Author Topic: WTTF Clacks  (Read 7889 times)

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Offline ArchDill

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WTTF Clacks
« on: Sat, 31 December 2016, 23:03:30 »
https://imgur.com/a/6ioQpzp

The Pink Topre Clack is not longer available, I traded it for another CH Clack.

-1-off Hemo Aero Keys FPS/Arrow Cluster

-FPS MX Deathcaps green and smoke

-Bro Blanks, 1 MX and Topre fn and esc

-Exchange Traded Fund Fug

-Financial Responsibility Fug (hard trade)
« Last Edit: Mon, 28 January 2019, 18:46:38 by Signature »

Offline ArchDill

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Bump

Offline odd

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I have a basically NIB Tex black alu that I am looking to get rid of. I'll check my PM's when i get home .

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I have a basically NIB Tex black alu that I am looking to get rid of. I'll check my PM's when i get home .
Pm'd

Offline RigorVN

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there's a guy on mechmarket selling a purple lo-pro 60% alu case for $50! pretty good deal

Offline ArchDill

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there's a guy on mechmarket selling a purple lo-pro 60% alu case for $50! pretty good deal

Link? Is it still available?

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Bump.

Offline ArchDill

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Re: [WTB] GMK Terminal Artisans, Tex 60% case w/feet
« Reply #7 on: Tue, 10 January 2017, 12:24:15 »
BBBUUUUUUMMMMMMMP

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Re: [WTB/T] GMK Terminal Artisans, Tex 60% case w/feet
« Reply #8 on: Fri, 13 January 2017, 01:18:55 »
Bump

Offline ArchDill

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Re: [WTB/T] GMK Terminal Artisans, Tex 60% case w/feet
« Reply #9 on: Sat, 21 January 2017, 02:55:46 »
BUMMMP

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Re: [H] Fugu, Pierced Darkness Snapper, PP [W] KK Oxblood, Aero Hemo
« Reply #11 on: Fri, 03 February 2017, 23:02:40 »
Bump for some HHKB mods.

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Re: [W] KK Oxblood, Aero Hemo [H] Fugu, Pierced Darkness Snapper, PP
« Reply #12 on: Sat, 04 February 2017, 22:46:01 »
Bump. I NEEEDD those oxblood mods.

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bump

Offline ArchDill

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Need a Red Viridian Puppet Master bump

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Re: [W] KK Oxblood Jukebox, Topre 55g domes [H] Pierced Darkness Snapper, PP
« Reply #15 on: Wed, 15 February 2017, 16:06:21 »
Bump

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Re: [H] Carbonate Halfshell {W} colorswap
« Reply #16 on: Tue, 21 February 2017, 22:53:28 »
Boop

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Partial KK Oxblood mods, Purple Sliders
« Reply #17 on: Sat, 08 April 2017, 21:47:37 »
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see High five (disambiguation) and Give me five (disambiguation).

A high five between two U.S. Navy Sailors
File:Curiosity Rover Begins Mars Mission - high-five clip.webm
NASA's Curiosity-rover team celebrate with high fives after the landing on Mars, August 2012. Full video.
The high five is a hand gesture that occurs when two people simultaneously raise one hand each, about head-high, and push, slide, or slap the flat of their palm against the flat palm of the other person. The gesture is often preceded verbally by a phrase like "Give me five", "High five", or "Up high." Its meaning varies with the context of use but can include as a greeting, congratulations, or celebration.

