Antares Rocket Explosion from the Launch Pad

Video from 4 cameras that were on the launch pad to capture the Antares launch… with one of the cameras right in the middle of the fireball.

On the 28th October the Antares rocket launched to the ISS carrying a Cygnus resupply spaceship. Just a few seconds after liftoff there was a failure in the first stage booster causing the rocket to lose power and head back to the launch pad leaving a fiery trail on it’s descent. On hitting the ground the rocket exploded in a huge fireball engulfing the launch pad and surrounding areas.

This video is a compilation of 4 cameras that were on the launch pad to capture the launch. The video runs through each at full speed before slowing down to give you a slow motion of the explosion. One of the cameras was right in the middle of the fireball, with chunks of broken rocket showering down around it.

Credit to:
AmericaSpace and ZeroG News

Mike Barrett AmericaSpace.com
Peter Greenwood Zero-G News
Jeff Seibert AmericaSpace.com
Elliot Severn Zero-G News
Matthew Travis Zero-G News

www.Americaspace.com
www.zerognews.com

Antares rocket explosion from the launch pad

Headache? Your Brain May Have a Tapeworm

A series of brain scans revealed a rare tapeworm had been living inside a man’s brain for four years – causing headaches and scrambling his sense of smell.

brain tapeworm

Doctors in England were having a hard time figuring out what was giving a Chinese man headaches and seizures and causing disturbances in his sense of smell. After the 50-year-old man tested negative for various diseases, a series of brain scans revealed the cause of the strange symptoms — a tapeworm had been living inside the man’s brain for four years.

The parasite measured about one centimeter in length and had tunneled five centimeters through the man’s brain before surgeons removed it in 2012, The Guardian reported. The man is now reportedly cured of the infection.

Researchers identified the parasite as a Spirometra erinaceieuropaei, a rare species of tapeworm normally found in China, South Korea, Japan and Thailand. Only 300 cases of infection by the parasite have been reported in humans.

Scientists believe that Spirometra erinaceieuropaei may be contracted by eating crustaceans and reptiles that harbor it, or by using a Chinese remedy for sore eyes that is made from frogs.

“We did not expect to see an infection of this kind in the U.K., but global travel means that unfamiliar parasites do sometimes appear,” Dr. Effrossyni Gkrania-Klotsas, a researcher at the department of infectious disease at Addenbrooke’s NHS Trust in Cambridge, said in a written statement.

Dr. Effrossyni Gkrania-Klotsas and her colleagues used a sample of the worm to sequence the creature’s entire genome for the first time. The results of this research were published online on Nov. 21 in the journal Genome Biology.

The researchers say the newly sequenced genome, which is 10 times bigger than the genome of any other tapeworm, will shed light on how the parasite worms its way into humans and other host animals–and help point the way to new drug treatments, according to the researchers.

“By comparing the genome to other tapeworms we can see that certain gene families are expanded,” lead researcher Dr. Hayley Bennett, a researcher at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Hixton, England, said in a written statement. “These possibly underpin this worm’s success in a large variety of host species.”

Most parasitic tapeworms that infect humans and animals–including Spirometra erinaceieuropaei–live in the intestines, cause few symptoms, and are easy to treat. However, in rare cases, including this one, the worms can make their way to the brain.

10 Facts That Will Make You Lose Faith in Humanity

Ridiculous arrests, absurd court cases, and tragic deaths all feature in out list of the 10 stories that will make you lose all faith in humanity.

Ridiculous arrests, absurd court cases, and tragic deaths all feature in out list of the 10 stories that will make you lose all faith in humanity. Try not to facepalm too hard..

Fear not we have made another video that will restore your faith! Watch it here.. 10 Facts That Will Restore Your Faith in Humanity –https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VXL1…

Music= Losing Hope by John DeFaria
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alltime10s humanity

CARIBOU – Sun

CARIBOU – Sun

Official video for “Sun” by Caribou, taken from the album Swim.

Swim is the record Caribou mastermind Dan Snaith has wanted to bring to fruition for as long as he has been making music. A mathematics scholar and an ingenious multi-instrumentalist/composer, he surprised critics and fans with 2007’s Andorra, a brilliant, electro-tinged pop breakthrough with a timeless grace that made most year-end ‘Best of’ lists and won Canada’s prestigious Polaris Music Prize. After the startling infectiousness of Andorra, Swim is a more complex, multi-layered affair–rife with fascinating rhythms, instrumentation, and vocals (including those of Born Ruffians’ Luke Lalonde, who appears on ‘Jamelia’)–that becomes more alluring with each listen.

