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dude, at least try to outsmart me.

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  • #16
    SK is ancient telegraph-speak, meaning literally "silent key" - I'm not at all surprised that it's continued with textphones.

    Even now, radio hams use SK to refer to deceased fellows...

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    • #17
      Quoth Chromatix View Post
      Even now, radio hams use SK to refer to deceased fellows...
      Makes sense to me. Magicians still use a broken wand as a symbol for a fellow magi who has passed on. I am virtually certain that tradition predates any magician still alive today, and then some.

      "The Customer Is Always Right...But The Bartender Decides Who Is
      Still A Customer."

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      • #18
        Quoth smileyeagle1021 View Post
        He told me his name was, and I have no problem quoting it sense it was so obviously fake, "djdjdj fkfkfk"... exactly like that, no caps, no vowels, so obviously fake that I had a hard time taking him serious...
        Quoth lupo pazzesco View Post
        ...so, is that particular name of some sort of slavic origin or what...?
        Don't you remember Bill Clinton's program to send vowels to Bosnia? That was so they wouldn't have to use names like that.
        "I don't have to be petty. The Universe does that for me."

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