Welcome in DE!
Hello visitor from Delaware,
Welcome to elitemrp.net 2.0!
Friday, February 6, 2009
Check out my new product, EZQuizTaker!
Also, if you haven't already, check out my newly designed Photo Gallery (powered by Flickr).
Please choose a section on the left.
Under 'Software / Services' you can choose:
- lynk2 short url generator - A free service to generate short http://lynk2.me URLs from long URLs *new*
- mosascii m2 - A free application that converts images into full-color HTML mosaics
- EZQuizTaker - A fun and educational shareware application for creating and taking multiple choice quizzes.
- EZMailSend - A shareware Windows command-line SMTP client.
- Are You a Hippie? Test - A far-out quiz to determine if you're hip or square, man
- BMI Calculator - Find out your Body Mass Index/Quetelet's Index
- DeFusco Software - Discontinued software released by me in the late 90's under the name DeFusco Software
Or choose one of my fun image generators:
- It's a Trap! - Generate funny images that state the obvious
- I Want to Believe - What do you believe in? Find out with this generator
- Where is Your God Now? - The image generator of nightmares
And don't forget to check out my photo gallery or DVD collection!
Thank you for visiting!
elitemrp.net's State Links
Use my BMI Calculator and compare your score with the average BMI / Quetelet's Index for Delaware
Are you a hippie living in Delaware? Take my Hippie Test to find out!
Jokes about Delaware
State Facts about Delaware
Delaware state flag icon provided by Free Gifs and Animations
elitemrp.net presents Delaware State Information
Henry Hudson, sailing under the Dutch flag, is credited with Delaware's discovery in 1609. The following year, Capt. Samuel Argall of Virginia named Delaware for his colony's governor, Thomas West, Baron De La Warr. An attempted Dutch settlement failed in 1631. Swedish colonization began at Fort Christina (now Wilmington) in 1638, but New Sweden fell to Dutch forces led by New Netherlands' governor Peter Stuyvesant in 1655.
England took over the area in 1664, and it was transferred to William Penn as the lower Three Counties in 1682. Semiautonomous after 1704, Delaware fought as a separate state in the American Revolution and became the first state to ratify the Constitution in 1787.
During the Civil War, although a slave state, Delaware did not secede from the Union.
In 1802, Ëleuthère Irénée du Pont established a gunpowder mill near Wilmington that laid the foundation for Delaware's huge chemical industry. Delaware's manufactured products now also include vulcanized fiber, textiles, paper, medical supplies, metal products, machinery, machine tools, and automobiles.
Delaware also grows a great variety of fruits and vegetables and is a U.S. pioneer in the food-canning industry. Corn, soybeans, potatoes, and hay are important crops. Delaware's broiler-chicken farms supply the big Eastern markets, and fishing and dairy products are other important industries.
Points of interest include the Fort Christina Monument, Hagley Museum, Holy Trinity Church (erected in 1698, the oldest Protestant church in the United States still in use), and Winterthur Museum, in and near Wilmington; central New Castle, an almost unchanged late 18th-century capital; and the Delaware Museum of Natural History.
Popular recreation areas include Cape Henlopen, Delaware Seashore, Trap Pond State Park, and Rehoboth Beach.
Delaware is a state located on the Atlantic Coast in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States.[3] The state is named after Delaware Bay and River, which were named for Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr (1577-1618).[4] Population estimates by the Census Bureau for 2005 place the population of Delaware at 843,524. Despite being the 45th most populous state, it is the seventh most densely populated state, with a population density of 320 more people per square mile than the national average, ranking ahead of states such as Florida, California, and Texas.
The gross state product of Delaware in 2003 was $49 billion. The per capita personal income was $34,199, ranking 9th in the nation. In 2005, the average weekly wage was $937, ranking 7th in the nation.
The state bird is the Blue Hen Chicken
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My status as of 9:59:17 PM (03/11/10)My uptime is 54 days, 2 hours, 19 minutes
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The temperature outside my house is º42
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My latest movie purchases (on 03-11-2010) were The Informant!, Up in the Air and The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day [Blu-Ray]
The last movie I watched was The Hurt Locker, which I rate 5 out of 5
This is what I have to say: "http://lynk2.me"

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