THIS IS A FACT THAT MOST OF US EARN AFTER WE LEARN, BUT IF WE KNOW INSTANTLY HOW TO UTILISE OUR KNOWLEDGE OF EARNING WHILE LEARNING THEN WE CAN SURELY GET INTO A RIDE.
MOST OF US USING THE INTERNNET ARE AWARE TO THE FACT HOW USEFUL OR RATHER HOW ESSENTIAL HAS INTERNET BECOME TO US WITH INCREASING NUMBER OF INTERNET USERS GROWING EXPONETIALLY WITH EACH DAY WE HAVE AS A COMMUNITY REDEFINED COMMUNICATION.IT IS OUR COMMUNITY OR OUR PERFECT SHARING PLACE .
NOW .........
TALKING ABOUT INTERNET SOME OF US REALLY SEEK A FORTUNE THROUGH IT.
WE HEAR STORIES OF PHENOMENAL SUCCESS OF PEOPLE ON INTERNET AND JUMP ON TO THIS SECTION ..PRACTICALLY SPEAKING THAT DOESNOT HAPPEN.
WE HAVE TO DECIDE THE BEST FOR US........REMEMBER THERE IS NO SHORTCUT TO HARDWORK WE MIGHT SEE ONLY THE RESULTS BUT ARENOT AWARE OF THE TOIL BEHIND IT........
WE THINK THERE IS SOME GREAT ACHIEVMENT FOR US BEHIND THIS CYBER WALLS
WHICH ACTUALLY IS BUT THE MOTTO IS BE AT THE RIGHT PLACE AT THE RIGHT TIME...
THE MOST ANNOYING FACTOR IS THAT THE INTERNET IS EVENLY MADE OF GOOD AND BAD FACTORS. FOR EXAMPLE WHEN WE DESPERATELY WANT TO BE FINANCIALLY FREE THEN WE FIND SOME VERY LAVISHING OFFERS AND GORGEOUS DISPLAYS ,BUT WHEN WE SCROOL ENOUGH TIME AND POWER THROUGH IT THEN DURING THE EXHAUSTION PERIOD WE FIND THE FACT THAT WE HAVE TO PAY A HECTIC AMOUNT FOR THE BEGINING OF SERVICE WITH AFTER SO MUCH TESTIMONIALS AND RECEIPTS...SOME OF THEM APPEAR GENUINE WHICH INFACT ARE NOT ...SO SAVE YOUR TIME AND THOGHTS BY JUST GOING TO BOTTOM OF PAGE AND VIEW THE PRICE AND EVERYTHING IS YOUR CHOICE NOW
SOME COMPANY PROVIDE DATA ENTRY JOB ,MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST JOBS, EMAIL POSTING JOBS AND OFFER ELUSIVE PRICES WITH COMFORT OF HOME......
DO PLACE YOURSELF AS A COMPANY HEAD WOULD YOU PREFER SUCH AN HIGH PAYING EMPLOYEE FOR THESE JOBS . AND DO YOU REALLY THINK THAT THESE JOBS ARE DISTRIBUTED AMONG GENERAL PEOPLE. SO DONT FAKE YOURSELF .AND IF YOU HAVE THE GENUINE TALLENT THEN APPLY WITH KNOWN AND REGITERED COMPANIES.
THESE DAYS THERE COMES EMAILS WITH BANK TRANSACTION REQUESTING YOU TO DEPOSIT THERE HARD EARNED MONEY TO YOUR ACCOUNT AND YOU WOULD GET A % INCOME IN THOUSAND DOLLARS.. YOU DECIDE YOUR SELF TO SUBMIT TO YOUR BRAIN OR THE $$$$$$$$$ .
THESE WERE SOME MERE EXAMPLES TO GET YOU AWAY FROM EXHAUSTION.......
THERE ARE A LOT OF INCOME OPPERTUNITIES ON INTERNET JUST BELIEVE YOURSELF AND WORK HARD AND SMART AND YOU WILL SOON FIND YOUR SELF ON YOUR ROAD TO SUCCESS........REMEMBER THE REDRIDING HOOD STORY ..........
$$$$$$$$$DONT LITTER IN THE WAY OR YOU MIGHT LOSE YOUR WAY########
JUST LISTEN TO YOUR BRAIN AND BREAK FREE FROM THE FAKE EVIL OF INTERNET.
ENJOY YOUR PASSION.................
Thursday, November 23, 2006
Thursday, November 02, 2006
In Space, No One Can Hear You Say “Doh!”
Space exploration is an unpredictable business
- no matter how well you plan ahead. Some mistakes cost lives, others cost money, and for some, well, we’ve yet to know the price we’ll have to pay. But hey, it’s not a mistake, it’s a learning experience!
