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    Debt Consolidation To Stop Foreclosure
    Debt consolidation can put a stop to foreclosure if you choose the right timing and you do not keep postponing the decision waiting from some magic solution. Foreclosure can be stopped; it just has to be your choice. Debt Consolidation does not necessarily imply a new loan. Debt consolidation loans are only one form of debt consolidation. There are other options to be considered too. The first approach a debt consolidation agency will try, implies contacting your creditors and exploring the possibility of negotiating your debt so as to obtain better and more affordable terms on your current loans. What Kind Of Debt Is Subject to Foreclosure Foreclosure is a legal proceeding by which the debtor is deprived from the rights over a property due to the failure to comply with the repayment of a debt. Thus, only defaults on secured debts can carry foreclosure as a consequence. While often foreclosure is used as synonym of repossession, truth is that foreclosure is the legal process explained above and repossession is the consequence of that process. It is the actual execution of the judge’s decision.Home loans, home equity loans and car loans (when the vehicle is used as collateral) are the main examples of debts that can imply a foreclosure if you default on the loan. Skipping one payment or paying late will not necessarily imply foreclosure though. A continued failure to repay the loan is necessary to trigger the legal action. Legislation varies but usually more than one missed payment is needed.How Debt Consolidation S
    s that had been entombed by Luis Pasteur some 70 years previously). Reports detailed in the scientific press tell of the revival of micro-organisms from more ancient sources. Roger Levesque of the Laval University, Quebec, drilled a 130 metre long ice core from Ellesmere island in the Canadian Arctic that had been preserved at a temperature of approximately -20C. By sterilising the outside of the core and then melting the inner ice in sterile conditions, he was able to revive bacteria from up to 7,000 years ago. Upon analysis of their DNA they were found to be related to, but significantly different from, bacteria living today providing further support for his claims. Researchers at the California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo (U.S.A.), have gone one step further. In isolating a stingless bee from fossilised amber resin dating back at least 25 million years, they claim to have produced bacterial cultures from the contents of its stomach. These claims are again supported by the DNA sequence characteristics and we must face the possibility that some living organisms at least are able to survive in a dormant state for extremely long periods of time.

    Do these reports sound ridiculous? It is perhaps one thing to have revived microorganisms but to consider that larger creatures can survive in a state of suspended animation is surely entering the realms of folklore and the supernatural. James Clegg at the University of California has discovered that brine shrimps, when in unfavorable conditions, are able to form cysts that even when kept at room temperature are able to be revived after a number of years. During this period of dormancy there is no detectable metabolism. Energy is not used in this dormant state, which has led to scientists asking whether we need to re-examine our present definition of life. The use of energy has, until now, been deemed to be one of the fundamental properties of living things in order that they can maintain their structure, but the brine shrimps have shown us that we should not presume such things and that it is possible for some organisms to temporarily (over a period of years) suspend what we unders

    Fear Of One's Sexuality
    If you have ever been sexually abused or harassed it's likely that you still carry the traumatic scars of such an incident. Apart from the common symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder that accompany such unfortunate events is something that may be even more significant and debilitating than first recognized. This is the feelings one is left with about their own sexuality.These feelings may take on some of the following forms: feelings of shame about one's sexuality or about one's self as a sexual being, fear of one's sexual thoughts and feelings, a tendency to diminish or cover up one's sexuality (i.e. poor hygiene, obesity, other habits that sabotage relationships) and others.Turning against one's sexuality has spiritual consequences that I would like to discuss here because it is akin to annihilating what I call the "Core Spiritual Self". The Core Spiritual Self is the essence of who one is as a human and spiritual energy. This energy is essentially who one is, i.e. the Life Energy that is in that body of yours and which is responsible for its proper functioning.It has been my experience, over the last 15 years helping individuals with trauma heal, that when an individual is traumatized their energy field becomes encoded with a negative and parasitic energy that does several things.First, it stays lodged in the individual's energy field and by doing so depletes it of energy. This energy is the individual's life energy.Second, it tends to disorganize what I have called the Divine Holographic Energy Field (see my a
    I was watching a meteor shower at quarter to midnight the other night. It's been a while since I've seen shooting stars but even last night's modest display was quite something. I'm always amazed at how many people have never even seen one solitary silver streak - let alone a true meteor storm and to be honest its been too long since I stood under a star lit sky. It set me thinking.

