LYCOS RETRIEVER
Elephant
built 661 days ago
The Elephant is a mobile base and repair vehicle. Twelve soldiers can ride in it and a Mongoose respawns in its forward hold. It is armed with a forward M41 LAAG on the top right and a AIE-486H Heavy Machine Gun on the mid left.
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Elephant programs that interact non-trivially with the outside world can have both input-output specifications, relating the programs inputs and outputs, and accomplishment specifications concerning what the program accomplishes in the world. These concepts are respectively generalizations of the philosophers' illocutionary and perlocutionary speech acts.
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Elephant Outlook provides managed business-critical high-availability email messaging and collaboration services to leading companies in the US and around the world. With operational experience and certified expertise, Elephant Outlook provides unmatched levels of availability, performance, and security for companies in the financial, healthcare, and technology sectors including emergency and government agencies. Elephant Outlook serves as an extension to IT operations allowing companies to focus on their core business. For more information on Elephant Outlook and its services, visit www.elephantoutlook.com or call 800-876-1422.
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Elephant Outlook will migrate customers to the new release of Microsoft Exchange, the leading email messaging solution among Fortune 50 companies. The new Microsoft Exchange 2007 release will provide unified messaging, improved customer experience, new anti-spam and anti-virus message hygiene technologies, along with advanced continuous replication clustering for increased reliability and performance.
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[T]hen comes the greatest of all ‘vahanas’ (carriages for Gods) - the ‘Airavat’ ( elephant ). The Airavat was the chosen carriage for the God of all Gods ‘ Indra ’. There were other Gods as well riding on elephants as well, but Indra’s airavat was special. It was regal in size and had ten tusks, not just the usual two. (e/3)
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After one year the tusks are permanent, but the molars are replaced six times in an average elephant's lifetime.[26] The teeth do not emerge from the jaws vertically like with human teeth. Instead, they have a horizontal progression, like a conveyor belt. New teeth grow in at the back of the mouth, pushing older teeth toward the front, where they wear down with use and the remains fall out. When an elephant becomes very old, the last set of teeth is worn to stumps, and it must rely on softer foods to chew. Very elderly elephants often spend their last years exclusively in marshy areas where they can feed on soft wet grasses. Eventually, when the last teeth fall out, the elephant will be unable to eat and will die of starvation.
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