Say Cheese!American astronaut Neil Armstrong commits a huge public relations blunder when he forgets to hand the camera to "Buzz" Aldrin during their historic adventure on the Moon. End result? No still photographs of Neil Armstrong, the first guy to set foot on the moon. When LIFE magazine wanted a cover photograph of Armstrong on the moon, they had to use one of Buzz. But as some consolation, Armstrong was reflected in Aldrin's spacesuit visor!
Miles or Kilometers?
NASA's $125m mission to study the climate on Mars was destroyed in 1999 when a navigation error caused the Mars Climate Orbiter to undershoot its target altitude by 90km (54 miles). Rather than entering Mars' atmosphere at its target altitude, it came instead to within 60km of the planet’s surface. The spacecraft, traveling at speeds of around 16,000kmh, was consequently torn apart in the atmosphere. The minimum survivable altitude was 85km – Dang! Missed by that much! A review board found the navigation error was caused when some of the spacecraft's commands were sent in imperial units rather than metric.
Rough Landing
NASA appoints a mishap investigation board to find out why parachutes on its Genesis mission didn't deploy properly when the space probe returned to Earth in September 2004. It had been collecting samples of the solar wind which scientists on Earth were eager to study. The board found the likely cause was a design error involving deceleration sensors. These switches sense the braking caused by reentry into the atmosphere, initiating the sequence leading to deployment of the parachutes and parafoil. But because the design plans didn't indicate orientation, the components were installed upside down. As a result, the $264 million mission nose-dived into the Utah desert at 300kmh.
Orbiting White Elephant
Overbudget and still not finished, the International Space Station is an easy target for critics who question the usefulness of the orbiting space laboratory. An estimated $100 billion has been spent on the station when it was supposed to cost $8 billion. Part of the reason was Russia's decision to buy into the station, subsidized for mostly political reasons by the U.S. and NASA.
Oops, We Terraformed Mars
A NASA microbiologist confirms the presence of bacteria in the chambers used to test the Mars landers Spirit and Opportunity, now tracking across the Martian landscape. Contaminating other planets is a UN treaty breach and, according to some scientists, the gaffe may have compromised future missions to find life on Mars.
Disaster Averted
A faulty thermostat triggers an explosion that almost claims the lives of US Apollo 13 astronauts Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and Jack Swigert while on the way to the Moon in 1970. The explosion in turn causes an oxygen tank to explode and blast to pieces parts of the command module, rendering the module virtually useless and forcing the crew to take refuge in the lunar module. Designed to carry two men, the module became a lifeboat for four days until their return to Earth. After the mishap, the Apollo program was held up as a technical triumph in the risky business of space exploration, with no lives lost save the three men who died in the Apollo 1 disaster in 1967.
Mirror, Mirror in Space
The Hubble Space Telescope was launched into orbit in 1990 with a flawed mirror while a back-up mirror sat useless in a warehouse. But in 1993 NASA turned Hubble's spherical aberration into a PR triumph when astronauts installed new components to correct the aberration in the primary mirror of Hubble's 2.4m telescope. Since then, Hubble’s images of space have captivated millions of people.
Calling Saturn
NASA engineers realized well into the US-European Cassini-Huygens mission that once the mother ship Cassini had released the European Space Agency Huygens probe in late 2004, the spacecraft could not communicate because engineers had not fully accounted for the Doppler shift in signals from the probe as it fell towards the surface of Saturn's biggest moon Titan. Engineers managed to correct the Doppler shift (by commanding Cassini to release the probe at a higher altitude) so that the Huygens lander came within range of Cassini's receivers. To make matters worse, a software command meant to switch on one of Cassini's receivers was never sent, so Cassini picked up only half the data beamed back by Huygens as it fell into Titan's atmosphere. Luckily, ground based radio telescopes - in a historic global hook-up - managed to pick up the faint signals and salvage the experiment.
A Hyphen, a Hyphen, My Spacecraft for a Hyphen
NASA's Mariner 1 never got to Venus in 1962 because someone omitted a hyphen in the software programming. A post flight review board found the omission in the data-editing program generated incorrect guidance signals for the spacecraft. The omission of the hyphen caused the computer to execute a series of erroneous course corrections that finally threw Mariner 1 off-course. Crash.
Danger on the Ground
In 1964, at a Cape Canaveral assembly unit, a Delta rocket's third-stage motor had just been mated to the Orbiting Solar Observatory spacecraft in preparation for pre-launch tests when suddenly the rocket ignited. The workroom became a furnace of searing rocket exhaust fumes, burning eleven engineers and technicians, three of them fatally. An investigation found static electricity probably ignited the propellant.
Pics courtesy NASA
- no matter how well you plan ahead. Some mistakes cost lives, others cost money, and for some, well, we’ve yet to know the price we’ll have to pay. But hey, it’s not a mistake, it’s a learning experience!