    There are conditions required for life. I am not talking about there being sufficient oxygen or water in the atmosphere for life to begin for then only life with which we are familiar is considered. The complexity necessary for life is only found in certain conditions (energetically speaking). Too hot and molecules do not sustain sufficient complexity as chemical arrangements are constantly broken down by the energy present in the surrounding environment, therefore the complexity of life can never emerge. Too cold and reactions are too slow for this complexity to come about, the energy for sustained chemical reaction being unavailable even if considered over billions of years. In the middle of these two extremes is a wide band of conditions where time and energy can combine to provide the complexity and chemical evolution necessary for life. Perhaps there are cold planets where living things reflect their ancestry in their slow, if even perceptible movements. Other environments may exist that have allowed life to emerge where energy is plentiful in the close orbits around stars; where forms may come and go fleetingly (compared to ours), their perpetuation ensured by a rapid and efficient reproductive cycle. Other chemical mixtures may provide other chemical evolutionary trees different from the carbon based chemistry found on Earth, where silicon or some such material has provided the structure for alien life. It may be removed from life on Earth but in the vastness of the universe it seems likely that life has arisen. It is even probable that the place is teeming. We should appreciate that the universe is without boundaries and even in our local organisation of stars the numbers are so great that they lie on the outer reaches of our imaginations. It has been put forward by Professor Fred Hoyle that life may have evolved in outer-space in comets as they undergo cycles of warming and freezing in their stellar orbits but let us consider planets a likely starting place. Until the mid 1990s no planets had been detected outside of our local system and there were those who believed that planets were scarce. With refinements in our technology, the first was detected by its influence on its host star and this has opened the flood gates for such discoveries that are now relatively common. Although we now have evidence, those who previously thought that planets were scarce in the universe have been shown to be comprehensively wrong, which comes as no surprise to many. I would suggest the same will hold true for life.

    There has been a noticeable change in attitude in the popular scientific press towards the possibility of extraterrestrial life. Quite what has been responsible for such a major shift is not easy to define but exobiology is not a field that is discussed in whispers anymore. We now know that there are micro-organisms that do not rely on energy from the sun to survive but we have known this for some time. These unusual creatures are found near thermal vents on the ocean floor or in thermal pools in cave systems and recently whole ecosystems containing many unique species have been discovered in subterranean systems in several locations on our planet. It is possible that isolated subterranean pools subjected to the warmth of volcanic energy could provide the potential for life on planets and satellites even beyond the range of the warmth from their own suns. Recently is has been proposed that moons themselves could sustain life for in our own solar system. Jupiter's moon, Europa, has caught the imagination of the scientific community resulting in open speculation on the possibility of life within an ocean beneath its icy covering, warmed by volcanic activity. The scope for life has, it seems, widened considerably in our eyes even though in the real world it has always been the same. It is our perspective that has changed, for we have let our bias of old, concerning our central and unique role in existence, slip away to be replaced by a more rational, logical view of the universe. It would not be surprising if our perspective were to change even more.

    Now we are no longer embarrassed to consider life elsewhere in the cosmos can we consider contact with aliens? One of the points to consider in assessing the likelihood of encountering beings from another planet is how long a civilisation needs to exist before it is capable of communicating across the reaches of space. Homo sapiens has been around for a little while but only in the last one hundred years have we achieved this level of technology. How long we will be around for is another question that is open to debate for we have had the capability of destroying our planet for only a short period of time. Will we live together and manage the planet's resources effectively or will our civilisation fall, bought down by our inability to work as one, divided by greed and misunderstanding? Pessimists would argue that if we are typical of advanced life forms then the period of existence when advanced species have the ability to send signals across space to other civilisations, will be very short. If they are right then the universe could indeed be teeming with life as one civilisation after another burns brightly for a moment before surrendering its ability to contact life on other planets through their own poor evolutionary performance. The result would be their isolation, missing the overlap with the time of another ascending civilisation and thus the opportunity for contact with truly alien life forms.

