
Our world from the ISS Image locations (latitude and longitude) are approximate, based on (1) description in tweet text, (2) general "look" of geography, and (3) "reasonable fit" in Google Earth &/or ArcMap. The routine is: (1) read tweet from @Cmdr_Hadfield, @AstroMarshburn, or related to ISS Missions 34 & 35; (2) determine lat-long; (3) fill-in a Google Drive spreadsheet with date, tweet description (& date-time Atlantic), tweet source, tweet URL (same as clicking the short URL in the tweet), photo URL (by right-clicking the photo, one can "copy image URL"), and lat-long; (4) when this map opens, it reads the spreadsheet and displays a click-able satellite icon at each lat-long. Using the map: A similar map for Missions 36-37 with @AstroKarenN and @astroluca tweets is bit.ly/karenluca (new window). To see subsets of these presented in story-map format, try bit.ly/CanSpace and bit.ly/ListSpace (new window). Like books?
Ray Harryhausen Profile Ray Harryhausen stands alongside Willis O'Brien as one of the greatest stop-motion animators creating fantastic films that have amazed audiences since he began his work. Few film-makers have inspired the awe and admiration of an audience as Ray Harryhausen has. His films contains visual images that are burned into the minds of everyone who has seen them. One has only to mention the skeleton battles in either THE SEVENTH VOYAGE OF SINBAD or JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS and you can visualize the scene in you mind. It is this power that has made Ray Harryhausen something of a cult figure and in a world sadly in need of heroes like Jason and Sinbad, Mr. Harryhausen's films remain a beacon to a brighter time when heroes were truly good and villains were truly evil. Ray was born to Fred and Martha Harryhausen in Los Angeles. Ray's aunt was a nurse to Sid Grauman's mother. Ray's Yearbook Entry Ray Bradbury, Ray Harryhausen, Forrest J Ackerman Jupiter Sketch Still of the Jupiter Creature & Ship
Comment empêcher Google de vous pister en ligne ? - francetv info - Pale Moon Votre lieu de connexion, le nom de votre navigateur, votre sexe, votre âge et même la vitesse à laquelle vous lisez... Lorsque vous parcourez une page web, "Big Brother", alias Google, sait potentiellement tout de vous. Les dernières révélations du site 01net, publiées vendredi 8 mai, ne devraient rien arranger. Non content de connaître vos moindres mouvements sur la toile, le géant de Mountain View est désormais capable d'estimer la légalité du contenu de vos mails. Bonne nouvelle : il est peut-être encore temps de disparaître des écrans radars. Prenez la mesure du problème Si vous possédez un compte Google, il existe un moyen simple de vérifier ce que la firme sait de vous. En vous rendant sur votre tableau de bord Google, l'envie de rire devrait commencer à passer. Si vous l'avez activé, votre profil Google + trahit votre date de naissance, le nom de vos contacts et la nature de vos relations avec eux. Cette existence, vous pouvez même la consommer sur place ou "à emporter".
Jonah Lehrer plagiarism in Wired.com: An investigation into plagiarism, quotes, and factual inaccuracies Photo by Thos Robinson/Getty Images for World Science Festival. For the past three months, Jonah Lehrer, science journalist, author of three books, and (former) New Yorker staff writer has been under siege. In mid-June, he was accused of recycling his old work and publishing it as new. Before Lehrer joined The New Yorker, he was one of the premier bloggers at Wired.com; the site still boasts several hundred blog posts he wrote for his Frontal Cortex blog. That's where I came in. My task was not to decide whether Lehrer got everything right—every journalist makes mistakes and misinterprets things—but to determine whether he recycled, fabricated, plagiarized, or otherwise breached journalistic ethics. I soon came to the conclusion that he had. Wired.com decided not to publish my full analysis of my findings, but given the importance and prominence of the Lehrer case, Slate stepped in to fill the gap. Journalistic rules about press releases are murky.
Durak Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Le Durak est un jeu de cartes d'origine russe se jouant généralement de deux à six joueurs, avec un jeu de 36 cartes (jeu de 32 cartes plus les 6). But du jeu[modifier | modifier le code] Le but de chaque joueur est de se débarrasser le plus rapidement possible de la totalité de ses cartes. Ordre des cartes[modifier | modifier le code] L'ordre des cartes est le suivant, de la plus faible à la plus forte : 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Valet, Dame, Roi, As. Déroulement d'une partie[modifier | modifier le code] Au début de la première partie, il convient de désigner un Durak afin de savoir qui joue en premier et qui distribue. Le Durak distribue 6 cartes à chaque joueur, les cartes en trop formant la pioche. La partie se déroule de la façon suivante : Le premier attaquant est le joueur situé à la droite du Durak, le Durak étant le premier défenseur. Liens externes[modifier | modifier le code] Durak Portail des jeux
Les utilisateurs d'Internet Explorer moins intelligents... ou victimes d'un hoax (màj) Un si beau troll, trop beau pour être vrai ? De sérieux soupçons pèsent sur « l'étude » (voir plus bas) affirmant que les utilisateurs d'Internet Explorer étaient moins intelligents que les autres internautes. Après qu'elle a connu un très important relai médiatique, il apparait que le soi-disant cabinet qui en est à l'origine n'a qu'une existence toute relative. Si le canular est avéré, ses auteurs auront réussi à attirer l'attention de centaines de médias en ligne (dont Clubic, qui s'en trouve bien marri), parmi lesquels de vénérables institutions telles que la BBC britannique... laquelle lève aujourd'hui le voile sur un certain nombre d'éléments qui poussent à sérieusement douter, si ce n'est rejeter en bloc, les fondements de cette étude pour le moins insolite affirmant qu'on pouvait observer des différences de QI entre utilisateurs de navigateurs différents. Publication initiale, 29 juillet, 17h45 :
lour pictures revealed of London blitz from Nazi bombers in World War II By Daily Mail Reporter Updated: 17:42 GMT, 20 July 2011 For many, photographs from the World War II have only been seen in grainy black and white. But now, new colour images have emerged that show the full horror of the destruction inflicted by Nazi bombings across London. The powerful images were released to mark the 70th anniversary of the launch of Winston Churchill's 'V for Victory' campaign on July 19, 1941. Clearing up: Workers remove rubble from a building decimated in a heavy German air raid during the Blitz. Wallpaper inside the shattered bedrooms can even be seen in the gap left in the row of houses Standing tall: The spire of the Central Criminal Court - better known as the Old Bailey - rises defiantly while all around it buildings have become jagged shells in a landscape scarred by the relentless German bombings On the night of October 14 1940, a bomb penetrated the road and exploded in Balham Underground station, killing 68 people.
Talhotblond Talhotblond is a 2009 documentary, detailing an Internet love triangle which resulted in a real life homicide, in a case called the "Internet Chatroom Murder." Thomas Montgomery (screen name: marinesniper), a 47-year-old married man, pleaded guilty to murdering his co-worker, 22-year-old Brian Barrett (screen name: beefcake). The two men were involved in a love triangle with "Jessi," an 18 year old girl with the screen name 'talhotblond'. While both men knew each other from work, neither had ever met "Jessi" in person. The film's TV rights were sold to MSNBC. Awards[edit] Winner of the Seattle International Film Festival's 2009 Best Documentary Grand Jury Award[3][4][5] and a finalist at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam.[6] Lifetime movie[edit] References[edit] External links[edit]