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Monday, October 31, 2005
  Amazing picture of my eyes

And a pic Custom car from my friend made in photoshop, it did taked all day to make it.
 
  Einstein Managed His Inbox Just Like You
I admire thoose smart people, people who thinks for ewerything, who see oportuninty in ewery thing.
Aint much of them in this world.
f you're like Einstein, you respond to some emails immediately and let others wait. And, of course, some you never answer.

And every now and then, you find an old one in your inbox that you didn't even realize you had, and you reply.

A new study finds that the correspondence of Albert Einstein, as well as that of Charles Darwin, followed patterns similar to modern email communication.

Prolific writers

Einstein sent more than 14,500 letters. But he received more than 16,200, and responded to only a quarter of them. Darwin mailed more than 7,500 letters. He responded to 32 percent of the roughly 6,530 letters he received. [Chart]

Of course letter writing takes more time than email, but the mathematical relationship between quick replies and delayed responses was similar, explains João Gama Oliveira of the University of Aveiro in Portugal.

Of Einstein's responses, 53 percent were sent within 10 days. For Darwin, the figure was 63 percent. But now and then they replied months or years later. Einstein begins one reply by explaining that he's just discovered the senders letter of more than a year prior while sifting through "a mountain of correspondence."

"In both Darwin's and Einstein's correspondence and today's email we find that most responses take short time, but sometimes the responses take a very long time, Oliveira told LiveScience. "In other words, for both email and mail communication, the response times exist in a very broad range of values, and there is no typical response time for which we could say that all response times are around (and close to) that value."
Read More ON: http://www.livescience.com/history/051026_einstein_letters.html
 
Monday, October 24, 2005
  Military: New Aluminum Windows Stop .50-Caliber Bullet
A new type of transparent armor made of aluminum could one day replace glass in military vehicles.

The product is called aluminum oxynitride. It is being tested by the Army and the University of Dayton Research Institute in Ohio.

The material is a ceramic compound with a high compressive strength and durability, according to an Army statement issued this week. It performs better than the multilayered glass products currently in use, and its about half the weight. It is virtually scratch-resistant.

"The substance itself is light-years ahead of glass," said 1st Lt. Joseph La Monica, who heads the research.

Glass is still used in the new process, being sandwhiched between an outer layer of the polished aluminum oxynitride and a polymer backing.

THATS GREAT A NEW WEAPON THING, FINALY YEA ON WHO WE GONNA TEST IT .... IT DOESNT COST US MUCH THE OTHERS DO PAY, ITS AN ARMY THING FOR SECURITY SO BE SECURED.
 
Sunday, October 23, 2005
  Your Brain Remembers What You Forget
Your Brain Remembers What You Forget
As you dash outdoors in the middle of winter, you might make it halfway down the block before realizing that your ears are freezing because you forgot your hat.

Now, scientists have shown that even though you've had an apparent memory lapse, your brain never forgot what you should have done.

Memory works mainly by association. For example, as you try to remember where you left your keys, you might recall you last had them in the living room, which reminds you that there was a commercial for soap on television, which reminds you that you need soap, and so on. And then, as you're heading out the door to buy soap, you remember that your keys are on the kitchen counter.

Your brain knew where the keys were all along, it just took a round-about way to get there.

Now, scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies are studying associative memory in monkeys to figure out just how this complicated process works.
LEAVE THE MONKS ALONE TEST US WITH THAT, GIVE US LOT OF WEED, IF SMOKING WEED PEOPLE ALSO KNOW THEY HAVE WEED BUT DONT KNOW WHERE..... I GUESS BRAINS DO KNOW haha
 
Saturday, October 22, 2005
  Want to lose weight? Get a dog
"We know that walking is good for people but we don't know how to get people to continue to do it. We wanted to see whether bonding with a dog might be a motivator to continue walking," said Johnson, who is an associate professor of nursing and director of the College of Veterinary Medicine's Research Center for Human-Animal Interaction at the University of Missouri-Columbia.
The dog-walkers in the study started by walking 10 minutes per day three times per week and eventually walked up to 20 minutes per day 5 days per week. One group walked for 50 weeks while another walked for only 26 weeks.
New York - Dogs may be more than man's best friend; they may also be a tool for losing weight, according to a new study that shows making a commitment to walk a dog - your own or someone else's - leads to increased exercise and weight loss.
I agree get a dog he can feel when you good or not, he is more than just a mans best firend..
Dog is loyal 2 the death not like womens and mans :)
 
Monday, October 17, 2005
  Daniel Craig named As First Blond Bond
LONDON (Reuters) - His name is Craig, Daniel Craig.

The English actor was named as the next James Bond on Friday, ending months of speculation over who would take over from Pierce Brosnan on Her Majesty's secret service.

In typically flamboyant 007 style, the 37-year-old swept up the River Thames on a power launch to a news conference, escorted by Royal Marines boats.

