I was hopelessly lost. All of the signs were telling me conflicting things and it didnrsquot seem like there were any people around that I could ask for help Everyone who was there hurried past me averting their gaze seemingly playing a game of ignore the lost man with the big backpack. The muffled voice came back on the intercom and announced a string of instructions regarding which train
Monthly Archives: March 2010
Ireland
Saturday 13.3.2010 day 150IrelandWe arrived in Ireland at 1 pm and did not know what side of the road they drove on until we was an Irish car as we drove off the ferry and itrsquos driverrsquos seat was on the right hand side so we knew that they drove on the Left hand side of the road It was good to know this before we got to the road.We then drove to our Resort in Knocktopher Abbey Knockto
Ferry to Ireland
Friday 12.3.2010 day 150Ferry to IrelandWe drove to Normandie past the dday beachers which were very pretty we read in the French news paper that they are still fining unexploded bombs from dday and had found one on the 14 of Feb a few weeks before we where there where they evacuated 20000 people from their homes and they do not expect to find all the dday bombs until 2020. We got the 10 pm Ce
Carnac standing stones in Brittany
Thursday 11.3.2010 day 149Carnac standing stones in BrittanyWe drove from Paris to Carnac today. Once we got to Carnac we checked into our wonderful hotel with fantastic views across the river. We then went to the Carnac Alignments a Neolithic site that is 6000 years old. Legion has that the stones were Roman legionaries turned to stone and local belief had them to be Magical stones. From 1830
Travel to the Greek Islands
A holiday company specialising in Holidays to the Greek Islands is offering departures from Bristol International Airport for the first time this summer.Islands of Greece has seats available on flights operated by Viking Airlines from Bristol for Holidays to Corfu Kefalonia Mykonos Crete and Holidays to Skiathos. The company has been providing luxury Greek island holidays for 30 years and off
Hot and Sticky
As we moved further north from Cervantes we said goodbye to the nice cool nights that we had grown accustomed to in the south and moved into ldquohot and stickyrdquo territory once again. In the very dry country that surrounds Geraldton we had heard of this little oasis called Ellendale Pool with a nice campground and a permanent waterhole where you could swim and cool off. So after a few rat
The bag is back
The bag is backThere have been a lot of you wondering what happend to my friend Ander's bag. I just thought I would give you an update on this issue. Anders have had a couple of telephone conversations with the responsible delivery agency and the responsible airline during the last couple of days. Finally today ha has recieved his bagAnder's is now ready to move on in life. Kristian
Jaipur Travel Car Rental in Jaipur
Jaipur is a globally famous travel destination situated in the Indian state of Rajasthan. It is the capital city of the state. It is also one of the most beautiful and remarkable cities in the country. Fondly known as the Pink City of India this beautiful city appeals and attracts a large gathering of tourists and vacationers from all over the world. The city is one of the wellplanned cities in
All Kinds Of Checks Available Here
To create a better impression on clients various companies and business personal have their own bank checks printed. This also includes printing your company logo in case your company possesses one on each and every check that they give out. This shows your professionalism towards work and your devotion for your company you are dealing with. Your clients also get a vivid picture of this through
Nahtrang
So we arrived in Nhatrang on sat morning after the bumpiest ride ever on the sleeperbus. It shouldnt really be called a sleeper bus as sleep was impossible to achieve. but still. . an experience. especially as there wasnt a toilet on board and it was a 12 hour journey. which was interesting for some loud mouths americans would were forced to go on the side of the road haha. We arrived just as t
FCC’s broadband plan: A possible dream – Washington Post (blog)
FCC's broadband plan: A possible dream Washington Post (blog) If you can pull up objective reports about the download and upload speeds and reliability of services near your home, as seen in the graphic at left ... |
1992 Libertarian VP candidate now Republican for local Prosecutor in Nevada
LIBERTARIAN BLAST FROM THE PAST!