There are many origin stories of the high five,[1] but the two most documented candidates are Dusty Baker and Glenn Burke of the Los Angeles Dodgers professional baseball team on October 2, 1977, and Wiley Brown and Derek Smith of the Louisville Cardinals men's college basketball team during the 1978–1979 season.[2]

Contents  [hide]
1   Origin
1.1   Glenn Burke and Dusty Baker
1.2   Louisville Cardinals
1.3   Conor Lastowka
1.4   Antecedents
2   Variations
2.1   "Too slow"
2.2   Air five
3   Celebrations
4   Human health
5   References
6   External links
Origin[edit]

The gesture probably originated in American professional sports. Picture of Drew Storen (right) and Wilson Ramos of the Washington Nationals (2011).
The use of the phrase as a noun has been part of the Oxford English Dictionary since 1980 and as a verb since 1981.[3] The phrase is related to the slang "give me five" which is a request for some form of handshake – variations include "slap me five", "slip me five", "give me (some) skin" – with "five" referring to the number of fingers on a hand.[4] The "high five" originated from the "low five", which has been a part of the African-American culture since at least World War II.[2] It's probably impossible to know exactly when the low first transitioned to a high, but there are many theories about its inception.[2] Magic Johnson once suggested that he invented the high five at Michigan State,[2] presumably in the late '70s. Others have suggested it originated in the women's volleyball circuit of the 1960s.[2]

Glenn Burke and Dusty Baker[edit]
For decades, the "conventional wisdom"[2] has been that the first high five occurred between Dusty Baker and Glenn Burke of the Los Angeles Dodgers in Dodger Stadium on October 2, 1977, the last day of the regular season.[2] In the sixth inning, Dusty Baker hit a home run off Houston Astros pitcher J.R. Richard. It was Baker's 30th home run, making the Dodgers the first team in history to have four hitters with at least 30 home runs each in a single season.[5] As journalist Jon Mooallem tells the story:

It was a wild, triumphant moment and a good omen as the Dodgers headed to the playoffs. Burke, waiting on deck, thrust his hand enthusiastically over his head to greet his friend at the plate. Baker, not knowing what to do, smacked it. "His hand was up in the air, and he was arching way back," says Baker, "So I reached up and hit his hand. It seemed like the thing to do."[2]

This story regarding the origin of the high five can be found in the written news as early as September 1982 and is featured in the ESPN 30 For 30 Film The High Five directed by Michael Jacobs.[6] After retiring from baseball, Burke, who was one of the first openly gay professional athletes, used the high five with other gay residents of the Castro district of San Francisco, where for many it became a symbol of gay pride and identification.[7][2]

Louisville Cardinals[edit]
Another origin story, first reported in 1980,[8] places it at a University of Louisville Cardinals basketball practice during the 1978–1979 season.[2] Forward Wiley Brown went to give a plain old low five to his teammate Derek Smith, but suddenly Smith looked Brown in the eye and said, "No. Up high." Brown thought, "Yeah, why are we staying down low? We jump so high," raised his hand and the high five was supposedly born.[2] High fives can be seen in highlight reels of the 1978–1979 Louisville team.[2] During a telecast of a 1980 game, announcer Al McGuire shouted: "Mr. Brown came to play! And they're giving him the high-five handshake. High five!"[2]

Conor Lastowka[edit]
Sometime after 2002, the Burke story was challenged by Lamont Sleets, who played basketball for Murray State University. He claimed to be the originator of the high five in the 1960s because his father's Vietnam buddies were called The Five and the young Sleets would jump up and slap their hands and say "Hi, Five!".[2] However the Sleets story was a hoax, a publicity stunt concocted by the founders of the "National High Five Day" (est. 2002)[9] – they needed a "founder" and so invented the story and plugged in Sleets' name.[2] "We just found the guy [Sleets] and made up a story," said Conor Lastowka, a founder of National High Five Day and professional comedy writer.[2]

Antecedents[edit]
Antecedents of the physical gesture of slapping palms together predate the 1970s,[10][unreliable source?][11] when the high five is believed to have been coined. For example, it can be seen in the 1960 French Nouvelle vague movie Breathless.[12] These earlier cases were never called "high fives", however, because the term had not yet been coined and they lacked the cultural context and meaning surrounding the gesture that originated in the United States during the late 1970s and 1980s independent of usage elsewhere.[2]

Conventional wisdom holds that the Tokyo district of Roppongi earned the slogan of "High Touch Town" after residents noticed WWII American GIs walking the streets giving each other high-fives; when the Japanese asked about the gesture it was mistranslated as hai tatchi or "high touch".[13] This story is possibly apocryphal, as Hiroyuki Usui, a representative of the Roppongi Shopkeepers Promotion Association explains, "There is no deep meaning in 'High Touch Town'. People don't know what it means."[14] The term "high touch town" may have originated before the high five and had a different meaning, or 'high touch' may mean "high class", a play on the town's reputation for nightlife activity among off-duty military personal.[14]

Variations[edit]
In addition to the standard high five several other types of "five" exist.