    We have been monitoring the skies for evidence of alien civilisation for some years. Clearly space is not filled with the detectable emissions from alien technology for we would have stumbled across them by now. More likely, if detectable civilisations exist, then contact will come via a weak signal from one particular direction in the sky and this act of detection may come with improvements in our receiving technology. It may simply be that we are isolated by distance even though on a cosmological scale life is indeed common in the universe. At the present time it may not be here in our own neighbourhood but it may well have been . Running water may once have been common place on Mars as the river beds, flood plains and delta-like features suggest and where there is (was) water then the probability of life must increase. It is possible as some sort of cosmological irony that it may arise somewhere close to our planet after all trace of human civilisation has gone for we may be isolated in time. We have no way of knowing but it seems that in time and in space we are probably not alone.

    Could these civilisations reach us? What are the possibilities with respect to travelling across the vast distances of space. There are several options open to potential space travellers:

    1. Create a method of propulsion that can enable interstellar travel within the lifetime of an organism.

    2. Create a craft that can travel interstellar distances and place the pilots in stasis during the excessive time periods incurred in sub-light speed travel.

    3. Create self sustaining colonies to man interstellar craft such that although one generation may not complete the journey, their space-borne progeny would finish the odyssey.

    Before the invention of aeroplanes it was considered by many that flight was impossible. We may be in a similar situation today with respect to manned deep space travel but until it is achieved we cannot know if this is possible (catch 22!). We do know that time travel is theoretically possible and we may perhaps harness this in the future but only time will tell. Such speculation may irritate some parties and so we should take a more conservative approach to predicting our future. Already we have the potential for self supporting colonies and the technology for interstellar travel at sub-light speeds and so point number three is almost a reality.

    What of point two? Bacteria are hardy organisms. When the going gets tough some species are able to form structures known as spores that are long lived and highly resistant in unfavourable conditions. Even in recent times scientists have locked away these spores and revived them after periods of tens of years (in 1956 scientists revived spores that had been entombed by Luis Pasteur some 70 years previously). Reports detailed in the scientific press tell of the revival of micro-organisms from more ancient sources. Roger Levesque of the Laval University, Quebec, drilled a 130 metre long ice core from Ellesmere island in the Canadian Arctic that had been preserved at a temperature of approximately -20C. By sterilising the outside of the core and then melting the inner ice in sterile conditions, he was able to revive bacteria from up to 7,000 years ago. Upon analysis of their DNA they were found to be related to, but significantly different from, bacteria living today providing further support for his claims. Researchers at the California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo (U.S.A.), have gone one step further. In isolating a stingless bee from fossilised amber resin dating back at least 25 million years, they claim to have produced bacterial cultures from the contents of its stomach. These claims are again supported by the DNA sequence characteristics and we must face the possibility that some living organisms at least are able to survive in a dormant state for extremely long periods of time.

    Do these reports sound ridiculous? It is perhaps one thing to have revived microorganisms but to consider that larger creatures can survive in a state of suspended animation is surely entering the realms of folklore and the supernatural. James Clegg at the University of California has discovered that brine shrimps, when in unfavorable conditions, are able to form cysts that even when kept at room temperature are able to be revived after a number of years. During this period of dormancy there is no detectable metabolism. Energy is not used in this dormant state, which has led to scientists asking whether we need to re-examine our present definition of life. The use of energy has, until now, been deemed to be one of the fundamental properties of living things in order that they can maintain their structure, but the brine shrimps have shown us that we should not presume such things and that it is possible for some organisms to temporarily (over a period of years) suspend what we underst

