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Osteen Said What?
Osteen Said What?Santa arriving via helicopter?!love-concert11-mangga.AVISpiders In SpaceEarly Science Photography: X-Raysfallout 3: the two best armor's in the game: xbox360Pygmy TarsiersJapanese Car Design Looks to the FutureBlue Moon of Kentucky - Old Joe ClarkCommodore 64 - 25th Anniversary Celebration
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Produced by the Museum of Idolatry at http://www.alittleleaven.com This is video of Joel Osteen's brand of scripture twisting and the prosperity gospel. [Mas+detalle]
Por  : alittleleaven    Duración: 03:29 Min    Vistos: 731464    Publicada: 4/30/2007    
081130 2008 loveconcertoon opening 2008러브콘서툰 자선 파티 이벤트 한국 만화가 웹툰 korean Comic Artist 漫畵家 party tonight 홍대 museum [Mas+detalle]
Por  : yunahana    Duración: 01:57 Min    Vistos: ""    Publicada: 11/30/2008    
Orb weavers launched into space aboard the Shuttle STS-126, en route to the International Space Station. Sent by Boulder-based BioServe Space Technologies, part of the University of Colorado College of Engineering, the arachnids will serve as a classroom tool for teaching fifth though ninth graders about the effects of zero gravity. "A lot of spider behavior is based on gravity -- hanging upside down, dropping down on a drag line, even web building," says Stefanie Countryman, Payload Mission Manager for BioServe, which has sent arachnids aloft before on the shuttle Columbia. "At first weightlessness is a shock and they float around a bit, but they get used to it pretty quickly and start tethering their silk to the walls to crawl across, rather than dropping down," she said. Planning for the spider's comfort involved Dr. Paula Cushing, Department Chair and Curator of Invertebrate Zoology at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, who provided insight into the web spinners' needs. Cushing, recalling the horrors of domestic airline flights, vowed to ensure that these spiders get both food and drink during their trip. "In the 1970s they sent a spider up to Skylab, but didn't send food or water," she said, "then they couldn't tell if the web was built differently because of zero gravity or because the spider was dehydrated and starving." As a result, fruit flies will be included for meals, but because they're not protein-rich, they've been fed dry dog food to plump them up. "They're the biggest fruit flies I've ever seen," says Countryman, quickly explaining that hundreds of school children won't log on to see their spider getting pummeled by its food. "The spider still wins every time," she said. Cushing and Countryman will be on hand at the launch in Florida to decide which of five spiders have the right stuff for cosmic cruising. "We'll assess their condition and behavior, but the ones who build webs most consistently will be the ones that go," said Cushing. Only one will fly first-class, with room to weave. The back-up spider flies coach, in a tiny cargo hold barely large enough for the folding tray table. The entire habitat is in a three-level containment system designed to prevent the spider's escape. But any science fiction fan knows it might fail, resulting in the spider getting loose, exposed to gamma-rays, taking over the ship, and flying off to join the Sith lords (readers, this is unlikely - to date no spider has been accepted into the Sith lord fraternity). NASA Web site profiles of the astronauts don't include the plucky arachnonauts yet, no doubt due to the last-minute decision on which of the five will fly. But the seven-person crew is ready to welcome their new teammates and have been trained on how to care for them. "The astronauts just love educating kids and find it exciting to have something alive up there with them," said Countryman. Participating classrooms will be given orb weavers of their own, and via the 24-hour Web cam tracking the arachnid's activity, will compare their spider's web and behavior to that of the ones on the shuttle. [Mas+detalle]
Por  : BrunoTheQuestionable    Duración: 02:31 Min    Vistos: 26570    Publicada: 11/17/2008    
Corey Keller, curator of an exhibit at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art about early science photography, leads you through a brief, heavily-illustrated tour of the social history of x-rays. [Mas+detalle]
Por  : wired    Duración: 01:36 Min    Vistos: 8416    Publicada: 11/17/2008    
"just as the title says" t-51b power armor tesla armor xbox 360 t-51b power armor location: the location of the t-51 power armor is in "Fort Constantine" and you get it from a quest in the "museum of history" witch is the gouls hidout. there is a goul that will give you a quest to go and kill 4 or 5 people in the head and bring their keys back as proof of their deaths. you don't bring them back because you need all the keys to get in Fort Constantine tesla armor location: you get it from the main quest line at "raven rock" in the enclave base or if you play long enough the enclave send drop ships and their is usually tesla armor on one of them remember this is only my opinon on the best armors. it all depends on what your focusing on as a character that will determin the best armor [Mas+detalle]
