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Messages - ka1iic

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 [8] 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ... 61
106
HF Mystery Signals / Re: Mystery signal question
« on: February 12, 2017, 1424 UTC »
Thanks Token.  No problem with the move OM, I knew it was miss placed but I'm playing with this SDR and loving it so, if you might, take that as an excuse :-)

The welding thingie makes total sense when I consider the types of businesses within walking distance of my apartment.  With 2 large auto sales and service outfits and one aircraft equipment outfit and others I haven't seem as of yet.  I gave up on the S&D ideas a year or two ago, now I plan 'workarounds'.

I'll have a few strange ones to post tho.  The sweeper (sounds like a vfo) isn't just one sweep but it appears to be two at the same time.  Hmmm.  And of course OTHR... tons of them and some of then aren't playing by the rules... ;-)

later Sir!
vw

107
HF Mystery Signals / The 'curly' signal... picture no audio
« on: February 11, 2017, 1659 UTC »
Don't know what this is but I have seen it a few times but this is the best pic of it so far...

I call it the curly signal  or hook signal... tell me what everyone else is calling it please so we will all be on the same page...  perhaps :-)

vgw

108
Huh? / Re: Another great FanCo product
« on: February 10, 2017, 2052 UTC »
Twinkle Twat for the ladies... it makes the flys go away... ;-)

109
Now that I think about that pic might work better then Exlax.

Exlax = The best 'do it yourself' kit ever made :-)

110
General Radio Discussion / Re: WWV Broadcast Outages
« on: February 10, 2017, 0016 UTC »
Awwwww man!!! Now I'm going to need to buy a clock...  darn darn darn!

111
Awwwwww.... Josh did you have to post that pic????   Now I'll have to do do do my poo poo poo with the damned lights out!!!

awww mannnnn!

112
http://www.nbcnews.com/mach/space/why-these-scientists-fear-contact-space-aliens-n717271


Why These Scientists Fear Contact With Space Aliens
by REBECCA BOYLE
 Image: An illustration of aliens.
An illustration of aliens. Science Picture Co. / Getty Images
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The more we learn about the cosmos, the more it seems possible that we are not alone. The entire galaxy is teeming with worlds, and we're getting better at listening — so the question, "Is there anybody out there?" is one we may be able to answer soon.

But do we really want to know? If aliens are indeed out there, would they be friendly explorers, or destroyers of worlds? This is a serious question no longer confined to science fiction, because a growing group of astronomers has taken it upon themselves to do more than just listen. Some are advocating for a beacon swept across the galaxy, letting E.T. know we're home, to see if anyone comes calling. Others argue we would be wise to keep Earth to ourselves.

Related: NASA's Bold Plan to Save Earth From Killer Asteroids

"There's a possibility that if we actively message, with the intention of getting the attention of an intelligent civilization, that the civilization we contact would not necessarily have our best interests in mind," says Lucianne Walkowicz, an astrophysicist at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago. "On the other hand, there might be great benefits. It could be something that ends life on Earth, and it might be something that accelerates the ability to live quality lives on Earth. We have no way of knowing."

Like many other astronomers, Walkowicz isn't convinced one way or the other — but she said the global scientific community needs to talk about it.

Stephen Hawking
Internet investor and science philanthropist Yuri Milner shows the Starchip, a microelectronic component spacecraft. The $100 million project is aimed at establishing the feasibility of sending a swarm of tiny spacecraft, each weighing far less than an ounce, to the Alpha Centauri star system. Bebeto Matthews / AP, file
That conversation is likely to heat up soon thanks to the Breakthrough Initiatives, a philanthropic organization dedicated to interstellar outreach that's funded by billionaire Russian tech mogul Yuri Milner. Its Breakthrough Message program would solicit ideas from around the world to compose a message to aliens and figure out how to send it. Outreach for the program may launch as soon as next year, according to Pete Worden, the Breakthrough Initiatives' director.

