Don’t think it’s what you’re afraid of
come in you know what’s been made up
Hold you tight, words have a new sound
reading the signs that just seep out
You’ve got to leave it

“Don’t you go evade me now
Come see what you’ve done”

Each of your reasons has broken
call it off once you have spoken
Filled to the top then split open
repeating over and over
Now you have to leave it

“Don’t you go evade me now
Come see what you’ve done
I’ve been thinking lately how
all these feelings won”

Updating always fun




                           
Winter Light by hammockmusic
Photo

                           

Winter Light by hammockmusic

Photo

Euro 2012 final draw. We’re in the pool of death. But we have a change to fuck with the Sjermanz. So that makes it a okay.

Euro 2012 final draw. We’re in the pool of death. But we have a change to fuck with the Sjermanz. So that makes it a okay.

Wendy and pretty Lisa

Sometimes there is a moment in you’re life that a things of you past comes to life. This time the river lead me to Waterfall, a Wendy And Lisa song. Way back when in the days when I was young, I liked the music of these two Girls. Been to a concert in Vredenburg Utrecht. At the time they had only released 2 albums.

So I would have been around 21 years of age. Time sure flies is an appropriate thing to say at this point. The show was great.

Now I’m reminiscing while listening to their songs

The orignal music vid

                                 

Source: allemande

European high court rejects Internet traffic filtering as violation of fundamental rights

While Thanksgiving is an American holiday, internet service providers and users in Europe had reason to give thanks yesterday. The highest court in the European Union overturned a ruling that would have forced a Belgian ISP to preemptively filter Internet traffic to prevent the unauthorized sharing of music files.

The European Court of Justice overturned a ruling by a Belgian court in a suit brought by the Belgian Society of Authors, Composers and Publishers (SABAM). SABAM filed it against Scarlet Extended over alleged illegal peer-to-peer filesharing by Scarlet’s customers. That 2007 ruling required Scarlet to filter traffic on its network, so that it could identify and block illegal peer to peer filesharing traffic. It was based on an interpretation of Belgian copyright laws that put the burden of enforcement on ISPs. 

Scarlet had appealed, focusing on European data privacy laws, saying that the ruling would in effect force the company to monitor all Internet traffic passing through its network—which would, aside from being technically unfeasible, violate the privacy of its customers. The case has been closely watched by Internet companies in Europe, which were concerned that they could be faced with similar requirements.

In its ruling, The Court of Justice upheld the right of copyright holders to file injunctions against intermediaries over illegal file sharing. But it struck down the provisions of the Belgian court ruling that required filtering, finding that the filtering provisions violated European Union e-commerce laws, and infringed on the rights of Scarlet and its customers. The broad monitoring required to filter file-sharing would “infringe the fundamental rights of [Scarlet’s] customers, namely their right to protection of their personal data and their right to receive or impart information, which are rights safeguarded by the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU,” the court panel wrote.

Source: Arstechnica

Source: b-r-u-t-a-l-i-t-y

Tractor beams on full! First steps towards light-based tractor beams

The tubes of the Internet saw some extra traffic recently when NASA announced funding for a team of researchers to study tractor beams. That’s right, tractor beams, as in Star Trek and Star Wars (and countless other science fiction settings). The goal here isn’t to grab spacecraft (at least, not at first); instead, NASA wants to use the technology to collect particle samples for analysis on rovers and spacecraft.

This may sound like science fiction, but a few days after this announcement, a pair of papers appeared inPhysical Review Letters, discussing the theory behind two approaches the NASA team plans to study (the papers’ authors appear to be unaffiliated with that team).

In general, shining light on something will cause it to move away from you as the photons are either absorbed or scattered—the conservation of momentum requires that the lost momentum is compensated by the object gaining some momentum in the photon’s original direction of movement. This is great if you want to push objects away, but how do you pull them toward you? By manipulating the light beams in different ways, you can force photons to scatter off the object in a way that causes motion in the opposite direction. The two papers present different methods of doing just this.