The "low five" had already been known since at least the 1920s; written evidence can be found in Cab Calloway's 1938 Hepster's Dictionary.[15] In the 1927 film The Jazz Singer, actor Al Jolson is seen performing the low five in celebration of the news of a Broadway audition. In African-American Vernacular English (AAVE) this was known as "giving skin" or "slapping skin".[15] "Gimme Some Skin" was a term current in 1940s Hipster subculture and had crossed over to mainstream culture, as seen in the 1941 Abbott and Costello film In the Navy where the Andrews Sisters perform "Gimme Some Skin, My Friend" and choreograph giving (low) fives.[16]

If one initiates a high five (or any variation thereof) by offering a hand(s), and no reciprocal hand appears to consummate the gesture, the initiator is said to have been "left hanging".[17] This could be interpreted as an insult, friendly joke or form of enlightenment, depending on the context of its use.

Another variation is the "self high five". The action consists of raising one hand, generally the right hand, and tagging it with the other. It was often used by Diamond Dallas Page as part of his persona, such as in his WCW theme song "Self High Five".[18] A variation of this variation was explored by Turkish artist Deniz Ozuygur who built a "Self High-five Machine", which was exhibited in New York City in 2010.[19] It is a robotic arm that spins in circles striking another robotic arm, both of which are rubber casts of Ozuygur's own arms.[19]

"Too slow"[edit]
The "too slow" variation is a sequence of high five and low five, often accompanied by a rhyme such as "Up High. Down Low..."[20][21] then, during the down low sequence, the initiator will surprise the counter-party by pulling their hand back at the last moment, thus tricking the other person to swipe empty air, completing the rhyme "Too slow!".[22] There are variations on this theme, with additions of "to the side" and other hand positions for the partner to contact the initiator's hand.[23]


"Up high."
 

"Down low."
 

Victim misses.
 

"Too slow!" (With finger-guns.)
The origin of the too slow variation has not been established, but notable sources have made reference to it; for example the title song for Lay on Five, a BBC children's television programme broadcast in 1985–86 featuring Floella Benjamin, ended "..too slow to Lay on Five".[24] The too slow variation is in the 1987 film The Principal in a scene where Principal Rick Latimer (James Belushi) does it to Arturo Diego (Jacob Vargas).[25] In the New York Times archives, the earliest reference is from 1993[20] when Arnold Schwarzenegger did it with the son of a film-crew member while on the set of Last Action Hero, saying: "Let's have five. Five high. Five low,"[20] at which point Arnold pulled his hand away saying "Too slow." The boy reportedly laughed.[20] Arnold did it originally in the 1991 film Terminator 2: Judgment Day, when John Connor (Edward Furlong) teaches the Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) to "Gimme five. Up high, down low, too slow."[26] In the 1998 Seinfeld episode "The Dealership," the character David Puddy (played by Patrick Warburton) constantly asks other characters for high fives, much to their chagrin. In 2008, They Might Be Giants released the song "High Five!" on an album for children titled Here Come the 123s, with lyrics "High five! Low five! Slap me five! Down low! Too slow!", a gesture described in the song as "old school"[27] a slang term usually meaning something from a prior generation.[28] In the film Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014), the final scene involved two apes giving the "too slow" snub, a plot device which plunged the ape community into war presumably resolved in a sequel movie.[29]

Air five[edit]