    Spring Clean Your Spending Habits
    Ah, spring is in the air. A crisp breeze is blowing, the sun is shining again, and flowers are just beginning to blossom. This is typically a time when we open our windows, sweep the dust out from under the sofa and clear away the clutter that we hoarded over the winter months.Spring cleaning is underway!In addition to your physical surroundings, there may be another area to spring clean that you haven’t yet thought of.At the end of the day, we could all use a little extra money. How about taking a bit of time to spring clean your spending habits?The exchange of money for goods and services actually was quite an ingenious invention. It is a great tool of exchange, that allows us to accumulate wealth and then later decide how much of that wealth we would like to put toward the acquisition of things we need or desire.Often we get caught up in spending habits that have little to do with the initial purpose of exchanging money.* We purchase items spur of the moment without much thought.* We purchase items because we think it will make us feel better.* We purchase things with the notion that they might make us look good.Yet, in the end, these spending habits leave our bank accounts empty and us wanting for more. Essentially, these spending habits actually create the atmosphere of lack and insecurity that we are attempting to fulfill with our spending habits.See the cycle?Ready for a little spring cleaning? Take a moment and review the following:* What are your spending
    t forward by Professor Fred Hoyle that life may have evolved in outer-space in comets as they undergo cycles of warming and freezing in their stellar orbits but let us consider planets a likely starting place. Until the mid 1990s no planets had been detected outside of our local system and there were those who believed that planets were scarce. With refinements in our technology, the first was detected by its influence on its host star and this has opened the flood gates for such discoveries that are now relatively common. Although we now have evidence, those who previously thought that planets were scarce in the universe have been shown to be comprehensively wrong, which comes as no surprise to many. I would suggest the same will hold true for life.

    There has been a noticeable change in attitude in the popular scientific press towards the possibility of extraterrestrial life. Quite what has been responsible for such a major shift is not easy to define but exobiology is not a field that is discussed in whispers anymore. We now know that there are micro-organisms that do not rely on energy from the sun to survive but we have known this for some time. These unusual creatures are found near thermal vents on the ocean floor or in thermal pools in cave systems and recently whole ecosystems containing many unique species have been discovered in subterranean systems in several locations on our planet. It is possible that isolated subterranean pools subjected to the warmth of volcanic energy could provide the potential for life on planets and satellites even beyond the range of the warmth from their own suns. Recently is has been proposed that moons themselves could sustain life for in our own solar system. Jupiter's moon, Europa, has caught the imagination of the scientific community resulting in open speculation on the possibility of life within an ocean beneath its icy covering, warmed by volcanic activity. The scope for life has, it seems, widened considerably in our eyes even though in the real world it has always been the same. It is our perspective that has changed, for we have let our bias of old, concerning our central and unique role in existence, slip away to be replaced by a more rational, logical view of the universe. It would not be surprising if our perspective were to change even more.

    Now we are no longer embarrassed to consider life elsewhere in the cosmos can we consider contact with aliens? One of the points to consider in assessing the likelihood of encountering beings from another planet is how long a civilisation needs to exist before it is capable of communicating across the reaches of space. Homo sapiens has been around for a little while but only in the last one hundred years have we achieved this level of technology. How long we will be around for is another question that is open to debate for we have had the capability of destroying our planet for only a short period of time. Will we live together and manage the planet's resources effectively or will our civilisation fall, bought down by our inability to work as one, divided by greed and misunderstanding? Pessimists would argue that if we are typical of advanced life forms then the period of existence when advanced species have the ability to send signals across space to other civilisations, will be very short. If they are right then the universe could indeed be teeming with life as one civilisation after another burns brightly for a moment before surrendering its ability to contact life on other planets through their own poor evolutionary performance. The result would be their isolation, missing the overlap with the time of another ascending civilisation and thus the opportunity for contact with truly alien life forms.

    We have been monitoring the skies for evidence of alien civilisation for some years. Clearly space is not filled with the detectable emissions from alien technology for we would have stumbled across them by now. More likely, if detectable civilisations exist, then contact will come via a weak signal from one particular direction in the sky and this act of detection may come with improvements in our receiving technology. It may simply be that we are isolated by distance even though on a cosmological scale life is indeed common in the universe. At the present time it may not be here in our own neighbourhood but it may well have been . Running water may once have been common place on Mars as the river beds, flood plains and delta-like features suggest and where there is (was) water then the probability of life must increase. It is possible as some sort of cosmological irony that it may arise somewhere close to our planet after all trace of human civilisation has gone for we may be isolated in time. We have no way of knowing but it seems that in time and in space we are probably not alone.

    Could these civilisations reach us? What are the possibilities with respect to travelling across the vast distances of space. There are several options open to potential space travellers:

    1. Create a method of propulsion that can enable interstellar travel within the lifetime of an organism.

    2. Create a craft that can travel interstellar distances and place the pilots in stasis during the excessive time periods incurred in sub-light speed travel.