Say Cheese!American astronaut Neil Armstrong commits a huge public relations blunder when he forgets to hand the camera to "Buzz" Aldrin during their historic adventure on the Moon. End result? No still photographs of Neil Armstrong, the first guy to set foot on the moon. When LIFE magazine wanted a cover photograph of Armstrong on the moon, they had to use one of Buzz. But as some consolation, Armstrong was reflected in Aldrin's spacesuit visor!
Miles or Kilometers?
NASA's $125m mission to study the climate on Mars was destroyed in 1999 when a navigation error caused the Mars Climate Orbiter to undershoot its target altitude by 90km (54 miles). Rather than entering Mars' atmosphere at its target altitude, it came instead to within 60km of the planet’s surface. The spacecraft, traveling at speeds of around 16,000kmh, was consequently torn apart in the atmosphere. The minimum survivable altitude was 85km – Dang! Missed by that much! A review board found the navigation error was caused when some of the spacecraft's commands were sent in imperial units rather than metric.
Rough Landing
NASA appoints a mishap investigation board to find out why parachutes on its Genesis mission didn't deploy properly when the space probe returned to Earth in September 2004. It had been collecting samples of the solar wind which scientists on Earth were eager to study. The board found the likely cause was a design error involving deceleration sensors. These switches sense the braking caused by reentry into the atmosphere, initiating the sequence leading to deployment of the parachutes and parafoil. But because the design plans didn't indicate orientation, the components were installed upside down. As a result, the $264 million mission nose-dived into the Utah desert at 300kmh.
Orbiting White Elephant
Overbudget and still not finished, the International Space Station is an easy target for critics who question the usefulness of the orbiting space laboratory. An estimated $100 billion has been spent on the station when it was supposed to cost $8 billion. Part of the reason was Russia's decision to buy into the station, subsidized for mostly political reasons by the U.S. and NASA.
Oops, We Terraformed Mars
A NASA microbiologist confirms the presence of bacteria in the chambers used to test the Mars landers Spirit and Opportunity, now tracking across the Martian landscape. Contaminating other planets is a UN treaty breach and, according to some scientists, the gaffe may have compromised future missions to find life on Mars.
Disaster Averted
A faulty thermostat triggers an explosion that almost claims the lives of US Apollo 13 astronauts Jim Lovell, Fred Haise and Jack Swigert while on the way to the Moon in 1970. The explosion in turn causes an oxygen tank to explode and blast to pieces parts of the command module, rendering the module virtually useless and forcing the crew to take refuge in the lunar module. Designed to carry two men, the module became a lifeboat for four days until their return to Earth. After the mishap, the Apollo program was held up as a technical triumph in the risky business of space exploration, with no lives lost save the three men who died in the Apollo 1 disaster in 1967.
Mirror, Mirror in Space
The Hubble Space Telescope was launched into orbit in 1990 with a flawed mirror while a back-up mirror sat useless in a warehouse. But in 1993 NASA turned Hubble's spherical aberration into a PR triumph when astronauts installed new components to correct the aberration in the primary mirror of Hubble's 2.4m telescope. Since then, Hubble’s images of space have captivated millions of people.
Calling Saturn
NASA engineers realized well into the US-European Cassini-Huygens mission that once the mother ship Cassini had released the European Space Agency Huygens probe in late 2004, the spacecraft could not communicate because engineers had not fully accounted for the Doppler shift in signals from the probe as it fell towards the surface of Saturn's biggest moon Titan. Engineers managed to correct the Doppler shift (by commanding Cassini to release the probe at a higher altitude) so that the Huygens lander came within range of Cassini's receivers. To make matters worse, a software command meant to switch on one of Cassini's receivers was never sent, so Cassini picked up only half the data beamed back by Huygens as it fell into Titan's atmosphere. Luckily, ground based radio telescopes - in a historic global hook-up - managed to pick up the faint signals and salvage the experiment.
A Hyphen, a Hyphen, My Spacecraft for a Hyphen
NASA's Mariner 1 never got to Venus in 1962 because someone omitted a hyphen in the software programming. A post flight review board found the omission in the data-editing program generated incorrect guidance signals for the spacecraft. The omission of the hyphen caused the computer to execute a series of erroneous course corrections that finally threw Mariner 1 off-course. Crash.
Danger on the Ground
In 1964, at a Cape Canaveral assembly unit, a Delta rocket's third-stage motor had just been mated to the Orbiting Solar Observatory spacecraft in preparation for pre-launch tests when suddenly the rocket ignited. The workroom became a furnace of searing rocket exhaust fumes, burning eleven engineers and technicians, three of them fatally. An investigation found static electricity probably ignited the propellant.
Pics courtesy NASA
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