Author Topic: Calling in support ship  (Read 1178 times)

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Offline Carl

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Offline pecenipicek

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Re: Calling in support ship
now, if it only worked...
Skype: vrganjko
Ho, ho, ho, to the bottle I go
to heal my heart and drown my woe!
Rain may fall and wind may blow,
and many miles be still to go,
but under a tall tree I will lie!

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Offline Mars

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Re: Calling in support ship
Link is broken

 

Offline Harbinger of DOOM

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Re: Calling in support ship
no, it isn't.
aldo_14 ~ "The ego has landed."
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Offline Bobboau

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Re: Calling in support ship
it was
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Offline Mars

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Re: Calling in support ship
Cool, now all we need to do is invent subspace drives and fusion reactors.

 

Offline Harbinger of DOOM

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Re: Calling in support ship
roflwaffle.
or we could find an extremely abundant oil source on Mars.............  ;7 ;7
aldo_14 ~ "The ego has landed."
an0n ~ "Wheee, I can spam and no-one will notice!"

 

Offline achtung

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Re: Calling in support ship
link's borked again.
FreeSpaceMods.net | FatHax | ??????
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Formerly known as Swantz

 

Offline Harbinger of DOOM

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Re: Calling in support ship
and AGAIN obviously UNBORKED!
Its your ISPs, folks!
quit posting spam!
aldo_14 ~ "The ego has landed."
an0n ~ "Wheee, I can spam and no-one will notice!"

 

Offline Black Wolf

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Re: Calling in support ship
Well, it's borked for me too. Could someone quote the article?
TWISTED INFINITIES · SECTORGAME· FRONTLINES
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Offline Mefustae

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Re: Calling in support ship
Well, it's borked for me too. Could someone quote the article?
Mef to the rescue!

Quote from: Interesting Article
Invention: In-flight rearming

    * 18:08 25 July 2006
    * NewScientist.com news service
    * Barry Fox

In-flight rearming

The US Air Force's research lab in New York is developing a system will allow fighter planes to be rearmed, as well as refuelled, in mid-flight.

A supply plane, such as a C-141 or C-17 would incorporate a telescopic boom that extends from its rear. This boom would boast its own miniature wings, to give it stability and lift while deployed. And mounted on top would be a looped conveyor belt to move bombs and missiles from the supply plane to the boom's end.

A fighter plane could then fly over the boom until optical sensors confirm that the weapons below are aligned and can be snatched up.

The Air Force's patent application reveals political motivations for the plan. It says that some nations are reluctant to provide access to bases for refuelling and rearming. "The nations of Europe, for example, lying closer as they do to areas of turmoil such as the Middle East, are often reluctant to take hard stances against terrorists who lie within an automobile ride from their borders," it reads.

Read the full in-flight rearming patent application.

Atmospheric broadcasting

The layer of the atmosphere known as the ionosphere, at an altitude of 50 kilometres, is already used as a radio reflector, bouncing low frequency radio signals from one side of the world to the other.

Researchers at Samsung in Korea are now working on a way to turn the ionosphere into an antenna. A patent application filed by the company reveals plans to direct higher frequencies radio signals, at about 1 gigahertz, at the ionosphere, to alter its behaviour.

It describes using an Ultra High Frequency (UHF) radio signal, of a few hundred megahertz, and a carrier signal of around 1 gigahertz. The mix would be amplified and focused by a dish into a spot beam that hits the underside of the ionosphere.

The idea is for the GHz carrier signal to be absorbed by the atmosphere and for the UHF one to alter the temperature of electrons flowing through the ionosphere. This should create an alternating current within the ionosphere that can be modulated at a particular frequency. The target spot should then work as an antenna, radiating the UHF tens of kilometres back down to Earth.

Samsung sees the system as a cheap way to broadcast signals, or communicate over long distances, without needing to launch expensive satellites.

Read the full atmospheric broadcasting patent application.

Firefly fish

Schools of glowing fish could become a tool for monitoring water quality. The US government's National Institute of Environmental Health Services (NIEHS) has been funding research into fish that glow like a firefly when exposed to polluted water, a patent application reveals.

Fireflies light up when an enzyme in their stomach called luciferase oxidises luciferin. The NIEHS hopes to insert luciferase-producing genes from fireflies into the eggs of zebrafish. A related approach has been proposed previously (see Glowing red GM fish to sell in US).

Other genes would then be injected into the zebrafish making them sensitive to a particular pollutant. This could make the fish generate luciferase in the presence of mercury, for example.