From Eric Dondero
The year was 1992. Nancy Lord was a prominent civil liberties attorney in Atlanta. She had run for statewide office in Georgia on the Libertarian Party ticket. Attractive, energetic, and offering a chance for the Party to balance the ticket with a female presence, former Alaska State Representative Andre Marrou picked Lord to be his running mate.
Marrou and Lord crisscrossed the country and garnered some national media attention, including CNN. In the end, the ticket didn't do as well as hoped at the ballot box. In the year of Perot, Bush I, and a "guy from Hope," William J. Clinton, Marrou/Lord came in 4th place, with 292,000 votes.
Lord soon drifted away from the LP. There were reports that she rejoined the Republican Party and moved out West.
Now the reports have been confirmed. And Lord is getting back into the limelight.
From the Parumph Valley Times, March 17:
Nancy Lord, attorney for the Concerned Citizens for a Safe Community, and Michael Root, a Las Vegas attorney who promotes himself as an outsider, round out the field of five candidates for Nye County district attorney competing in the June 8 Republican primary.
The other two Republicans are incumbent Bob Beckett and former Nye County Chief Civil Deputy District Attorney Ron Kent.
The primary winner advances to the Nov. 2 general election to face the winner of the Democratic primary race between Brian Kunzi and Nicholas Anthony Del Vecchio.
Against Marijuana laws, but would still follow current laws
Continuing:
While she is running as a Republican, Lord said she is fundamentally still a Libertarian. She is against marijuana laws but will prosecute offenders as long as the drug is illegal in Nevada. But Lord said she won't prosecute a case where someone's Fourth Amendment rights were violated due to an illegal search.
"I am not required to represent the county commissioners personally. I will represent Nye County as if it's a corporate client, and I have over a decade of experience in that regard," Lord said.
Nye County is located in southwest Nevada and borders California (Death Valley area). Parumph is the largest town with a population of 28,000. It is considered an exurb of Las Vegas. The County is home to three legal brothels.
NASA’s Spitzer Unearths Primitive Black Holes

This artist's conception illustrates one of the most primitive supermassive black holes known (central black dot) at the core of a young, star-rich galaxy.
› Full image and caption
Black holes are beastly distortions of space and time. The most massive and active ones lurk at the cores of galaxies, and are usually surrounded by doughnut-shaped structures of dust and gas that feed and sustain the growing black holes. These hungry, supermassive black holes are called quasars.
As grimy and unkempt as our present-day universe is today, scientists believe the very early universe didn't have any dust -- which tells them that the most primitive quasars should also be dust-free. But nobody had seen such immaculate quasars -- until now. Spitzer has identified two -- the smallest on record -- about 13 billion light-years away from Earth. The quasars, called J0005-0006 and J0303-0019, were first unveiled in visible light using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. That discovery team, which included Jiang, was led by Xiaohui Fan, a coauthor of the recent paper at the University of Arizona. NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory had also observed X-rays from one of the objects. X-rays, ultraviolet and optical light stream out from quasars as the gas surrounding them is swallowed.
"Quasars emit an enormous amount of light, making them detectable literally at the edge of the observable universe," said Fan.
When Jiang and his colleagues set out to observe J0005-0006 and J0303-0019 with Spitzer between 2006 and 2009, their targets didn't stand out much from the usual quasar bunch. Spitzer measured infrared light from the objects along with 19 others, all belonging to a class of the most distant quasars known. Each quasar is anchored by a supermassive black hole weighing more than 100 million suns.
Of the 21 quasars, J0005-0006 and J0303-0019 lacked characteristic signatures of hot dust, the Spitzer data showed. Spitzer's infrared sight makes the space telescope ideally suited to detect the warm glow of dust that has been heated by feeding black holes.
"We think these early black holes are forming around the time when the dust was first forming in the universe, less than one billion years after the Big Bang," said Fan. "The primordial universe did not contain any molecules that could coagulate to form dust. The elements necessary for this process were produced and pumped into the universe later by stars."
