re
trying to structure current and future parts of the website based on
those elements. Therefore we've worked quite extensively to find a
proper structure. Please clickhttp://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/
to discover the 64 elements we've found or read the summary below. We
have defined the following 9 'stages':

1.       Identity: The agent’s identity. The ‘who’. Not based on any
conversation, it's about its behaviour, its personality, its
knowledge, its social background like, and which sensors does this
agent have to sense its environment?
2.       Identification: How can an agent distinguish a human being
from other living (and non-living) entities by observing its sensors
and how can an agent identify them: does the agent already know this
person?
3.       Perception: Is something different than the last time the
human being and virtual agent communicated? What does the body posture
and facial geography say? Would the agent already be capable to say
something about its conversational partner, the human being, without
any communication, just by observing? The filtering process, which
information is relevant, is extremely important in this phase.
4.       Processing: During this phase, the communication has been
started and the agent is processing the verbal and non-verbal input
from the human, creates associations and intentional behavior.
5.       Expression: At this stage the agents knows what to express,
and choses from ther the thousand ways to express it. Using gestures?
Body posture? Words? Intonation. It’s all part of this phase.
Actually, this is the last phase of the communication loop as it’s now
time for the human being to respond.
6.       Appearance: Where and in what form do the agents appear? On
screens? As holographic projections? Augmented reality? Embedded in
humanoids?
7.       Skills: Independent of its communication skills: what can
this agent do for human beings? Is he a good coach? A trainer? A role
player/actor? A friend? A translator?
8.       Societal impact: An interesting category with discussions on
the impact of embedding of conversational AI in our society.
Sociological, psychological and philosophical.
9.       Integrate: How to integrate all those concepts into a working
environment that feels natural and normal to human beings?

Curious what you think! Let us know below or via:http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/categorisation/(<a
href="http://www.chatbots.org/conversational/agent/
categorisation/">link</a

Erwin Van Lun

Yipee! send it to Cheshire first so they can brag all over it (I'll be
someplace else getting down slumming like..but what the hell! :p)
Cheshire ARE THE WEALTHIEST COUNTIES IN EUROPE if you happen to like
whores!

Well known for their cats, too.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

hi Don...still married? have U had your boyfriends in it?

No.

Still posting nonsensical crap drunk, Nicola?????

Yours...

OK.
 
N...
Posted: Mon Nov 16, 2009 11:53 am
Guest
On 14 Nov, 06:19, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Nov 13, 5:52 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

Your 'global brain' committe seems to have turned out fine here IN CC
at least, a sort of 'communism' with biological choice ethic...biased
basically towards a cerytain kind of visual stimulus ... ! Personally
I'm a kind of Christian...more a democrat...and I can sort understand
how Alqeada proliferates quite favorably within that sort of 'pass me
down' system? I wonder if that was one of the intentions, and also
whats suggested by your 'global brain' hand-me-across-over or down
framework doesnt seem to understand religeon, but only by imagination
alone?

When they brought that wall down in Berlin some years ago....I wonder
if it truely was a democratic fight for freedom? or the fear of
freedom and the desire to have communism stray and persist
Westerly.....Cheshire will do very well under Putin, I'm sure he
understood how to keep them damned Nazi's under control...I least I
hope so?
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Mon Nov 16, 2009 7:12 pm
Guest
On Nov 16, 5:53 am, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
Quote:
On 14 Nov, 06:19, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:

On Nov 13, 5:52 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

Your 'global brain' committe seems to have turned out fine here IN CC
at least, a sort of 'communism' with biological choice ethic...biased
basically towards a cerytain kind of visual stimulus ... ! Personally
I'm a kind of Christian...more a democrat...and I can sort understand
how Alqeada proliferates quite favorably within that sort of 'pass me
down' system? I wonder if that was one of the intentions, and also
whats suggested by your 'global brain' hand-me-across-over or down
framework doesnt seem to understand religeon, but only by imagination
alone?

When they brought that wall down in Berlin some years ago....I wonder
if it truely was a democratic fight for freedom? or the fear of
freedom and the desire to have communism stray and persist
Westerly.....Cheshire will do very well under Putin, I'm sure he
understood how to keep them damned Nazi's under control...I least I
hope so?

Just don't know.
 
N...
Posted: Mon Nov 16, 2009 8:59 pm
Guest
you know, when or if unemployment reaches a really critical level? and
people realize that all those wonderful adverts are for things that
are basically luxurious but unessential commodities!
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 1:27 am
Guest
On Nov 16, 2:59 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
Quote:
you know, when or if unemployment reaches a really critical level? and
people realize that all those wonderful adverts are for things that
are basically luxurious but unessential commodities!

Isn't that an incomplete sentence, Nicola of Chester, England?
 
N...
Posted: Tue Nov 17, 2009 9:54 pm
Guest
On 17 Nov, 01:27, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Nov 16, 2:59 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

you know, when or if unemployment reaches a really critical level? and
people realize that all those wonderful adverts are for things that
are basically luxurious but unessential commodities!

Isn't that an incomplete sentence, Nicola of Chester, England?

how much did you charge your wife ?
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Wed Nov 18, 2009 11:18 pm
Guest
On Nov 17, 3:54 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:
Quote:
On 17 Nov, 01:27, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:

On Nov 16, 2:59 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

you know, when or if unemployment reaches a really critical level? and
people realize that all those wonderful adverts are for things that
are basically luxurious but unessential commodities!

Isn't that an incomplete sentence, Nicola of Chester, England?

how much did you charge your wife ?

How much do you charge the guys you pick up on the street?
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Fri Nov 20, 2009 1:41 am
Guest
On Nov 18, 5:18 pm, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Nov 17, 3:54 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

On 17 Nov, 01:27, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:

On Nov 16, 2:59 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

you know, when or if unemployment reaches a really critical level? and
people realize that all those wonderful adverts are for things that
are basically luxurious but unessential commodities!

Isn't that an incomplete sentence, Nicola of Chester, England?

how much did you charge your wife ?

How much do you charge the guys you pick up on the street?

Don't we do well together?
 
Don Stockbauer...
Posted: Fri Nov 20, 2009 1:44 pm
Guest
On Nov 19, 7:41 pm, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
Quote:
On Nov 18, 5:18 pm, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:

On Nov 17, 3:54 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

On 17 Nov, 01:27, Don Stockbauer <don.stockba... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:

On Nov 16, 2:59 pm, N <n.m.ke... at (no spam) hotmail.co.uk> wrote:

you know, when or if unemployment reaches a really critical level? and
people realize that all those wonderful adverts are for things that
are basically luxurious but unessential commodities!

Isn't that an incomplete sentence, Nicola of Chester, England?

how much did you charge your wife ?

How much do you charge the guys you pick up on the street?

Don't we do well together?

"Such a lovely couple, those two."
 
 
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