The genetically modified fish could then be dangled in a cage into water at risk of pollution. After half an hour they could be removed and dunked into a solution containing luciferin. If they start to glow, it means the water is polluted. The brightness of their glow could even reveal just how bad the pollution is. And the fish should survive the process for re-use later.

Read the full firefly fish patent application.

 

Offline vyper

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Re: Calling in support ship
and AGAIN obviously UNBORKED!
Its your ISPs, folks!
quit posting spam!

The irony of that post burns.

Well, it's borked for me too. Could someone quote the article?
Mef to the rescue!

Quote from: Interesting Article
Invention: In-flight rearming

    * 18:08 25 July 2006
    * NewScientist.com news service
    * Barry Fox

In-flight rearming

The US Air Force's research lab in New York is developing a system will allow fighter planes to be rearmed, as well as refuelled, in mid-flight.

A supply plane, such as a C-141 or C-17 would incorporate a telescopic boom that extends from its rear. This boom would boast its own miniature wings, to give it stability and lift while deployed. And mounted on top would be a looped conveyor belt to move bombs and missiles from the supply plane to the boom's end.

A fighter plane could then fly over the boom until optical sensors confirm that the weapons below are aligned and can be snatched up.

The Air Force's patent application reveals political motivations for the plan. It says that some nations are reluctant to provide access to bases for refuelling and rearming. "The nations of Europe, for example, lying closer as they do to areas of turmoil such as the Middle East, are often reluctant to take hard stances against terrorists who lie within an automobile ride from their borders," it reads.

Read the full in-flight rearming patent application.

Atmospheric broadcasting

The layer of the atmosphere known as the ionosphere, at an altitude of 50 kilometres, is already used as a radio reflector, bouncing low frequency radio signals from one side of the world to the other.

Researchers at Samsung in Korea are now working on a way to turn the ionosphere into an antenna. A patent application filed by the company reveals plans to direct higher frequencies radio signals, at about 1 gigahertz, at the ionosphere, to alter its behaviour.

It describes using an Ultra High Frequency (UHF) radio signal, of a few hundred megahertz, and a carrier signal of around 1 gigahertz. The mix would be amplified and focused by a dish into a spot beam that hits the underside of the ionosphere.

The idea is for the GHz carrier signal to be absorbed by the atmosphere and for the UHF one to alter the temperature of electrons flowing through the ionosphere. This should create an alternating current within the ionosphere that can be modulated at a particular frequency. The target spot should then work as an antenna, radiating the UHF tens of kilometres back down to Earth.

Samsung sees the system as a cheap way to broadcast signals, or communicate over long distances, without needing to launch expensive satellites.

Read the full atmospheric broadcasting patent application.

Firefly fish

Schools of glowing fish could become a tool for monitoring water quality. The US government's National Institute of Environmental Health Services (NIEHS) has been funding research into fish that glow like a firefly when exposed to polluted water, a patent application reveals.

Fireflies light up when an enzyme in their stomach called luciferase oxidises luciferin. The NIEHS hopes to insert luciferase-producing genes from fireflies into the eggs of zebrafish. A related approach has been proposed previously (see Glowing red GM fish to sell in US).

Other genes would then be injected into the zebrafish making them sensitive to a particular pollutant. This could make the fish generate luciferase in the presence of mercury, for example.

The genetically modified fish could then be dangled in a cage into water at risk of pollution. After half an hour they could be removed and dunked into a solution containing luciferin. If they start to glow, it means the water is polluted. The brightness of their glow could even reveal just how bad the pollution is. And the fish should survive the process for re-use later.

Read the full firefly fish patent application.

That fish story is very interesting. But won't animal cruelty groups have something to say?

"But you live, you learn.  Unless you die.  Then you're ****ed." - aldo14

 

Offline pecenipicek

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Re: Calling in support ship
That fish story is very interesting. But won't animal cruelty groups have something to say?
Throw them to the fish and see if the fish will listen to them?
Skype: vrganjko
Ho, ho, ho, to the bottle I go
to heal my heart and drown my woe!
Rain may fall and wind may blow,
and many miles be still to go,
but under a tall tree I will lie!

The Apocalypse Project needs YOU! - recruiting info thread.

 

Offline Getter Robo G

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Re: Calling in support ship
Use Mr Limpet for a more detailed polution analysis: "We'll I'll be dipped in Sheeit George! I better be getting hazzard pay for this!"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Incredible_Mr._Limpet

 :lol:

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