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Timestream Exploration


Deadly Surprise

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Everyone knows that thunderstorms need to be avoided. Yet, to fly in the season we must operate with them around. But even for seasoned pilots Thor may have a few surprises — something that didn't appear in the rulebooks or a situation that looked so similar to previous circumstances that pilots were tempted to try a strategy that always worked before. Here are two accidents in which both aircraft had their windshields broken, with subsequent forced landings. Neither pilot anticipated the hazards that the particular storms held. There is a message here for all pilots, not just those who fly heavy iron.
 
 

The losing hand: tradition and superstition in spaceflight

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by Alan Murphy
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
It may seem incredible that in the world of manned spaceflight, of high-tech mission control and protocols for everything, there is a body of folklore, superstition, and tradition that is followed by each and every crewmember as if performing a sacred rite. Invocation of spirits of the dead, holy water, lucky card games, talismans, ritual words to be uttered at certain times—it reads like the initiation into some secret lodge.
 

MPAA/RIAA-associated group attacks innocent business

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Revision3 tells the tale of how they were attacked and harmed by a corporation called MediaDefender over the Memorial Day weekend.

"It all started with just a simple “hi”. Now “hi” can be the sweetest word in the world, breathlessly whispered into your ear by a long-lost lover, or squealed out by your bouncy toddler at the end of the day. But taken to excess – like by a cranky 3-year old–it gets downright annoying. Now imagine a room full of hyperactive toddlers, hot off of a three hour Juicy-Juice bender, incessantly shrieking “hi” over and over again, and you begin to understand what our poor servers went through this past weekend.

On the internet, computers say hi with a special type of packet, called “SYN”. A conversation between devices typically requires just one short SYN packet exchange, before moving on to larger messages containing real data. And most of the traffic cops on the internet – routers, firewalls and load balancers – are designed to mostly handle those larger messages. So a flood of SYN packets, just like a room full of hyperactive screaming toddlers, can cause all sorts of problems.

For adults, it’s typically an inability to cope, followed either by quickly fleeing the room, or orchestrating a massive Teletubbies intervention. Since they lack both legs and a ready supply of plushies, internet devices usually just shut down."
 

The "Russian Woodpecker"

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NATO reporting name Steel Yard

The Russian Woodpecker was a notorious Soviet signal that could be heard on the shortwave radio bands worldwide between July 1976 and December 1989. It sounded like a sharp, repetitive tapping noise, at 10 Hz, giving rise to the "Woodpecker" name. The random frequency hops disrupted legitimate broadcast, amateur radio, and utility transmissions and resulted in thousands of complaints by many countries worldwide.

The signal was long believed to be that of an over-the-horizon radar (OTH) system. This theory was publicly confirmed after the fall of the Soviet Union, and is now known to be the Duga-3 system, part of the Soviet ABM early-warning network. This was something that NATO military intelligence was well aware of all along, having photographed it and giving it the NATO reporting name Steel Yard.
 


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