Director: Simon Owens
Producer: Rachel Dargavel at Steel Mill Pictures
D.O.P: Sam Brown
Wardrobe: Mimi Milburn Foster
Hair and Make-up: Cate Hall
Editor: James Rose at Cut and Run
Grade: Andrew Daniel at Molinare

 

CARIBOU - Sun

Secret to Imagination and Reality in Brain Unlocked

Researchers discovered that when humans daydream, the imagination triggers the brain’s circuitry to flow in the opposite direction of perceiving reality.

imagination

Aiming to discern discrete neural circuits, researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have tracked electrical activity in the brains of people who alternately imagined scenes or watched videos.

“A really important problem in brain research is understanding how different parts of the brain are functionally connected. What areas are interacting? What is the direction of communication?” says Barry Van Veen, a UW-Madison professor of electrical and computer engineering. “We know that the brain does not function as a set of independent areas, but as a network of specialized areas that collaborate.”

Van Veen, along with Giulio Tononi, a UW-Madison psychiatry professor and neuroscientist, Daniela Dentico, a scientist at UW-Madison’s Waisman Center, and collaborators from the University of Liege in Belgium, published results recently in the journal NeuroImage. Their work could lead to the development of new tools to help Tononi untangle what happens in the brain during sleep and dreaming, while Van Veen hopes to apply the study’s new methods to understand how the brain uses networks to encode short-term memory.

During imagination, the researchers found an increase in the flow of information from the parietal lobe of the brain to the occipital lobe — from a higher-order region that combines inputs from several of the senses out to a lower-order region.

In contrast, visual information taken in by the eyes tends to flow from the occipital lobe — which makes up much of the brain’s visual cortex — “up” to the parietal lobe.

“There seems to be a lot in our brains and animal brains that is directional, that neural signals move in a particular direction, then stop, and start somewhere else,” says. “I think this is really a new theme that had not been explored.”

The researchers approached the study as an opportunity to test the power of electroencephalography (EEG) — which uses sensors on the scalp to measure underlying electrical activity — to discriminate between different parts of the brain’s network.

Brains are rarely quiet, though, and EEG tends to record plenty of activity not necessarily related to a particular process researchers want to study.

To zero in on a set of target circuits, the researchers asked their subjects to watch short video clips before trying to replay the action from memory in their heads. Others were asked to imagine traveling on a magic bicycle — focusing on the details of shapes, colors and textures — before watching a short video of silent nature scenes.

Using an algorithm Van Veen developed to parse the detailed EEG data, the researchers were able to compile strong evidence of the directional flow of information.

“We were very interested in seeing if our signal-processing methods were sensitive enough to discriminate between these conditions,” says Van Veen, whose work is supported by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering. “These types of demonstrations are important for gaining confidence in new tools.”

10 Bizarre Humans Behaviors Can’t Be Explained

Humans are strange creatures. Discover the 10 most bizarre human behaviors that happen without reason and can’t be explained.

What a strange creature you are! (HD – 11/2014)

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FYI…
Why do we sneeze?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/art…
http://www.urmc.rochester.edu/encyclo…
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/03…

Why do we itch?
http://science.time.com/2013/05/23/so…
http://www.iflscience.com/brain/why-d…
http://health.howstuffworks.com/skin-…

Why do we blush?
http://science.time.com/2013/05/23/so…
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to…

Why do we hiccup?
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/artic…
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/273…

Why do we blink?
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/3076704/t/w…
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science…
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12…

Why do we laugh?
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/cu…
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/3077386/ns/…
http://www.scientificamerican.com/art…

Why do we yawn?
http://online.wsj.com/articles/the-re…
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140…

Why do we cry?
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-sty…
http://news.discovery.com/animals/zoo…

Why do we kiss?
http://scienceline.org/2006/10/ask-fi…
http://www.scientificamerican.com/art…

Why do we dream?
http://science.howstuffworks.com/life…
http://io9.com/10-theories-that-expla…
http://www.iflscience.com/brain/why-d…

Images courtesy of Tina Franklin, Orrling and Tomer S, Anne-Lise Heinrichs, Holley And Chris Melton, Björn Rixman, MarLeah Cole, Pedro Ribeiro Simões, Walt Stoneburner, Robert Couse-Baker, symmetry_mind, Karrie Nodalo, Creative Commons.