"We're well aware of the argument, 'Do you send things or not?' There's pretty vigorous opinion on both sides of our advisory panel," Worden says. "But it's a very useful exercise to start thinking about what to respond. What's the context? What best represents the people on Earth? This is an exercise for humanity, not necessarily just about what we would send." Members of the advisory panel have argued that a picture (and the thousand words it may be worth) would be the best message.

Next comes "more of a technical expertise question," Wordon says. "Given that you have an image or images, how do you best encrypt it so it can be received?"

Breakthrough Message will work on those details, including how to transmit the pictures, whether through radio or laser transmitters; how to send it with high fidelity, so it's not rendered unreadable because of interference from the interstellar medium; which wavelengths of light to use, or whether to spread a message across a wide spectrum; how many times to send it, and how often; and myriad other technical concerns.

Related: Space Mining: The Intergalactic Gold Rush Is On

The scientific community continues to debate these questions. For instance, Philip Lubin of the University of California, Santa Barbara, has published research describing a laser array that could conceivably broadcast a signal through the observable universe.

Breakthrough is also working on where to send such a message, Worden adds. The $100 million Breakthrough Listen project is searching for any evidence of life in nearby star systems, which includes exoplanets out to a few hundred light years away.

"If six months from now, we start to see some interesting signals, we'll probably accelerate the Message program," he says.

The fact that there have been no signals yet does pose a conundrum. In a galaxy chock full of worlds, why isn't Earth crawling with alien visitors? The silence amid the presence of such plentiful planets is called the Fermi Paradox, named for the physicist Enrico Fermi, who first asked "Where is everybody?" in 1950.

In the decades since, astronomers have come up with possible explanations ranging from sociology to biological complexity. Aliens might be afraid of us, or consider us unworthy of attention, for instance. Or it may be that aliens communicate in ways that we can't comprehend, so we're just not hearing them. Or maybe aliens lack communication capability of any kind. Of course there's also the possibility that there are no aliens.

Image: Stephen Hawking
Stephen Hawking announces the "Breakthrough Starshot" initiative in New York in 2016. Dennis Van Tine / Star Max/IPx via AP
But those questions don't address the larger one: Whether it's a good idea to find out. Some scientists, most notably Stephen Hawking, are convinced the answer is a firm "No."

"We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn't want to meet," Hawking said in 2010. He has compared meeting aliens to Christopher Columbus meeting Native Americans: "That didn't turn out so well," he said.

Others have warned of catastrophic consequences ripped from the pages of science fiction: Marauding aliens that could follow our message like a homing beacon, and come here to exploit Earth's resources, exploit humans, or even to destroy all life as we know it.

"Any civilization detecting our presence is likely to be technologically very advanced, and may not be disposed to treat us nicely. At the very least, the idea seems morally questionable," physicist Mark Buchanan argued in the journal Nature Physics last fall.

Related: How Computers Are Learning to Predict the Future

Other astronomers think it's worth the risk — and they add, somewhat darkly, that it's too late anyway. We are a loud species, and our messages have been making their way through the cosmos since the dawn of radio.

"If we are in danger of an alien invasion, it's too late," wrote Douglas Vakoch, the director of Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence (METI) International, in a rebuttal last fall in Nature Physics. Vakoch, the most prominent METI proponent, argues that if we don't tell anyone we're here, we could miss out on new technology that could help humanity, or even protect us from other, less friendly aliens.

“If we are in danger of an alien invasion, it’s too late.”
David Grinspoon, an author and astrobiologist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, says he first thought, "'Oh, come on, you've got to be kidding me.' It seems kind of absurd aliens are going to come invade us, steal our precious bodily fluids, breed us like cattle, 'To Serve Man,' " a reference to a 1962 episode of "The Twilight Zone" in which aliens hatch a plan to use humans as a food source.

Originally, Grinspoon thought there would be no harm in setting up a cosmic lighthouse. "But I've listened to the other side, and I think they have a point," he adds. "If you live in a jungle that might be full of hungry lions, do you jump down from your tree and go, 'Yoo-hoo?'"