    3. Create self sustaining colonies to man interstellar craft such that although one generation may not complete the journey, their space-borne progeny would finish the odyssey.

    Before the invention of aeroplanes it was considered by many that flight was impossible. We may be in a similar situation today with respect to manned deep space travel but until it is achieved we cannot know if this is possible (catch 22!). We do know that time travel is theoretically possible and we may perhaps harness this in the future but only time will tell. Such speculation may irritate some parties and so we should take a more conservative approach to predicting our future. Already we have the potential for self supporting colonies and the technology for interstellar travel at sub-light speeds and so point number three is almost a reality.

    What of point two? Bacteria are hardy organisms. When the going gets tough some species are able to form structures known as spores that are long lived and highly resistant in unfavourable conditions. Even in recent times scientists have locked away these spores and revived them after periods of tens of years (in 1956 scientists revived spores that had been entombed by Luis Pasteur some 70 years previously). Reports detailed in the scientific press tell of the revival of micro-organisms from more ancient sources. Roger Levesque of the Laval University, Quebec, drilled a 130 metre long ice core from Ellesmere island in the Canadian Arctic that had been preserved at a temperature of approximately -20C. By sterilising the outside of the core and then melting the inner ice in sterile conditions, he was able to revive bacteria from up to 7,000 years ago. Upon analysis of their DNA they were found to be related to, but significantly different from, bacteria living today providing further support for his claims. Researchers at the California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo (U.S.A.), have gone one step further. In isolating a stingless bee from fossilised amber resin dating back at least 25 million years, they claim to have produced bacterial cultures from the contents of its stomach. These claims are again supported by the DNA sequence characteristics and we must face the possibility that some living organisms at least are able to survive in a dormant state for extremely long periods of time.

    Do these reports sound ridiculous? It is perhaps one thing to have revived microorganisms but to consider that larger creatures can survive in a state of suspended animation is surely entering the realms of folklore and the supernatural. James Clegg at the University of California has discovered that brine shrimps, when in unfavorable conditions, are able to form cysts that even when kept at room temperature are able to be revived after a number of years. During this period of dormancy there is no detectable metabolism. Energy is not used in this dormant state, which has led to scientists asking whether we need to re-examine our present definition of life. The use of energy has, until now, been deemed to be one of the fundamental properties of living things in order that they can maintain their structure, but the brine shrimps have shown us that we should not presume such things and that it is possible for some organisms to temporarily (over a period of years) suspend what we unders

    What To Do When You Need Extra Money for College
    Paying for college is one of the biggest headaches that both parents and students are faced with once the acceptance letter goes out. The issue of paying for college also influences a student’s initial perception and decision regarding the college application process. Some students will even avoid applying to certain colleges and universities because of the hefty price tag that they carry. Once you have gained acceptance to the college of your dreams and learned that money doesn’t grow on trees, what will you do?While some students don’t have to worry about paying for college, there are those who are in need of extra money to make school payments. After you have exhausted the angle of financial aid and other funding options, you may find that only part of the college bill will be paid, leaving the remainder up to you.What really hurts a student’s financial situation is that it doesn’t stop with the tuition; college students also need to furnish the money needed for books, entertainment, housing, and additional living expenses. Below you will find the three main ways that students obtain the extra money they need to make ends meet in college:Getting a JobWhen possible, getting a job will help pay off college tuition and other expenses with two different approaches to consider: on-campus and off-campus. Depending on the type of school you attend, there may or may not be a lot of opportunities for both on- and off- campus work. Some colleges are situated away from the hustle and bustle of cities or towns, meaning the amount of of
    xistence, slip away to be replaced by a more rational, logical view of the universe. It would not be surprising if our perspective were to change even more.

