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experimenting with "time linking"@ uTube

(58 posts)
  1. Greatest Potential
    Member

    Posted 1 month ago #
  2. muggins
    Member

    Posted 1 month ago #
  3. Greatest Potential
    Member

    Posted 1 month ago #
  4. Greatest Potential
    Member

    Posted 1 month ago #
  5. muggins
    Member

    Experimenting with BBcode and seeing if the time thing works

    Alrighty then.

    Posted 1 month ago #
  6. Greatest Potential
    Member



    naughty nurses on duty

    Posted 1 month ago #
  7. muggins
    Member

    Posted 1 month ago #
  8. Greatest Potential
    Member

    <>Koopa ~ turtle artist
    these x skulls rawk!
    <>
    cut the mullet

    art of shade

    Posted 1 month ago #
  9. Greatest Potential
    Member


    Blue Öyster Cult song featured in car commercial

    Posted 1 month ago #
  10. Greatest Potential
    Member

    ______________________

    Posted 1 month ago #
  11. Greatest Potential
    Member

    lol@tazmanian devil decal
    SUV hydroplane

    Posted 1 month ago #
  12. Greatest Potential
    Member


    Gorby gets high

    Posted 1 month ago #
  13. Greatest Potential
    Member

    Edarem is like the coolest dude on YT and he takes good care of his doggies

    Posted 1 month ago #
  14. muggins
    Member

    re: edarem

    He ought t'stay off the 4 lane hwy on his moped...and fix that missin' toof.
    I don't want to seem too critical, but that rear view mirror has issues, too.

    Posted 1 month ago #
  15. Greatest Potential
    Member

    There's a Carl's Jr. star on the building there but he says he's going to... Hardee's

    Carl's Jr.
    Paris car wash vid commercial
    Marina HotForWords Portobello Mushroom Burger commercial


    ___________________

    Just out!
    Sneak peek vids for Paris Hilton products

    Posted 1 month ago #
  16. muggins
    Member

    I could be wrong, but Paris Hilton's so-called "hair brush" has altogether the wrong shape for a hair brush. It's looks like a refurbished sex toy. Where do you put the batteries?

    Posted 1 month ago #
  17. Greatest Potential
    Member

    Paris posted some of her childhood pics on facebook
    I think that's a princess magic wand of sorts

    With a wave of the wand ~ presto! Engelbert Humperdinck shows up in a pink limo

    I'm going to take her advice & enjoy the ride

    Posted 1 month ago #
  18. muggins
    Member

    I was about to type up that Engelbert was the German Tom Jones...but I thought I should check on that @ Wiki, because Englebert might be Austrian. It turns out he's a Limey who changed his name from Arnold Dorsey (after 15 years in showbiz) because his agent thought Engelbert Humperdinck would be catchy. I'm going to print out your pic of Englebert and take it to my barber and tell him, I want an Englebert Humperdinck hair style.

    Posted 1 month ago #
  19. Greatest Potential
    Member

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  20. muggins
    Member

    Do I sense a message in that set, Greatest Potential? Bye-the-bye, I have a strong attraction to the woman in the first clip. K-Rina, I think is her handle...it's not clear what her name is. I'm suspecting I have some kind of fetish-tic attraction to Russian women, and have placed myself under self-administered 24 hour observation.
    (Does all this mean I no longer have this thing for women with big butts?) I wonder if she ever stops talking. Mein Fuhrer, I can walk !

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  21. Greatest Potential
    Member

    No message in that set. It's Criss. Romanian, Transylvanian, always some beef about nothing. Oh well. I enjoy watching her rants. If she keeps at her skillz one day she will be a fantastic belly dancer.

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  22. Greatest Potential
    Member

    I suggest with salt lamps you go and purchase a new lamp, not used

    subduded lamp with warm tones like in the image there

    then you have to consider where you'll put that

    close to where your bed is is good, like on a nightstand

    a medium sized lamp is about right for a starter lamp

    about once a month you'll want to recharge your lamp by placing it in some sort of clear glass container outside in the sunlight for at least 8-10 hours before using it again

    take care of the lamp like you would a crystal

    this talk about himalayan lamps and persian lamps, etc. actually there is some truth to these things, cept it's not that whoopdee. like I think lavender & rose quartz is good for certain ppl.

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  23. muggins
    Member

    re: Criss. Romanian? My guess was off, but it could have been worse.

    re: Salt lamps. I was curious so I watched a couple of clips on these
    lamps. One lady claimed they give off ions. Ions? What kind of ions? At any rate, they are nice looking.
    Do you have one, G8est Potential, and what do you notice about them?

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  24. Greatest Potential
    Member

    There was this place I would go to often where I would go to aquire gemstones and herbs and such and at this store they had quite an elaborate display of fountains and statues and plant flora and salt lamps around. I noticed the relaxing atmosphere in the store and so I decided to get a lamp and try it out for myself.

    I'd say there's something to those, a way to perhaps create some tranquility into your living space. This talk about negative ions and emf (electromagnetic fluctuation) though, seems overly scientific to me. It would seem to me that if you wanted to reduce the amount of so-called harmful radiation within the electrical field of your work area (for instance) you could just start unplugging things and opt for silence.

    Crystals in general give off a certain type of energy so I would be careful before going out and getting a salt lamp. Some people get reactions to these lamps. If you use a salt lamp for a few hours and then notice you are getting headaches after using that it then it may not be the thing for you.