Many have already tried, albeit some more seriously than others.

In 2008, NASA broadcast the Beatles tune "Across the Universe" toward Polaris, the North Star, commemorating the space agency's 50th birthday, the 45th anniversary of the Deep Space Network, and the 40th anniversary of that song.

Later that year, a tech startup working with Ukraine's space agency beamed pictures and messages to the exoplanet Gliese 581 c. Other, sillier messages to the stars have included a Doritos commercial and a bunch of Craigslist ads.

Last October, the European Space Agency broadcast 3,775 text messages toward Polaris. It's not known to harbor any exoplanets, and even if it did, those messages would take some 425 years to arrive; yet the exercise, conceived by an artist, raised alarm among astronomers. Several prominent scientists, including Walkowicz, signed on to a statement guarding against any future METI efforts until some sort of international consortium could reach agreement.

Play Is an Alien Megastructure Causing this Distant Star's Strange Behavior? Embed
 Is an Alien Megastructure Causing this Distant Star's Strange Behavior? 1:58
Even if we don't send a carefully crafted message, we're already reaching for the stars. The Voyager probe is beyond the solar system in interstellar space, speeding toward a star 17.6 light-years from Earth. Soon, if Milner has his way, we may be sending even more robotic emissaries.

Milner's $100 million Breakthrough Starshot aims to send a fleet of paper-thin space chips to the Alpha Centauri system within a generation's time. Just last fall, astronomers revealed that a potentially rocky, Earth-sized planet orbits Proxima Centauri, a small red dwarf star in that system and the nearest to our own, just four light years away. The chips would use a powerful laser to accelerate to near the speed of light, to cover the distance between the stars in just a few years. A team of scientists and engineers is working on how to build the chips and the laser, according to Worden.

"If we find something interesting, obviously we're going to get a lot more detail if we can visit, and fly by," he says. "Who knows what's possible in 50 years?"

But some time sooner than that, we will need to decide whether to say anything at all. Ultimately, those discussions are important for humanity, Worden, Walkowicz and Grinspoon all say.

"Maybe it's more important that we get our act together on Earth," Grinspoon says. "We are struggling to find a kind of global identity on this planet that will allow us to survive the problems we've created for ourselves. Why not treat this as something that allows us to practice that kind of thinking and action?"

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 NBC News MACH ✔ @NBCNewsMACH
Some scientists want to beam signals from Earth to make contact with alien civilizations. Do you think that’s a good idea?
2:42 PM - 8 Feb 2017
Yes, and say hi for me.
Yikes! They might eat us.
Let scientists decide.
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266 votes • 20 hours left
  7 7 Retweets   6 6 likes
REBECCA BOYLE
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TOPICS SPACE
FIRST PUBLISHED FEB 8 2017, 9:23 AM ET
 NEXT STORY New 'Space Poop' System Could Fly on Orion Deep-Space Mission
MACH
FEB 6 2017, 11:25 AM ET
New ‘Space Poop’ System Could Fly on Orion Deep-Space Mission
by ELIZABETH HOWELL, SPACE.COM
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Image: During the Gemini 4 mission on June 3, 1965, Ed White becomes the first American to conduct a spacewalk.
NASA will announce winners for its Space Poop Challenge Feb. 16. NASA
A new spacesuit system to flush away astronauts' poop will likely fly on the first crewed Orion spacecraft flight, NASA said in an interview with Space.com.

This means that eager innovators could see their waste collection system fly in space between 2021 and 2023 on "Exploration Mission 2," or EM-2, which could bring the astronauts out of low-Earth orbit for the first time in half a century.

NASA recently wrapped up an open "space poop challenge" for designs that improve upon the current spacesuit waste collection garment (sometimes referred to as a diaper). Winners will be announced Feb. 16.

