Daily Archives: April 2, 2014

Caffeine (Demo) w/ facecam | GORGEOUS INDIE! | Indie Horror Game – Video

Posted: April 2, 2014 at 8:45 am


Caffeine (Demo) w/ facecam | GORGEOUS INDIE! | Indie Horror Game
This is the pre-release demo for the upcoming indie game, Caffeine. It looks sooo gorgeous and the atmosphere will make you get internal goosebumps...Enjoy! ...

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Caffeine (Demo) w/ facecam | GORGEOUS INDIE! | Indie Horror Game - Video

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Space Station Live: Protein Crystal Growth for Treatment of Immunological Disorders – Video

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Space Station Live: Protein Crystal Growth for Treatment of Immunological Disorders
NASA Public Affairs Officer Brandi Dean talks with Paul Reichert of Merck Research Laboratories in N.J. about the Merck PCG study, which looks at the crystal...

By: Waspie_Dwarf

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Space Station Live: Protein Crystal Growth for Treatment of Immunological Disorders - Video

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Geeks: Favorite fictional space station – Video

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Geeks: Favorite fictional space station
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Geeks: Favorite fictional space station - Video

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Space Station 13 Tutorial #2: Engineering – PA Setup – Video

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Space Station 13 Tutorial #2: Engineering - PA Setup
Fixed the REALLY OBNOXIOUS fan noise in the background. However, it was replaced by a lot of throat noises instead. This video just covers the most important...

By: IrisCorven

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Space Station 13 Tutorial #2: Engineering - PA Setup - Video

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Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back Part 1: *Sigh* Goddamnit Crash – Video

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Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back Part 1: *Sigh* Goddamnit Crash
After being defeat by Crash, Cortex discovers a new power source, the Power Crystals. After a year of research, Cortex figured out that he needs all 25 Cryst...

By: TheNBGComms

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Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back Part 1: *Sigh* Goddamnit Crash - Video

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Police Officers’ Hilarious Holiday Crime Video – Video

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Police Officers #39; Hilarious Holiday Crime Video
Officials try to use humor to spread the message that crime during the holidays is no joke. Tampa Police will expand its efforts to educate shoppers through ...

By: world agenda

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Police Officers' Hilarious Holiday Crime Video - Video

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Call of Duty: Ghosts Gameplay – Infected on Octane – W/Commentary – Video

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Call of Duty: Ghosts Gameplay - Infected on Octane - W/Commentary
See The Full Call of Duty Ghosts Series Here: http://goo.gl/hJVF5k Next CoD Ghosts Episode on: Thursday Call of Duty Ghosts: Team Deathmatch on Stormfront Ca...

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Call of Duty: Ghosts Gameplay - Infected on Octane - W/Commentary - Video

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Space History Photo: STS-86 Launch

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In this historical photo from the U.S. space agency, the Space Shuttle Atlantis blazes through the night sky to begin the STS-86 mission, slated to be the seventh of nine planned dockings of the Space Shuttle with the Russian Space Station Mir. Liftoff on September 25 from Launch Pad 39A was at 10:34 p.m. EDT, within seconds of the preferred time, during a six minute, 45 second launch window.

The 10 day flight will include the transfer of the sixth U.S. astronaut to live and work aboard the Mir. After the docking, STS-86 Mission Specialist David A. Wolf will become a member of the Mir 24 crew, replacing astronaut C. Michael Foale, who will return to Earth aboard Atlantis with the remainder of the STS-86 crew. Foale has been on the Russian Space Station since mid May. Wolf is scheduled to remain there about four months.

Besides Wolf (embarking to Mir) and Foale (returning), the STS-86 crew includes Commander James D. Wetherbee, Pilot Michael J. Bloomfield, and Mission Specialists Wendy B. Lawrence, Scott E. Parazynski, Vladimir Georgievich Titov of the Russian Space Agency, and Jean-Loup J.M. Chretien of the French Space Agency, CNES. Other primary objectives of the mission are a spacewalk by Parazynski and Titov, and the exchange of about 3.5 tons of science/logistical equipment and supplies between Atlantis and the Mir.

Each weekday, SPACE.com looks back at the history of spaceflight through photos (archive).

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Space History Photo: STS-86 Launch

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Worth the Wait – Extra! – Episode 2 – Video

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Worth the Wait - Extra! - Episode 2
On this episode of Worth the Wait - Extra!, we sit down with the developers of PeriAreion, an exciting Mars colonization game based in scientific reality. Th...

By: Just OK Gamers

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Worth the Wait - Extra! - Episode 2 - Video

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What Is the Fermi Paradox?

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By Elizabeth Howell, Space.com Contributor | April 02, 2014 04:19am ET

The Fermi Paradox seeks to answer the question of where the aliens are. Given that our star and Earth are part of a young planetary system compared to the rest of the universe and that interstellar travel might be fairly easy to achieve the theory says that Earth should have been visited by aliens already.

As the story goes, Enrico Fermi (an Italian physicist) first came out with the theory with a casual lunchtime remark in 1950. The implications, however, have had extraterrestrial researchers scratching their heads in the decades since.

"Fermi realized that any civilization with a modest amount of rocket technology and an immodest amount of imperial incentive could rapidly colonize the entire galaxy," the Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) said on its website.

"Within ten million years, every star system could be brought under the wing of empire. Ten million years may sound long, but in fact it's quite short compared with the age of the galaxy, which is roughly ten thousand million years. Colonization of the Milky Way should be a quick exercise."

It is true that the universe is incredibly vast and old. One estimate says the universe spans 92 billion light-years in diameter (while growing faster and faster). Separate measurements indicate it is about 13.82 billion light-years old. At first blush, this would give alien civilizations plenty of time to propagate, but then they would have a cosmic distance barrier to cross before getting too far into space.

The sheer number of planets that we have found outside of our solar system, however, indicates that life could be plentiful. A November 2013 study using data from the Kepler Space Telescope suggested that one in five sun-like stars has an Earth-size planet orbiting in the habitable region of its star, the zone where liquid water would be possible. That zone is not necessarily an indication of life, as other factors, such as the planet's atmosphere, come into play. Further, "life" could encompass anything from bacteria to starship-sailing extraterrestrials.

A few months later, Kepler scientists released a "planet bonanza" of 715 newly discovered worlds, pioneering a new technique called "verification by multiplicity." The theory essentially postulates that a star that appears to have multiple objects crossing its face or tugging at it would have planets, as opposed to stars. (A multiple star system at such close proximity would destabilize over time, the technique postulates.) Using this will accelerate the pace of exoplanet discovery, NASA said in 2014.

Our understanding of astrobiology (life in the universe) is just at a beginning, however. One challenge is these exoplanets are so far away that it is next to impossible for us to send a probe out to look at them. Another obstacle is even within our own solar system, we haven't eliminated all the possible locations for life. We know from looking at Earth that microbes can survive in extreme temperatures and environments, giving rise to theories that we could find microbe-like life on Mars, the icy Jovian moon Europa, or perhaps Saturn's Enceladus or Titan.

All of this together means that even within our own Milky Way Galaxy the equivalent of the cosmic neighborhood there should be many Earth-size planets in habitable zones that could host life. But what are the odds of these worlds having starfarers in their bounds? [Countdown: 13 Ways to Hunt Intelligent Aliens]

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What Is the Fermi Paradox?

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