Sunday, February 19, 2012

Video: Fire at BP Oil Refinery in Washington State

A large fire broke out at the BP Cherry Point oil refinery in northwestern Washington State. It is the largest oil refinery in the state and the fourth largest on the West Coast. The refinery can produce up to 230,000 barrels of fuel a day and has more...

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/46435581/

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Monday, February 6, 2012

SARKIT@#$%NY Giants vs New England live online free streaming ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]All guys are invited to watch NY Giants vs New England live streaming HD video online internet TV On NFL on your pc/laptop. Hallo man Don't mistake to start watching NY Giants vs New England live streaming ofthis NFL ...

Source: http://forums.shopify.com/categories/1/posts/72154

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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Meet Spark, the ?200 slate packing Linux-based Plasma Active UX

As we all know, the Kindle Fire's hot, Apple's selling bushels of iPads, and there's plenty of Honeycomb slates out there for you to choose from, but what if you want a tablet free from corporate influence? Enter Spark, a seven-inch slate that comes running the Plasma Active UX, an open-source OS based on Linux kernel, KDE's multi-platform Plasma environment and a dash of Qt for good measure. Now, this isn't just a consumer tablet -- Spark's aimed at "those who love writing great software... using the typical Linux tools" -- but it will offer access to ebooks from Project Gutenberg, plus Qt and QML apps, too. It's powered by a 1GHz AMLogic ARM processor, has a Mali-400 GPU and comes with 512MB of RAM, 4GB of internal storage, plus an SD card slot for future expansion. Modest underpinnings, to be sure, but for €200 ($262), you can't expect quad core silicon, right? Naturally, order and delivery dates remain a mystery, but plenty of other info about the open-source slate can be found at the source below.

Meet Spark, the ?200 slate packing Linux-based Plasma Active UX originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Feb 2012 04:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Ars Technica  |  sourceAaron J. Siego  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/02/01/meet-spark-the-200-slate-packing-linux-based-plasma-active-ux/

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Free Android Wallpaper of the day - All Aboard!

Free Android WallpaperToday's Free Android Wallpaper comes to us from Tony Bag O' Donuts, who says he took this train shot with an Olympus DSLR with a 14-54mm f2.8 lens at the Straburg railroad in Pennslyvania.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/Fg4KpLKDZ3o/story01.htm

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Russia blames Mars probe failure on space radiation

MOSCOW | Tue Jan 31, 2012 2:09pm EST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia blamed radiation on Tuesday for a computer glitch that doomed its Mars moon mission, but space industry experts cast doubt on the findings of an investigation into the crash of what was to be Moscow's first deep space mission in two decades.

The Phobos-Grunt spacecraft was stranded in Earth orbit after launch in November and crashed into the Pacific Ocean this month, one of five recent botched Russian launches.

Space agency chief Vladimir Popovkin also said Moscow would postpone the next U.S.-Russian manned mission to the International Space Station by one month from March over technical problems during testing of the Soyuz spacecraft.

The delay, which officials said was due to glitches with the Soyuz descent capsule, is likely to fuel concerns over relying solely on Russia to take astronauts into orbit.

"The most likely reason, in the opinion of the commission, was the local impact of heavily charged space particles that led to a failure in the memory of the main onboard computer in the second stage of flight," Popovkin told Russian news agencies in Voronezh, a town 450 km (280 miles) south of Moscow.

A burst of space radiation caused the onboard computers to reboot and go into standby mode, he said.

Popovkin said foreign-made counterfeit or defective microchips were partly to blame for the failure of the $165-million spacecraft, designed to retrieve soil samples from the Martian moon Phobos.

The budget for Russia's space program, he said, would be 150-200 billion roubles ($5-6.6 billion) a year until 2030.

EXPERTS CAST DOUBT

Popovkin had earlier hinted that foreign sabotage might be behind the failure, in an apparent attempt to deflect blame.

Experts said Moscow was blaming external factors for the loss of its ambitious Mars mission to distract from chronic failings with its once-pioneering industry.

"You can fantasize about everything. This is one of a number of possible reasons but one that is convenient for many people," Alexander Zakharov, the mission's lead scientist, told Reuters.

"Even if this was the true reason, which we can't completely rule out because it does happen, then there is some kind of problem with the flight system or the programming, which were not designed to guard against this (space radiation)."

State RIA news agency cited an industry source as saying it was "simply absurd" that Phobos-Grunt had not been made to withstand cosmic rays on its two-year interplanetary mission.

"They did not make a vacuum cleaner but a spacecraft that is intended to fly in the aggressive environment of outer space. They couldn't have failed to take this into account," the source said.

Another space industry source said potentially damaging bursts of radiation were highly unlikely in low-Earth orbit, where hundreds of satellites circle within the protective bubble of the planet's magnetic field.

"This usually happens with interplanetary satellites around Mars or Venus, in other words, in deep space," the source told RIA. "This phenomenon occurs every one or two years on average, but it is very unlikely to see it in low-Earth orbit."

Earlier Tuesday, the head of Russia's manned space program, Alexei Krasnov, said flaws with the hermetic sealing on the Soyuz TMA-04M re-entry were found during testing.

The mission, which was due to launch on March 30, will be delayed to allow time for a new capsule to be readied, likely delaying other missions as well.

(Reporting By Alissa de Carbonnel; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/--YTe-ca_Ws/us-russia-spacecraft-idUSTRE80U1YC20120131

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