Related: How to Pee in Space (and What to Do If the Toilet Breaks)

Winning designs will be able to flush away poop, urine and menstrual fluid for up to six days without the astronaut needing to use his or her hands. The substances have to be moved away in microgravity (where everything floats, even the gross stuff). Not only that, the new system has to have a design that works for any gender.

"The final waste management garment that is created won't be used nominally, but only in certain emergency situations that require spending long durations in a pressurized suit," Kristyn Johnson, one of the principal investigators for the study, told Space.com in an email. "For shorter durations, during launch and entry, the crew will plan to use an adult diaper as it fits our needs and is something we've used in the past."

Play NASA Unveiled the New Spacesuit for Starliner Astronauts Embed
 NASA Unveiled the New Spacesuit for Starliner Astronauts 1:04
NASA currently uses the Extravehicular Mobility Unit (EMU) for spacewalks on the International Space Station. This spacesuit type was first used in 1981 for the space shuttle program and, among other things, includes a diaper-like waste collection garment so that both males and females can relieve themselves while still inside. The EMU is designed for microgravity work, so NASA is also working on spacesuits that would be better suited for work on the surface of Mars.

"No major design changes have been made to the EMU waste collection garment over the years, as it still fulfils all the necessary requirements," Johnson said.

"We're looking for a solution that will be included on the vehicle for upcoming manned Orion missions," she added. "EM-2 will be the first flight of a long duration waste management device. There is a possibility that it could be a part of a future Mars trip timeline, but we're not focused on that aspect right now."

Astronaut isolation?
While NASA says isolating sick astronauts isn't part of the space poop challenge, Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum curator Cathy Lewis pointed out the new waste collection system could be good for that, too.

During the Gemini program of the 1960s, which tested out key technologies used for the Apollo moon landings between 1969 and 1972, there was a project to determine how to treat astronauts who become ill while wearing spacesuits. This included using an "injection patch" in some of the Gemini suit types for astronauts to receive medications by needle without opening the suit, she told Space.com.

Related: Evolution of the Spacesuit in Pictures

"Going from the injection patch to long term waste recovery is the next step," Lewis said. She added that the Apollo spacesuits had a built-in urine collection device that was hands-free, but it wouldn't work today as the system was designed only for male anatomy. (The first American female astronaut, Sally Ride, flew in space during the shuttle program in 1983.)

"The other limitation," she added, "is they are breathing pure oxygen, so they can't live in a spacesuit longer than 14 days. It's an absolute physiological maximum."

Lewis pointed out that bowel movements in space tend to be messy, even when not wearing a spacesuit. Astronauts are on a constant "low-producing" diet to keep poop to a minimum. Up until the end of the Apollo program, they dealt with feces using a plastic bag that attached to their rear ends. The bags were then stowed for the remainder of the mission.

Play Here's Why SpaceX's Recent Launch was a Big Deal Embed
 Here's Why SpaceX's Recent Launch was a Big Deal 1:29
On the space station today, however, astronauts don't need to go through that process; they instead use suction-operated toilets that don't require gravity to function.

Johnson said that after the contest's winners are announced, there will be a lengthy suit system design review where the agency tests and develops different options, then makes a final decision about which system to fly. As usual, NASA is also hoping to apply some of the technology to earthbound endeavors.

"We're happy to see all of the interest in this challenge," Johnson said. The challenge has been covered in more than 150 media outlets worldwide, according to the challenge website.

"It does have a lot of applicability to patients that may be on extended bed rest or those having to deal with incontinence," she added. "Being able to prevent skin breakdown, reduce odor, and fecal matter containment are just aspects of the challenge that we'd love to get input on. We're more than excited to hear people's concepts.


113
General Radio Discussion / Re: Sad lost
« on: January 25, 2017, 1503 UTC »
Many prayers from my house to yours and deepest sympathy.


114
Hell the radiation from sitting too close to those old TV sets running 15kv or higher voltage must have cast out a few X-rays or some such.

Pick up an old ARRL hand book from the later 1930's and see those pictures of KW sets using compressed cardboard for the front rack panel...  I always wondered what something like that would cast out during a nasty parasitic in the final...