    Now we are no longer embarrassed to consider life elsewhere in the cosmos can we consider contact with aliens? One of the points to consider in assessing the likelihood of encountering beings from another planet is how long a civilisation needs to exist before it is capable of communicating across the reaches of space. Homo sapiens has been around for a little while but only in the last one hundred years have we achieved this level of technology. How long we will be around for is another question that is open to debate for we have had the capability of destroying our planet for only a short period of time. Will we live together and manage the planet's resources effectively or will our civilisation fall, bought down by our inability to work as one, divided by greed and misunderstanding? Pessimists would argue that if we are typical of advanced life forms then the period of existence when advanced species have the ability to send signals across space to other civilisations, will be very short. If they are right then the universe could indeed be teeming with life as one civilisation after another burns brightly for a moment before surrendering its ability to contact life on other planets through their own poor evolutionary performance. The result would be their isolation, missing the overlap with the time of another ascending civilisation and thus the opportunity for contact with truly alien life forms.

    We have been monitoring the skies for evidence of alien civilisation for some years. Clearly space is not filled with the detectable emissions from alien technology for we would have stumbled across them by now. More likely, if detectable civilisations exist, then contact will come via a weak signal from one particular direction in the sky and this act of detection may come with improvements in our receiving technology. It may simply be that we are isolated by distance even though on a cosmological scale life is indeed common in the universe. At the present time it may not be here in our own neighbourhood but it may well have been . Running water may once have been common place on Mars as the river beds, flood plains and delta-like features suggest and where there is (was) water then the probability of life must increase. It is possible as some sort of cosmological irony that it may arise somewhere close to our planet after all trace of human civilisation has gone for we may be isolated in time. We have no way of knowing but it seems that in time and in space we are probably not alone.

    Could these civilisations reach us? What are the possibilities with respect to travelling across the vast distances of space. There are several options open to potential space travellers:

    1. Create a method of propulsion that can enable interstellar travel within the lifetime of an organism.

    2. Create a craft that can travel interstellar distances and place the pilots in stasis during the excessive time periods incurred in sub-light speed travel.

    3. Create self sustaining colonies to man interstellar craft such that although one generation may not complete the journey, their space-borne progeny would finish the odyssey.

    Before the invention of aeroplanes it was considered by many that flight was impossible. We may be in a similar situation today with respect to manned deep space travel but until it is achieved we cannot know if this is possible (catch 22!). We do know that time travel is theoretically possible and we may perhaps harness this in the future but only time will tell. Such speculation may irritate some parties and so we should take a more conservative approach to predicting our future. Already we have the potential for self supporting colonies and the technology for interstellar travel at sub-light speeds and so point number three is almost a reality.

    What of point two? Bacteria are hardy organisms. When the going gets tough some species are able to form structures known as spores that are long lived and highly resistant in unfavourable conditions. Even in recent times scientists have locked away these spores and revived them after periods of tens of years (in 1956 scientists revived spores that had been entombed by Luis Pasteur some 70 years previously). Reports detailed in the scientific press tell of the revival of micro-organisms from more ancient sources. Roger Levesque of the Laval University, Quebec, drilled a 130 metre long ice core from Ellesmere island in the Canadian Arctic that had been preserved at a temperature of approximately -20C. By sterilising the outside of the core and then melting the inner ice in sterile conditions, he was able to revive bacteria from up to 7,000 years ago. Upon analysis of their DNA they were found to be related to, but significantly different from, bacteria living today providing further support for his claims. Researchers at the California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo (U.S.A.), have gone one step further. In isolating a stingless bee from fossilised amber resin dating back at least 25 million years, they claim to have produced bacterial cultures from the contents of its stomach. These claims are again supported by the DNA sequence characteristics and we must face the possibility that some living organisms at least are able to survive in a dormant state for extremely long periods of time.

    Do these reports sound ridiculous? It is perhaps one thing to have revived microorganisms but to consider that larger creatures can survive in a state of suspended animation is surely entering the realms of folklore and the supernatural. James Clegg at the University of California has discovered that brine shrimps, when in unfavorable conditions, are able to form cysts that even when kept at room temperature are able to be revived after a number of years. During this period of dormancy there is no detectable metabolism. Energy is not used in this dormant state, which has led to scientists asking whether we need to re-examine our present definition of life. The use of energy has, until now, been deemed to be one of the fundamental properties of living things in order that they can maintain their structure, but the brine shrimps have shown us that we should not presume such things and that it is possible for some organisms to temporarily (over a period of years) suspend what we unders