The astronomers also observed that the amount of hot dust in a quasar goes up with the mass of its black hole. As a black hole grows, dust has more time to materialize around it. The black holes at the cores of J0005-0006 and J0303-0019 have the smallest measured masses known in the early universe, indicating they are particularly young, and at a stage when dust has not yet formed around them.
Other authors include W.N. Brandt of Pennsylvania State University, University Park; Chris L. Carilli of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Socorro, N.M.; Eiichi Egami of the University of Arizona; Dean C. Hines of the Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo.; Jaron D. Kurk of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, Germany; Gordon T. Richards of Drexel University, Philadephia, Pa.; Yue Shen of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Mass.; Michael A. Strauss of Princeton, N.J.; Marianne Vestergaard of the University of Arizona and Niels Bohr Institute in Denmark; and Fabian Walter of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Germany. Fan and Kurk were based in part at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy when this research was conducted.
The Spitzer observations were made before the telescope ran out of its liquid coolant in May 2009, beginning its "warm" mission.
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., manages the Spitzer Space Telescope mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Science operations are conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. For more information about Spitzer, visit http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/spitzer and http://www.nasa.gov/spitzer .
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ISS Photography: 100 Million Words
If a picture is worth a thousand words, then the Expedition 22 crew aboard the International Space Station is about to complete the generation of 100 million words worth of information.That’s because Commander Jeff Williams and Flight Engineers Max Suraev, Oleg Kotov, T.J. Creamer, and Soichi Noguchi are expected to snap a total of 100,000 images by the end of their mission in Earth orbit.
Williams is setting a record that surpasses his own previous record of 83,856 images taken during Expedition 13 in 2006.
“This week we broke my old Exp. 13 record for number of Earth photos,” Williams “tweeted” from the station. “Later, after landing and recovery, I will post some of best.”
Among those digital still images is this spectacular nighttime image taken of Houston, Texas, the home of Mission Control and astronaut training, and the hub of the International Space Station Program that unites five space agencies and 15 countries in peaceful exploration and scientific research.
Williams and Suraev will end their five-and-a-half-month stay on the station Thursday, when they undock their Soyuz spacecraft and head for a landing in Kazakhstan. They were part of both the Expedition 21 and 22 crews. Kotov, Creamer and Noguchi will stay on orbit, snapping more photos, for two more months before returning home after being part of both the Expedition 22 and 23 crews.
All told, space station crews so far have amassed a total of almost 639,000 images. Those images include photos that document life and work aboard the space station, and photos that document the condition of the home planet from its unique perspective 220 miles above Earth. Their efforts are part of a larger collection that began with Earth observations photos during the Gemini Program of the 1960s. Many of the images are used in scientific research about the Earth, its climate, its resources and the effects humans are having on both.
The recent STS-130 space shuttle mission delivered a new observation deck known as the cupola that offers the largest window ever flown on a spacecraft, and the upcoming STS-131 shuttle mission to the station will deliver the Window Observational Research Facility (WORF), which will provide a new facility dedicated to multi- and hyper-spectral remote sensing and high resolution Earth observation photography to enhance the use of the best optical-quality window ever flown in space, in the U.S. Destiny Laboratory.
For more information about Earth observations photography, visit the Gateway to Astronaut Photography of the Earth at:
For more information about WORF, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/science/experiments/WORF.html
For more information about the International Space Station, visit:
View my blog's last three great articles...
- Mars moon Phobos
- Planck Mission Images Galactic Web of Cold Dust
- Little Shrimp Makes Big Splash Beneath Antarctica
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Mars moon Phobos

Visit the German Aerospace Center page for 3-D and other imagery of Phobos.
View my blog's last three great articles...
- Planck Mission Images Galactic Web of Cold Dust
- Little Shrimp Makes Big Splash Beneath Antarctica
- See Spot on Jupiter. See Spot Glow.