Consider the old days when using a diathermy unit on a person was a good idea....  it still might be but oh well...

If I was a betting person I'd say I have had more MRI's and CT scans than anyone on this list... and look there ain't nothing wrong with me...

Like most of you folks I hear voices in my head when the radio is on or off.  I dream about bigger and better radios and not an ocean island with a tribe of 1,000 or more women and me being the only man.

When the Jehovah Witnesses  come knocking on the door I answer it dressed only in my underpants.  Heck I even do that when the Sheriff comes knocking too...  they don't seem to mind.

When I take down my vertical antenna to clean the joints etc and a neighbor asks me what is that thing I always answer; "it's a penis stretcher do you want to try it?"

So I ask you, has all the assorted RF I have been near affected me in any way at all?  Of course not!

With that I need to go because my third arm is hurting a bit .... must be because it has grown out of the arm pit of my right arm...  evolution... gotta luv it right?

Now where is my medication.... <sigh>

115
General Radio Discussion / Re: New Mediumwave Propagation Project
« on: January 19, 2017, 1917 UTC »
Yes quite nice... but I'd like to get the raw data for day to day propagation for say... 50 or more years

Just to do a math play with them you understand.

I have a gut feeling that, like the weather, the Chaos Theory enters into the equation at some point.

116
You can't keep a man with a dome like that down. I bet he waxes, buffs, and polishes. On FM that'll get you an extra three to four miles of coverage easy.

Yes Pigmeat the reflective qualities of head wax has been almost totally ignored by the current bunch of radio engineers.  Sadly so too, because it works wonders if the person with the waxy head likes to perch himself on top of the antenna as to act like a capacity hat on the radiating system.

This person deserves an Edison Award!

Now where in the heck did I put my medication?

117
Huh? / Re: Al, I've got my cap set on a Geek Goddess....
« on: January 19, 2017, 1859 UTC »
Is this an inner or outer course with deep penetration into the subject or is it a basic 'blubber and drool' course requiring a swim suit?

Just asking...

118
Hey guys thanks for the info on the cia and dod...  now I have yet another reason to hide under my bed... <sigh>

Looks to me that the only safe place to be is inside an icbm launching station...  now where in the hell did I put my security blanket  errrrr.... security pass...  life gets so damned complicated doughnut?

Well back to work on my latest project...  and let me tell you it's hard to build stuff under the workbench...

<  bang crash tinkle tinkle >  ooooppppsss I found that diamond reamer I have been missing for so long... but it looks like another trip to the ER to have it removed from my  errrrr  bottom.... <sigh>

ps:  did you folks hear that the current 'President' of the Philippines called potus Obama a "son of a wh*re" to his face even...  I guess there is a Bob!  All hail Bob and prepare for X-day!!!!!  yea team!

I like Chinese, I like Chinese, they only come up to your knees but they're cute and cuddly and ready to please...

119
Huh? / Re: Power from Tap Water
« on: January 12, 2017, 0412 UTC »
I wonder how much energy can be gotten from 'Piss Boy, Oh piss boy'  ???

Maybe I should ask the TRON about that... me remembers a 4th of July party and a piss-oline bo-mb experiment during said party...  I remember the thing bubbling away but for some reason that is all I remember...  don't even remember going home...  wow... old-timers disease I guess...

120
I seldom use the US warnings for overseas travel.  I do read them but I also use Englands, Canada, etc travels warning on top of the US ones.  Seems to me the US sites report quite late for some Countries warnings... like the Philippines...  as an good example at this time.

The US site doesn't report the Zitka problem like Canada does and that is just one such example.

I like to know ALL of the problems.

It is my belief that the Philippines will have a mild (mild?) civil war within this next year, if that is the case I will bug out to Guam damned quickly.  Just me being me...  and past training helps too also. ;-)  A person can hear a lot of Chinese spy stations in the Philippines I am told...

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