Two women engaging in an air five (With finger-gun).
An air five is a variation where the hands of the participants never actually touch, needing only line of sight to make the gesture.[30] It has an advantage for participants who are otherwise too far apart to achieve physical contact at the moment of the gesture. The participants may simply pretend to high five, or add an imitation sound of hand slapping. Also known as the wi-five, a mix of "wireless" and "high five" with a pun on wi-fi, a wireless computer technology.[31][32]

Celebrations[edit]
National High Five Day is a private initiative to give out high fives and is typically held on the third Thursday in April.[33] According to the National High Five Project, the event began in 2002 at the University of Virginia after a group of students set up a booth and gave out high-fives and lemonade.[34] In the last few years[when?] the National High Five Project began holding events where participants take part in a "high-five-a-thon" to raise funds for charity.[35][36]

Human health[edit]
A medical study has found that fist bumps and high fives spread fewer germs than handshakes.[37][38]





In other words...

BUMP

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTT Topre BBV2 for Red Viridian Puppetmaster or bbv2 Bloodguard
« Reply #18 on: Mon, 10 April 2017, 13:23:29 »
BUMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMP

Offline speaktobrett

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Re: WTT Topre BBV2 for Red Viridian Puppetmaster or bbv2 Bloodguard
« Reply #19 on: Tue, 11 April 2017, 17:32:42 »
How much do you want to sell the Topre Domino bbv2?

Or are you just wanting to trade?

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTT Topre BBV2 for Red Viridian Puppetmaster or bbv2 Bloodguard
« Reply #20 on: Tue, 11 April 2017, 17:49:23 »
How much do you want to sell the Topre Domino bbv2?

Or are you just wanting to trade?

Hey! Sorry, I already traded it.

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Partial KK Oxblood mods
« Reply #21 on: Mon, 24 April 2017, 14:35:25 »
Bump

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Partial KK Oxblood mods WTT EGg Hue Fugu
« Reply #22 on: Thu, 27 April 2017, 11:22:47 »
BUMMMMMMMMPPPPPP

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Re: WTB Partial KK Oxblood mods WTT EGg Hue Fugu
« Reply #23 on: Fri, 28 April 2017, 14:08:33 »
Bump

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Partial KK Oxblood mods WTT EGg Hue Fugu
« Reply #24 on: Sun, 30 April 2017, 15:36:01 »
BUMppp


Need Oxblood 1u

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Partial KK Oxblood mods
« Reply #25 on: Mon, 01 May 2017, 15:10:09 »
I neeeeeeed it

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Partial KK Oxblood mods
« Reply #26 on: Tue, 02 May 2017, 22:39:45 »
give me

Offline ArchDill

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Re: Looking for T Bloodguard Reaper and Jordan T bbv2
« Reply #27 on: Mon, 12 June 2017, 00:20:32 »
Random wiki BUMP

The unicorn is a legendary creature that has been described since antiquity as a beast with a single large, pointed, spiraling horn projecting from its forehead. The unicorn was depicted in ancient seals of the Indus Valley Civilization and was mentioned by the ancient Greeks in accounts of natural history by various writers, including Ctesias, Strabo, Pliny the Younger, and Aelian.[1] The Bible also describes an animal, the re'em, which some versions translate as unicorn.[1]

In European folklore, the unicorn is often depicted as a white horse-like or goat-like animal with a long horn and cloven hooves (sometimes a goat's beard). In the Middle Ages and Renaissance, it was commonly described as an extremely wild woodland creature, a symbol of purity and grace, which could only be captured by a virgin. In the encyclopedias its horn was said to have the power to render poisoned water potable and to heal sickness. In medieval and Renaissance times, the tusk of the narwhal was sometimes sold as unicorn horn.