    Which DVD Camcorder Is Best For You?
    Since the integration of the DVD (digital video disc) in the early 1990’s we have seen the popularity of this media system soar above anything else in the market place. Gone are the days of big chunky VHS tapes and video recorders, that are now being replaced by slime lined DVD recorders that provide unparallel sound quality and image generation and easy to manage DVD cases and storage units.We are seeing an explosion in digital media throughout the world at the moment and it shows no sign of slowing down anytime soon. That brings me to the subject of DVD camcorders. I bet you remember back in the day when their were the big old camcorders with the vhs tape inside and you would shoot your footage then pull the tape and put it straight into your vhs player and it was great… at the time. Next in line it was the mini DV camcorders that are probably the most popular form even today. They are a great way to shoot inexpensive, quality audio and video footage. But the next generation of camcorders definitely has to be the DVD camcorder. Why? I hear you ask, well it makes life so much easier when creating video footage and being able simply have unlimited amounts of discs on hand and being able to watch and copy the discs immediately.One tip to remember is that you should always make sure that the camcorder and you normal DVD player are able to play the same DVD format. There is nothing worse than having a disc that you cannot play from your camera.Some of the different types of DVD’s available are DVD-RAM, DVD+R, DVD-R and DVD+RW. DVD-R and
    here in our own neighbourhood but it may well have been . Running water may once have been common place on Mars as the river beds, flood plains and delta-like features suggest and where there is (was) water then the probability of life must increase. It is possible as some sort of cosmological irony that it may arise somewhere close to our planet after all trace of human civilisation has gone for we may be isolated in time. We have no way of knowing but it seems that in time and in space we are probably not alone.

    Could these civilisations reach us? What are the possibilities with respect to travelling across the vast distances of space. There are several options open to potential space travellers:

    1. Create a method of propulsion that can enable interstellar travel within the lifetime of an organism.

    2. Create a craft that can travel interstellar distances and place the pilots in stasis during the excessive time periods incurred in sub-light speed travel.

    3. Create self sustaining colonies to man interstellar craft such that although one generation may not complete the journey, their space-borne progeny would finish the odyssey.

    Before the invention of aeroplanes it was considered by many that flight was impossible. We may be in a similar situation today with respect to manned deep space travel but until it is achieved we cannot know if this is possible (catch 22!). We do know that time travel is theoretically possible and we may perhaps harness this in the future but only time will tell. Such speculation may irritate some parties and so we should take a more conservative approach to predicting our future. Already we have the potential for self supporting colonies and the technology for interstellar travel at sub-light speeds and so point number three is almost a reality.

    What of point two? Bacteria are hardy organisms. When the going gets tough some species are able to form structures known as spores that are long lived and highly resistant in unfavourable conditions. Even in recent times scientists have locked away these spores and revived them after periods of tens of years (in 1956 scientists revived spores that had been entombed by Luis Pasteur some 70 years previously). Reports detailed in the scientific press tell of the revival of micro-organisms from more ancient sources. Roger Levesque of the Laval University, Quebec, drilled a 130 metre long ice core from Ellesmere island in the Canadian Arctic that had been preserved at a temperature of approximately -20C. By sterilising the outside of the core and then melting the inner ice in sterile conditions, he was able to revive bacteria from up to 7,000 years ago. Upon analysis of their DNA they were found to be related to, but significantly different from, bacteria living today providing further support for his claims. Researchers at the California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo (U.S.A.), have gone one step further. In isolating a stingless bee from fossilised amber resin dating back at least 25 million years, they claim to have produced bacterial cultures from the contents of its stomach. These claims are again supported by the DNA sequence characteristics and we must face the possibility that some living organisms at least are able to survive in a dormant state for extremely long periods of time.