View this site auto transport car shipping car transport misting systems patio misting systems
Planck Mission Images Galactic Web of Cold Dust

Planck images a galactic web of cold dust. Image credit: ESA and the HFI Consortium, IRAS
› Full image and caption
Tendrils of the coldest stuff in our galaxy can be seen in a new, large image from Planck, a mission surveying the whole sky to learn more about the birth of our universe.
Planck, a European Space Agency-led mission with important participation from NASA, launched into space in May 2009 from Kourou, French Guiana. The space telescope has almost finished its first of at least four separate scans of the entire sky, a voluminous task that will be completed in early 2012.
The new image available online at http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA12964, highlights a swath of our Milky Way galaxy occupying about one-thirteenth of the entire sky. It shows the bright band of our galaxy's spiral disk amidst swirling clouds where gas and dust mix together and, sometimes, ignite to form new stars. The data were taken in the so-called far-infrared portion of the light spectrum, using two of nine different frequencies available on Planck.
"We've got huge amounts of data streaming down from space," said Ulf Israelsson, the NASA project manager for the mission at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "The intricate process of sorting through all of it has begun."
The mission's primary objective is to map the cosmic microwave background -- relic radiation left over from the Big Bang that created our universe about 13.7 billion years ago. Planck's state-of-the-art technology will provide the most detailed information yet about the size, mass, age, geometry, composition and fate of the universe.
In addition to cosmological questions like these, the mission will address such astronomy topics as star formation and galactic structure. Its observations will be used in synergy with data from other missions, such as the Herschel Space Observatory, another ESA mission with important NASA participation, and NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope.
"Planck is the first big cosmology mission that will also have a large impact on our understanding of our galaxy, the Milky Way," said Charles Lawrence, the mission's NASA project scientist at JPL. "We can see the cold dust and gas that permeate our galaxy on very large scales, while other missions like Herschel can zoom in to see the detail."
Planck is scheduled to release a first batch of astronomy data, called the Early Release Compact Source Catalog, in Jan. 2011. Cosmology results on the first two years' worth of data are expected to be released in Dec. 2012.
Planck is a European Space Agency mission, with significant participation from NASA. NASA's Planck Project Office is based at JPL. JPL contributed mission-enabling technology for both of Planck's science instruments. European, Canadian, U.S. and NASA Planck scientists will work together to analyze the Planck data. More information is online at http://www.nasa.gov/planckhttp://www.esa.int/planck. and
- Little Shrimp Makes Big Splash Beneath Antarctica
- See Spot on Jupiter. See Spot Glow.
- WISE Captures a Cosmic Rose
View this site auto transport car shipping car transport misting systems patio misting systems
Little Shrimp Makes Big Splash Beneath Antarctica

A JPL-designed camera submerged 600 feet beneath the Antarctic ice sheet to image its underbelly has yielded an unexpected find -- a shrimp.
› View related video
View this site auto transport car shipping car transport misting systems patio misting systems
Book Excerpt: The Hidden Beauty of Everyday Life
Kent Nerburn on finding beauty and the divine in all people and all things.
Google-Viacom court papers leave a lot to the imagination – FierceOnlineVideo
![]() Telegraph.co.uk | Google-Viacom court papers leave a lot to the imagination FierceOnlineVideo Google maintains that Viacom even had a major role in pushing the content online, either using employees or contractors to upload "roughed up" clips to make ... You are here: ClickZ Home › News › Inside Viacom's $1B YouTube Suit: 'Bad Vibe ...ClickZ News Viacom vs YouTubeMarketplace (blog) Google Says Viacom Secretly Uploaded Clips to YouTubeBloomberg Variety -Fast Company all 1,032 news articles » |
Now cafes in monument premises for tourists during CWG – Sify
Now cafes in monument premises for tourists during CWG Sify This has been especially worked upon keeping the Commonwealth Games in mind,' she added. In their bid to do away with touts and middlemen, who are often ... |