Por  : trixster6d9    Duración: 00:55 Min    Vistos: 43534    Publicada: 11/5/2008    
A team led by a Texas A&M University anthropologist has discovered a group of primates not seen alive in 85 years. These furry gremlin-looking creatures are about the size of a small mouse and weighing less than 2 ounces, have not been observed since they were last collected for a museum in 1921. [Mas+detalle]
Por  : AggiesTalk    Duración: 00:33 Min    Vistos: 115447    Publicada: 11/18/2008    
Japan Car - now on exhibit at the London Science Museum is not your average automobile show. Spectators should be prepared for an innovative encounter with the future of lifestyle and transport. When their proposal for a design museum in Tokyo was turned down, architect Shigeru Ban and designer Kenya Hara came up with the idea of a yearly show which would change in theme and location. The exhibit Japan Car is a fresh statement of how the Japanese consider the interior of the vehicle as a living space. [Shigeru Ban, Architect and Show Creator]: "Cars in Europe are designed as pure transportation means to go from one place to one place as quickly as possible. Instead, we just try to enjoy inside so that is the very different aspect of how car inside, also the space itself and design as a reflection of lifestyle." The Toyota Bb, for example, was designed as a private hideout with an 11-speaker sound system and front seat cushions that can be lowered out of sight from outside viewers. Proving that good things come in small packages, Japanese car manufacturers are also paying attention to environment with climate-conscious hybrids that are more like integrated systems than individual cells. Shigeru says that efficient public transportation in Japan is driving car sales down and that carmakers need to come up with special cars to meet the challenge. [Shigeru Ban, Architect and Show Creator]: "I think it's a very important moment for Japanese manufacturers. The competition is much stronger and also the design of the car is the same everywhere so this character and also the globalization of many different car companies in different countries working together, but unless we have some special character, I think it's very difficult to progress further." Using shoes as an analogy, Shigeru says of the future, "The car is becoming more like shoes, depending on the occasion, they use different types of cars." [Mas+detalle]
Por  : NTDTV    Duración: 02:12 Min    Vistos: ""    Publicada: 12/1/2008    
The finale of the Monroe-Style Mandolin Camp Faculty Concert at the International Bluegrass Music Museum in Owensboro, Kentucky on September 8, 2007. Frank Wakefield, Roland White, Mike Compton, David Long, Skip Gorman and Tom Ewing (on guitar) and Mike Lawing on fiddle. The Second Annual Monroe Style Mandolin Camp was held at the International Bluegrass Music Museum in Owensboro, Kentucky September 7- 9, 2007. [Mas+detalle]
Por  : FDRW    Duración: 08:29 Min    Vistos: 6204    Publicada: 9/16/2007    
[Recorded Dec 10, 2007] The Commodore 64 was an 8-bit home computer released by Commodore International in August, 1982, and during it's lifetime (between 1982 and 1994), sales totaled close to 17 million units, making it the best-selling single personal computer model of all time. Approximately 10,000 commercial software titles were developed for the Commodore 64 including development tools, office applications, and games. The C64 made an impressive debut at the 1982 Winter Consumer Electronics Show, as recalled by Production Engineer David A. Ziembicki: All we saw at our booth were Atari people with their mouths dropping open, saying, 'How can you do that for $595?' The term personal computer was a common term in the early 80's and was used as early as 1972 to characterize Xerox PARC's Alto. During this era of microcomputer innovation, the market was dominated by the IBM Personal Computer (IBM PC), the Commodore 64, the Atari 8-bit family, the Apple II, Tandy Corporation's TRS-80s, and various CP/M machines. Although the history of the Commodore is rich, the histories of the people and the companies that developed these early personal computers are also critical to the personal productivity tools and business solutions we often take for granted in our daily lives. This panel discussion is a celebration of the Commodore 64 computer and how it spawned a tremendous market for home, small business, distributed and networked technology. [Mas+detalle]
Por  : ComputerHistory    Duración: 32:16 Min    Vistos: 38821    Publicada: 12/14/2007    
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