The first paper, from a team at the University of Central Florida, approaches this problem by using a light beam that consists of multiple plane-wave components with different directions. In practical terms, this means you focus a bunch of laser beams on the objects, ensuring that they hit from angles that differ from the direction you want the object to move. The beams can then be adjusted based on the size and shape of the specific object to optimize the resulting force.

They demonstrated this technique numerically, modeling it using a cluster of 160 tiny, randomly distributed spheres and 24 beams of light, all with the same angle away from the axis of motion (84°). Initially, the “tractor beam” actually applied a force that pushed the object away but, by adjusting the polarization and phase of the various light beams, they generated a force that pulled the spheres backwards, as desired.

The authors of this paper emphasize that, while their work focused on moving objects towards the source of the lasers (which would be important for sample collection, like the NASA study wants), you could use the same principle to move objects in any direction, providing a full range of translation and rotation movements—a true tractor beam.

The second paper, this time from people at the Technical University of Denmark, National University of Singapore, and Singapore Agency for Science, Technology and Research, tried a different approach using a single Bessel beam. This special type of light beam, named after the Bessel function that describes its amplitude distribution, doesn’t diffract and spread out as it propagates.

Focusing just any Bessel beam on an object won’t pull it backwards; it needs to be a nonparaxial Bessel beam. This means that the partial plane-wave components of the beam form large angles with the beam’s axis (which is also the axis of desired movement). Effectively, this is just like the approach of the first team, but all the different sources are contained in a single beam of light. As before, these large angles cause photons to scatter away from the source and the resulting momentum loss moves the object backwards. Unfortunately, creating a nonparaxial Bessel beam is easier said than done, and hasn’t yet been demonstrated experimentally.

The second group also talks about adjusting the properties of their tractor beam to attract certain types of particles while repelling others, which could be important when collecting samples for analysis. The first approach might be closer to an actual demonstration, however, since the underlying technology involves lasers and a sophisticated control system. Either way, these are some of the first, solid steps towards capturingCorellian corvettes and smuggling freighters.

Source: Arstechnica

TRANSCRIPT
__________________

Greetings fellow citizens of the World.
We are Anonymous.

We are currently being censored by a powerful and oppressive government. While we protest against tyranny, they continue to censor and arrest us. Even in the United States, the land of the Free, we are now slaves to the 1%.

In November 2011, the United States Government forced Twitter to reveal personal information without court order. Also, the United States government is secretly tracking individuals with GPS devices. By far, the worst offences of 2011 to the American people are The Protect IP Act and SOPA bills. They alone will enable the 1% to censor the Internet and silence our Right To Free Speech.

Operation Blackout humbly ask you to protest against these social injustices! Support your Occupy movements! Martin Luther King said, “Our lives begin to end, the day we become silent about things that matter.” We Anonymous do not choose to become the way we are. As Nelson Mandela said, “When a man is denied the right to live the life he believes in, he has no choice but to become an outlaw.”

November 30th is your day to act. Your help to the movement will be decisive. Your mission is to help us spread the word on Operation Blackout. Make as many twitter accounts as you can and spread the message, which will be available in the description. With that message, and a trending hashtag with it, we can spread the word. Operation Blackout will prevail despite the government’s disapproval. Operation Blackout, engaged.

We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive.
We do not forget.
To the United States government, you should’ve expected us.

Icons to use for your twitter picture here:

http://pastebin.com/iMc8Cbzi

Operation Blackout TWITTERSTORM, ENGAGED!


November 30th 12:00PM EST, BEGIN THE ATTACK MESSAGE:

[#opblackout will not be silenced. We, #Anonymous, shall prevail!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czY-dZQsd-k #(TRENDING_HASHTAG)]

Siri can tell you what planes fly per your head.

Siri can tell you what planes fly per your head.

About

Me,Elementalboy

eLEmENTal pArTIcLEs

Astronaut (went to the moon before Neil Armstrong), Nerdfighter, time traveler and Atheist.

Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing.

Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the universe exists, why we exist.

It is not necessary to invoke God to light the blue touch paper and set the universe going."

Blogging since Friday, May 27, 2005 9:49 PM

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