Unicorns in antiquity

Unicorn seal of Indus Valley, Indian Museum

Gilt statue of a unicorn on the Council House, Bristol
Unicorns are not found in Greek mythology, but rather in the accounts of natural history, for Greek writers of natural history were convinced of the reality of unicorns, which they located in India, a distant and fabulous realm for them. The earliest description is from Ctesias, who in his book Indika ("On India") described them as wild asses, fleet of foot, having a horn a cubit and a half (700 mm, 28 inches) in length, and colored white, red and black.[2] Aristotle must be following Ctesias when he mentions two one-horned animals, the oryx (a kind of antelope) and the so-called "Indian ass".[3][4] Strabo says that in the Caucasus there were one-horned horses with stag-like heads.[5] Pliny the Elder mentions the oryx and an Indian ox (perhaps a rhinoceros) as one-horned beasts, as well as "a very fierce animal called the monoceros which has the head of the stag, the feet of the elephant, and the tail of the boar, while the rest of the body is like that of the horse; it makes a deep lowing noise, and has a single black horn, which projects from the middle of its forehead, two cubits [900 mm, 35 inches] in length."[6] In On the Nature of Animals (Περὶ Ζῴων Ἰδιότητος, De natura animalium), Aelian, quoting Ctesias, adds that India produces also a one-horned horse (iii. 41; iv. 52),[7][8] and says (xvi. 20)[9] that the monoceros (Greek: μονόκερως) was sometimes called cartazonos (Greek: καρτάζωνος), which may be a form of the Arabic karkadann, meaning "rhinoceros".

Cosmas Indicopleustes, a merchant of Alexandria who lived in the 6th century, made a voyage to India and subsequently wrote works on cosmography. He gives a description of a unicorn based on four brass figures in the palace of the King of Ethiopia. He states, from report, that "it is impossible to take this ferocious beast alive; and that all its strength lies in its horn. When it finds itself pursued and in danger of capture, it throws itself from a precipice, and turns so aptly in falling, that it receives all the shock upon the horn, and so escapes safe and sound."[10][11]

A one-horned animal (which may be just a bull in profile) is found on some seals from the Indus Valley Civilization.[12] Seals with such a design are thought to be a mark of high social rank.[13]

Offline rmendis

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Re: Looking for T Bloodguard Reaper and T Jordan bbv2
« Reply #28 on: Mon, 12 June 2017, 00:30:19 »
Good luck bump

Offline ArchDill

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Re: Looking for T Bloodguard Reaper and T Jordan bbv2
« Reply #29 on: Wed, 14 June 2017, 00:59:44 »

Offline ArchDill

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Re: Looking for blackout bbv2 or Nightowl MKII both in Topre
« Reply #30 on: Thu, 15 June 2017, 02:26:14 »
Bump

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB HHKB Pro 1 Black, Topre 55g domes, BKE domes, T bbv2's
« Reply #31 on: Fri, 16 June 2017, 17:06:05 »
BUMP

Offline ArchDill

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Re: Nothing
« Reply #32 on: Sun, 27 May 2018, 16:13:16 »
Comment so that I can find this post again later.

Offline dwarf.factory

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Re: Nothing
« Reply #33 on: Thu, 31 May 2018, 05:13:45 »
hmmmmm nothing.
My pure desire is GOLD

Offline Findecanor

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Re: Nothing
« Reply #34 on: Thu, 31 May 2018, 05:53:49 »

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Re: WTTF Bro GSL Last Pilot
« Reply #35 on: Sun, 05 August 2018, 00:17:13 »
Bummp

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Black HHKB Pro 1
« Reply #36 on: Fri, 04 January 2019, 07:56:02 »
Bump

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTB Black or WHITE HHKB Pro 1
« Reply #37 on: Mon, 07 January 2019, 18:00:38 »
Pls gib hhkb pro 1

Offline ArchDill

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Re: W Bro Hypurp Topre set
« Reply #38 on: Sun, 13 January 2019, 14:12:37 »
BUMP

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Re: W Bro Hypurp Topre set
« Reply #39 on: Tue, 15 January 2019, 16:52:01 »
.

Offline ArchDill

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Re: WTTF Clacks
« Reply #40 on: Mon, 28 January 2019, 17:19:56 »
bumpp