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  25. Greatest Potential
    Member


    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  26. muggins
    Member

    Rock Lamps, waterfalls and ions

    I did a little more reading up on ions, and I'm unconvinced that that either salt lamps or waterfalls produce ions. There are artificial ion generators, and scientists are researching the effects of ions in treating depression and seasonal affective disorder (SAD)...no pun intended. The dude who wrote the Wiki article on this topic used electronic ion generators that actually produce ions, but nobody has proved that they produce enough to ease a depression. But there might be something to the combination of the light, ions, and in the case of waterfalls, auditory stimulous, to "take the edge off". Maybe I'll get a rock lamp for Xmas, and a waterfall too, and see what they do.
    I can't splurge on them now because I just blew my spends for a couple of months.

    And that was a good piano clip in your last set.

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  27. Greatest Potential
    Member

    Ivan Seeking Mar8-04, 11:05 PM
    Originally posted by zoobyshoe
    I take it the critical angle depends on the medium? Any idea what the critical angle for the ionosphere might be?

    Here is some information:
    ionosphere
    The atmospheric shell characterized by a high ion density. Its base is at about 70 or 80 kilometers and it extends to an indefinite height.
    The ionosphere is classically subdivided into layers. Each layer, except the D-layer, is supposedly characterized by a more or less regular maximum of electron density. The D-layer exists only in the daytime. It is not strictly a layer at all, since it does not exhibit a peak of electron or ion density, starting at about 70 to 80 kilometers and merging with the bottom of the E-layer. The lowest clearly defined layer is the E-layer, occurring between 100 and 120 kilometers. The F1-layer and F2-layer occur in the general region between 150 and 300 kilometers, the F2-layer being always present and having the higher electron density. The existence of a G-layer has been suggested, but is questionable. The portions of the ionosphere in which these layers tend to form are known as ionosphere in which these layers tend to form are known as ionospheric regions, as in D-region, E-region, F-region, G-region. Sudden increases in ionization are referred to as sporadic, as in sporadic E or sporadic D. The above assumption that the ionosphere is stratified in the vertical into discrete layers is currently under serious question. Some evidence supports a belief that ion clouds are the basic elements of the ionosphere. Other investigations appear to reveal the ionosphere as a generally ionized region characterized by more or less random fluctuations of electron density.

    http://roland.lerc.nasa.gov/~dglover/dictionary/i.html

    Dispersion of Pulses Propagated Through the Ionosphere

    The ionosphere acts as a dispersive medium to certain bands of radio frequencies, with the result that radio waves passing through the ionosphere are bent as a function of frequency, much as light is bent when passing through a prism. However, in the ionosphere, as opposed to a prism, the index of refraction is an inverse function of frequency, causing low frequencies to be bent more than higher ones. A particular case of interest is the dispersion encountered by a pulsed waveform, whose Fourier content is spread over a broad band of frequencies. Two cases illustrate this dispersion::

    Sub-Ionospheric Propagation (Ground-to-Ground), whereby waves are transmitted from a point on the earth's surface and are received at another point on the earth's surface as a result of frequency-dependent ionospheric refraction. This phenomenon occurs principally in the HF band between about 3 and 30 MHz.

    Trans-Ionospheric Propagation (Ground-to-Satellite), whereby waves are transmitted from a point on the earth's surface and are received by a satellite located above the ionosphere, while undergoing frequency-dependent refraction during their passage through the ionosphere. This phenomenon occurs principally in the VHF band between about 30 and 300 MHz, with the effect lessening with increasing frequency.

    These effects are illustrated below using a ground-based omnidirectional transmitter and both ground-based and satellite-based receivers (for clarity, both the curvature of the earth and the ray paths are considerably exaggerated):...continued

    http://www.skylondaworks.com/sc_dispr.htm

    In the ionosphere, this variation is due to the varying electron content. In the neutral atmosphere, the index of refraction of electromagnetic waves is a function of temperature, pressure, and water content. The largest effect is due to the pressure change as a function of altitude in the atmosphere, producing a variation in index of refraction that is primarily vertical, but this effect is relatively easily modeled. continued with a technical explanation of some related concepts]

    http://kreiz.unice.fr/magic/THEORY/theory.html

    This is a good link.
    http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/navy/docs/es310/propagat/Propagat.htm

    I didn't spot a good number, but unless something funny happens, the index of refraction for the ionosphere must be between 1 and 1.0003 [between that of air and a pure vacuum]. This implies that the critical angle is a glancing angle...say 89 degrees from the perpendicular.

    Not sure I totally follow. You are saying that all cases of reflection/refraction are in fact absorption and re-emission, as opposed to authentic bouncing like a rubber ball off a wall?

    Correct. No bouncing balls in the quantum realm. I think one correct statement is that the atoms in the media absorb the incident photons, but if the energy of the photons isn't correct, the configuration is unstable and the atom immediately [almost immediately...say in 10-31 seconds] releases a photon [not the same photon as far as we know] of equal energy in order to compensate. This is what actually slows the speed of light in that media as well. In between the atoms, photons travel at Cvac and follow a geodesic as determined by the local gravity; ie. they travel in "straight lines" less the effects of gravity.

    source: internet

    of note: some of those links don't work.
    also, not stating anything here,
    simply providing info


    Ion propulsion


    gyroscopes


    Giant Tesla Coils + Mad Electro-Scientists: Omega Recoil

    Posted 3 weeks ago #
  28. muggins
    Member

    Posted 3 weeks ago #

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