The first blond Bond wore a blue suit and red tie and posed for photographers in the shadow of Tower Bridge.

The English actor was named as the next James Bond on Friday, ending months of speculation over who would take over from Pierce Brosnan on Her Majesty's secret service.

In typically flamboyant 007 style, the 37-year-old swept up the River Thames on a power launch to a news conference, escorted by Royal Marines boats.

The first blond Bond wore a blue suit and red tie and posed for photographers in the shadow of Tower Bridge."

They should take Black Bond, than he could candidate for President heheh
 
Sunday, October 16, 2005
  Google Satellite Photos Worry India Leader - Yahoo! News
HYDERABAD, India - Indian President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam expressed concern Saturday about a free mapping program from Google Inc., warning it could help terrorists by providing satellite photos of potential targets.
ADVERTISEMENT

Google Earth, an Internet site launched in June this year, allows users to access overlapping satellite photos. Although not all areas are highly detailed, some images are very high resolution, and some show sensitive locations in various countries.
BLHA BLAH BLAH
What about NASA(300mb) program which we could download before the google earth came out, So thats a bullsht...
Terrorist could use nasa satelite 1-2 years back and no news about that.
 
  Searching mp3 and other files
Did somebody try to search files through google, i did and it does
return some good content. try these searches bellow...
?intitle:index.of? mp3 2pac
Than try changing search like
?intitle:index.of? wma 2pac OR
?intitle:index.of? mp3 2pac OR
"parent directory " MP3 -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml [artist] [title]
- means not to include in search + means do include like
"parent directory " +MP3 +wma -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml -opendivx -md5 -md5sums [artist] [title]
"parent directory " MP3 wma Mpeg -xxx -html -htm -php [artist] [title]
It does take some time to learn but i think its worth it.

And one more thing if u search some artist and in search results u dont
wanna lyrics to be displayed u just do search like this:
eminem -lyrics and it removes all sites that contain lyrics word.
thats wery helpfull sometimes.
 
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
  Exercise amount more important than intensity
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - How much you exercise may be more important than how hard you exercise in terms of heart health, according to a study of sedentary overweight men and women. And, many will be happy to hear, exhaustive amounts of exercise are not needed for heart health.Health News Article | Reuters.com
 
  This TV Is Strictly for the Nerds
NerdTV is a new weekly online TV show from PBS.org technology for geeks.
Though a bit crude, NerdTV is brainy enough to surprise anyone who thinks original web content consists of cheap satires and low-rent flash animation.
See tha TV >>> http://www.pbs.org/cringely/nerdtv/shows/
 
Monday, October 10, 2005
  Psychic seeks $25 million reward for Saddam
Hahah haha
A Brazilian court will consider a psychic's claim that the U.S. government owes him a $25 million reward for information he says he provided on the hiding place of ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
I watched TV and noone belives in psychic but police and goverment do use them for they missions...WTF...Or maybe that psychic just want money, grrrrr.
all story on Reuters.
 
Sunday, October 09, 2005
  When Drunk Driving Deterrence Becomes Neo-Prohibition
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This fall Mothers Against Drunk Driving marks its 25th anniversary. The organization certainly has much to celebrate: Deaths from drunk driving are down more than 35 percent since the early 1980s. We no longer chuckle at the bumbling drunk who can barely get his key into the ignition — we scorn him. Hopefully, we arrest him, too.
Thats good but people still do drunk and drive. that aint no solution to problems. For problems it must be more solutions.
Problems like alcohol could be made with reason, im thinking about it.
 
Monday, October 03, 2005
  Rare White Giraffe Photographed

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A researcher in Africa has finally spotted the rare white giraffe that he's been seeking for twelve years, and he's got a photograph to prove it.

Charles Foley, a Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) researcher, first heard rumors of the white giraffe in 1993 when he was working in Tanzania's Tarangire National Park doing research on savanna elephants.

Intrigued, Foley set out to find the animal, but by the next year, the sightings had stopped coming in.

"I assumed it had died, either at the hand of man or best," he said. "I never stopped looking though."

Foley's persistence paid off this summer. While conducting a routine aerial survey of a group of the park's elephants, he spotted a white speck in the distance.

"I looked…blinked…looked again…and it was still there," Foley said.

Foley told his pilot to make another pass over the spot and managed to snap a photograph of the white giraffe just as they flew over the trees.

"The proof is there to see—a mostly white giraffe with small dark blotches on its body," Foley said. "Only the bottom half of its legs were the more traditional brown color."

Foley doubts the giraffe he photographed is the same giraffe sighted in 1993, and that it is probably not a pure albino animal. Albino animals lack the pigments that give their skin color. Rather, Foley thinks the giraffe was probably just lighter than normal.
 
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I Got A Blog And Do Blogging Is Everything I See I Read I Explore I Comment I Spend Lot Of Time On Internet, I Love Google, Reading News, Commenting On Pictures, Money , War Stories, Gas, Animals And All Possible :))