Music credits :
“Get to the top”, by AlumoMusic

hybrid human behaviors

Ritualz – Pisces

Ritualz – Pisces

by Marta Giec
Mashup multi video composition based on a such old PC/Amiga/C64/PS games like:
1. Space Wracked 1991
2. Alone In The Dark 1992
3. Shadow Of The Beast II 1990
4. Zombie Apocalypse II 1994
5. Zombie Apocalypse 1992
6. The Beast Within, A Gabriel Knight Mystery 1995
7. The Clock Tower 1995
8. Shivers 1995
9. Harvester 1996
10. Extase 1990
11. I Have No Mouth, And I Must Scream 1995
12. Ripper 1996
13. Voyeur 1994
14. Personal Nightmare 1989
15. Phantasmagoria 1995
16. LSD Dream Emulator 1998
17. The 7th Guest 1993
18. Ugh! 1992
19. Apidya 1992
20. Carmageddon 1997
Demos:
21. Artillery C64 Demo
22. Demolicious C64 Demo
and film:
23. Phenomena 1985 a film by Dario Argento

Ritualz - Pisces

New Clue Provided in Mystery of Unsolved “Kryptos”

American artist Jim Sanborn has provided a new hint towards solving the “Kryptos” cryptographic puzzle resting on the grounds of the CIA headquarters.

kryptos

In 1989, the year the Berlin Wall began to fall, American artist Jim Sanborn was busy working on his Kryptos sculpture, a cryptographic puzzle wrapped in a riddle that he created for the CIA’s headquarters and that has been driving amateur and professional cryptographers mad ever since.

To honor the 25th anniversary of the Wall’s demise and the artist’s 69th birthday this year, Sanborn has decided to reveal a new clue to help solve his iconic and enigmatic artwork. It’s only the second hint he’s released since the sculpture was unveiled in 1990 and may finally help unlock the fourth and final section of the encrypted sculpture, which frustrated sleuths have been struggling to crack for more than two decades.

The 12-foot-high, verdigrised copper, granite and wood sculpture on the grounds of the CIA complex in Langley, Virginia, contains four encrypted messages carved out of the metal, three of which were solved years ago. The fourth is composed of just 97 letters, but its brevity belies its strength. Even the NSA, whose master crackers were the first to decipher other parts of the work, gave up on cracking it long ago. So four years ago, concerned that he might not live to see the mystery of Kryptos resolved, Sanborn released a clue to help things along, revealing that six of the last 97 letters when decrypted spell the word “Berlin”—a revelation that many took to be a reference to the Berlin Wall.

To that clue today, he’s adding the next word in the sequence—“clock”—that may or may not throw a wrench in this theory. Now the Kryptos sleuths just have to unscramble the remaining 86 characters to find out.

Sanborn hass always been fascinated by Berlin’s many clocks but the Berlin Clock in particular has intrigued him the most. The clock, also known as the Berlin Uhr or Set Theory Clock, was designed in the 1970s by inventor and tinkerer Dieter Binninger. It displays the time through illuminated colored blocks rather than numbers and requires the viewer to calculate the time based on a complex scheme.

set-theory-clock-berlin-clock

“Clock” could easily refer instead to a method devised by a Polish mathematician and cryptologist during World War II to crack Germany’s Enigma ciphers—a method that was expanded on by Alan Turing and his team at Bletchley Park who are credited with ultimately cracking Enigma.

[Read more at The NYTimes]

10 Mysterious Creatures That Could Be Real

Thousands of people claim to have seen these strange beasts but their existence remains hotly disputed by scientists and biologists.

10 Mysterious Creatures That Could Be Real

Thousands of people claim to have seen these strange beasts but their existence remains hotly disputed by scientists and biologists. They’re 10 mysterious creatures that could be real. Release the kraken!

——————

Video Endboard Links:

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——————

Music = Deathwise by Christian Marsac

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Video Endboard Links:

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alltime10s creatures

Shabazz Palaces – An Echo from the Hosts

Shabazz Palaces – An Echo from the Hosts that Profess Infinitum

Portraits of sword and molotov-wielding assassins

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Shabazz Palaces - An Echo from the Hosts that Profess Infinitum