    Do these reports sound ridiculous? It is perhaps one thing to have revived microorganisms but to consider that larger creatures can survive in a state of suspended animation is surely entering the realms of folklore and the supernatural. James Clegg at the University of California has discovered that brine shrimps, when in unfavorable conditions, are able to form cysts that even when kept at room temperature are able to be revived after a number of years. During this period of dormancy there is no detectable metabolism. Energy is not used in this dormant state, which has led to scientists asking whether we need to re-examine our present definition of life. The use of energy has, until now, been deemed to be one of the fundamental properties of living things in order that they can maintain their structure, but the brine shrimps have shown us that we should not presume such things and that it is possible for some organisms to temporarily (over a period of years) suspend what we unders

    Local vs. Network Diagnostics
    Obviously anyone who maintains PCs, whether local or on a network, is bound to be familiar with the demands of getting the offending machine back up and running as quickly as possible!Most have experienced the frustration of trying to pin point the problem, which could even boil down to being simply a faulty component.Some of you may even have used diagnostic software to help locate the problem, saving in some cases hours of time.Of course the accuracy of the many diagnostics software and tools available on the market varies, depending on just how in depth their tests are, and just how thoroughly they interrogate the system.Sometimes people ask us why they can’t run our diagnostic software, MicroScope, over a network. Most of the reasons for this are related to OS independence, so this article should be read after finishing The Importance of OS Independence - available at www.micro2000.co.uk/techtips/One reason though is that hardware problems of any consequence will normally interfere with network communications. If you can even talk to another system over the network, you have just checked out about 95% of what you can check out over a network. Any testing more thorough than that will require local access.Not being able to do in-depth hardware testing over a network is just an extreme case of the truism that you can’t do accurate hardware testing under a general-purpose OS such as Windows, DOS or Linux, because these programs are designed to run the hardware in the background, insulated from the user and applic
    s that had been entombed by Luis Pasteur some 70 years previously). Reports detailed in the scientific press tell of the revival of micro-organisms from more ancient sources. Roger Levesque of the Laval University, Quebec, drilled a 130 metre long ice core from Ellesmere island in the Canadian Arctic that had been preserved at a temperature of approximately -20C. By sterilising the outside of the core and then melting the inner ice in sterile conditions, he was able to revive bacteria from up to 7,000 years ago. Upon analysis of their DNA they were found to be related to, but significantly different from, bacteria living today providing further support for his claims. Researchers at the California State Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo (U.S.A.), have gone one step further. In isolating a stingless bee from fossilised amber resin dating back at least 25 million years, they claim to have produced bacterial cultures from the contents of its stomach. These claims are again supported by the DNA sequence characteristics and we must face the possibility that some living organisms at least are able to survive in a dormant state for extremely long periods of time.

    Do these reports sound ridiculous? It is perhaps one thing to have revived microorganisms but to consider that larger creatures can survive in a state of suspended animation is surely entering the realms of folklore and the supernatural. James Clegg at the University of California has discovered that brine shrimps, when in unfavorable conditions, are able to form cysts that even when kept at room temperature are able to be revived after a number of years. During this period of dormancy there is no detectable metabolism. Energy is not used in this dormant state, which has led to scientists asking whether we need to re-examine our present definition of life. The use of energy has, until now, been deemed to be one of the fundamental properties of living things in order that they can maintain their structure, but the brine shrimps have shown us that we should not presume such things and that it is possible for some organisms to temporarily (over a period of years) suspend what we understand as the property of life. The slowing of human metabolic rates is certainly not in the realms of science fiction although it is true to say the technology required may be some way off but it is a real possibility. Whether the technology is available to alien beings or their physiology is more amenable to such manipulation is pure speculation, nevertheless the prospect is there.

    When considering the three options available for interstellar travel our relatively young race is almost at the point of having the technology to embark on such adventures. Will the scientists of the 22nd century find the key to deep space travel in the seed of 20th century science or will we remain planet bound, confined by our minds and our technology? So, if we reject the UFO phenomenon, interpreted as evidence of alien visitation, on the basis of the impossibility of interstellar travel then we are flying in the face of reality. This is perhaps a shock for some.

    In short, I have no problem with the belief that there is life elsewhere in the universe. It would not be surprising if the alien equivalent of an Earthly bacterial spore had arrived and survived on planet Earth sometime in our history. I find it feasible that life may have evolved on other worlds to such a stage where the dominant species is capable of interstellar travel using technologies far in advance of our own. Although it may feel uncomfortable, but pursuing the same line of logical thought, it is not beyond the realms of possibility that such species have visited (or will visit) our planet. As for the reports of saucers and aliens.. that's perhaps a different conversation.

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