Anonymous ID: d5f7c2 July 30, 2018, 9:13 p.m. No.2366235   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6980 >>6769

>>2354516

Self-signed us useless since https will flag it as self-signed hence "questionable".

 

Not certificate authority trail to follow for credibility.

 

Basically as is server owner says "I vouch for my self"

Anonymous ID: d5f7c2 July 30, 2018, 9:17 p.m. No.2366298   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8709

>>2359386

read some books . very few real "masters" here but some highly competent, self-taught but frequently "narrow" expertise.

 

Don't bother talking about Internet traffic routing, security or detains of IP protocol family. Very, very few here that speak that language.

 

Host-based programming/scripting mostly, and web stuff

Anonymous ID: d5f7c2 July 31, 2018, 2:09 a.m. No.2368941   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9158 >>9082

>>2368501

Gematria originated as an Assyro-Babylonian-Greek system of alphanumeric code or cipher later adopted into Jewish culture that assigns numerical value to a word, name, or phrase in the belief that words or phrases with identical numerical values bear some relation to each other or bear some relation to the number itself as it may apply to Nature, a person's age, the calendar year, or the like. A single word can yield multiple values depending on the system used.

 

Although ostensibly derived from Greek, it is largely used in Jewish texts, notably in those associated with the Kabbalah. The term does not appear in the Hebrew Bible itself.

 

Some identify two forms of gematria: the "revealed" form, which is prevalent in many hermeneutic methods found throughout Rabbinic literature, and the "mystical" form, a largely Kabbalistic practice.

 

Though gematria is most often used to calculate the values of individual words, psukim (Biblical verses), Talmudical aphorisms, sentences from the standard Jewish prayers, personal, angelic and Godly names, and other religiously significant material, Kabbalists use them often for arbitrary phrases and, occasionally, for various languages.

 

A few instances of gematria in Arabic, Spanish and Greek, are mentioned in the works of some Hasidic Rabbis also used it, though rarely, for Yiddish.

 

However, the primary language for gematria calculations has always been and remains Hebrew and, to a lesser degree, Aramaic.

 

Numerology is any belief in the divine or mystical relationship between a number and one or more coinciding events. It is also the study of the numerical value of the letters in words, names and ideas. It is often associated with the paranormal, alongside astrology and similar divinatory arts.

 

Despite the long history of numerological ideas, the word "numerology" is not recorded in English before c.1907

 

So it would be correct to describe it as sort of a mystical, Kabbalistic form of numerology voodoo like reading chicken bones?

 

With no scientific or linguistic basis?

 

Just magic words and numbers?

 

And we are supposed to take it seriously?

 

OK