Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Charge two devices at once with the sCharger-12 solar charger [feedly]


 
 
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Charge two devices at once with the sCharger-12 solar charger

sCharger-12

The sCharger-12 USB Solar Charger from SunTactics isn't like most solar chargers on the market. It uses "mono-crystalline solar cells, the most efficient solar cell technology of the 21st century" instead of the plastic panels and weak solar cells used in other chargers. It doesn't charge up a battery, because those will quickly die after being baked in the sun while charging. Instead, you plug up two devices and charge them real-time, and you can actually use your device as it charges. Although it's optimized for 5V devices, SunTactics says you can charge any USB-chargeable devices, including tablets. Unlike some solar chargers that require a manual reset if they are temporarily blocked from the sun during a charging cycle, the sCharger-12 has "Auto-Retry Technology", so it will immediately re-start charging within minutes after being temporarily blocked from the sun. It's lightweight and water-resistant, and it will work for many years because it has no batteries that will eventually fail. The sCharger-12 is $239.95 from SunTactics.

Filed in categories: Cables, Batteries, News, Outdoor Gear

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Charge two devices at once with the sCharger-12 solar charger originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on April 29, 2013 at 12:00 pm.




Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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[GUEST REVIEW] Kate Onyett on “Vince Cosmos” – Glam Rock Detective [feedly]


 
 
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[GUEST REVIEW] Kate Onyett on "Vince Cosmos" – Glam Rock Detective


Kate Onyett lives and works in Oxford, UK, doing her bit for the NHS and the sick of England. When not nursing a doctor's ego, she can be found reading and reviewing speculative fiction, and is open to suggestions and submissions for such (gizmomogwai at hotmail dot co dot uk). Her interest in the speculative found full flowering at university, when she talked her tutors into letting her write first about vampires, and then about pirates. Yarr.

It is 1972, and Poppy Munday travels down from South Shields in North England to seek her fortune and make something of herself in the Big Smoke that is hip and happening London. Supported by an older, worldlier cousin and a motherly landlady, Poppy overcomes homesickness and near tragedy (her favourite glam rocker survives being shot at while on stage) to win a competition to meet that same idol, Vince Cosmos. Foiling a second assassination attempt plunges her into Vince's world of intergalactic adventure and intrigue. She joins forces with him and the strange little man from the upstairs flat to stop Martians taking over the world, one sequinned boot-step at a time.

Vince Cosmos is a funky, lively mix that harks back directly to the comfy, cosy adventures of late 70s, early 80s sci-fi adventures at tea time (the era of my own youth), and there is more than a whiff of classic Doctor Who about the style and tone of the play. This is not surprising, given that it is the brainchild of Paul Magrs, a respected fantasy and sci-fi author who has written for Doctor Who, and whose books are quirky gems, written with a humorously light touch. This is not grand, epic space opera, nor a grinding, angst-filled dramatic 'event'. But it is a lot of fun, with an appealingly innocent sensibility. These are adventures where nothing so awfully terrible happens that the heroes cannot save the day, and where more potentially dangerous events are exciting instead of intimidating, leaving the heroes undeterred and unscathed. A theatre may be blown up, and a hotel suite shot up, but no one is killed. Baddies escape to make trouble for another day and death and grief are quite 'alien' to this nostalgic tale.

The story comes directly through Poppy's point of view, narrating her own adventures, and we learn bit by bit about glam-rock detecting only as she becomes initiated. She emerges as an amazed but centred young woman, with a brave, pragmatic streak. She steps in and instigates a fair bit of the action, saving the day more than once, but is happy to let Vince to take the limelight. As for Vince himself, Magrs ideas for glam-rock era music-making and Martian-hunting culminated in the question "What if Ziggy Stardust really was an alien?" and Vince was born in glorious stereo format. He is a pitch-perfect clone of Bowie's most famous creation: dolled up in outrageous costumes and makeup, his attitude one of light insouciance, his music based on the ethic of prog-rock space opera. The role of Vince, thanks to Ziggy's enduring influence, is a tremendously strong underpinning for the entire premise. Vince's angle is what he does offstage; his assertion that he and his sidekick know the 'truth' about Martians; invaders sneaking in by stealth, against whom he does battle. Sometimes vain and self-centred, Vince can seem shallow, although a final 'good night' phone call with Poppy to make sure she is OK at the conclusion of the play's events shows that he can be sweetly thoughtful on occasion.

Aliens Among Us may seem a little cliché, but are not so surprising to Poppy. A quick précis of history between her and Vince midway through reveals that in this version of 1972, Martians really did try to invade at the end of the nineteenth century, and not just in the imagination of H.G. Wells. When the strong-arm tactics failed, the Martians retreated and are now apparently using more subtle infiltration techniques to achieve their nefarious ends.

But do not be mislead, there is no comparison to be made about paranoid, 'them within us' politics, Invasion of the Body Snatchers-style. Colours, flashy false fronts and hidden identities shimmer and dance lightly across this narrative, adding interest and only allowing for dramatic reveals in suitably exciting moments. Accusations of intentional gravitas would be completely inaccurate, and unfair. There has never been the intention — from author to production to finished product — that this is about anything but what it presents: colourful adventures and exciting scrapes. At the end of the day, the baddies are baddies and the goodies are goodies, operating under the banner of righteous defence.

The events of the play have a distinct voice…that of a very British form of nostalgia, a tone at which Magrs excels. It was an exciting time, as in the 70s new possibilities were straining at the leash of tradition British social norms, especially in the melting-pot of London. With its nostalgic, golden glow, encapsulated by the hopeful Poppy, come to seek her fortune down south, and who ends up with a whole lot more, the play is an ambassador for rosy-tinted memory. The overall effect is a merchandising of the near-past into a convivial, more positive time. And it tugs at the memories of anyone grown into adulthood, who can still recall the wide-eyed passions of youth, before life got complicated and serious.

Yes, this is, compared to some sci-fi, as light as a feather. But the high production values and strong, cheerful performances; especially from Lauren Kellegher as perky Poppy and smooth-tonsiled Julian Rhind-Tutt as Vince, mean that it is a hugely enjoyable bit of froth. As a package Vince Cosmos is a neat, lovingly crafted little bubble of historical flavour. It is a reinvented 1970s Britain with some brilliant characterisations, produced with an eye firmly on the fun. And it is on this, it's highest and most amiable merit, it should be judged. Bafflegab's production works in magical symbiosis with Magrs's writing, producing a top-notch product that entertains and amuses, with starry potential for future episodes.




Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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Kingston's MobileLite Wireless is a memory card reader that doubles as a charger [feedly]


 
 
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Kingston's MobileLite Wireless is a memory card reader that doubles as a charger

Kingston's MobileLite Wireless is a memory card reader that doubles as a charger

By all metrics, Kingston's wireless Wi-Drive has been a successful product: the company is still selling it two years later, and has since refreshed it with beefier storage and Android compatibility. If there's one thing customers complained about, though, it was the lack of expandable memory -- a problem if you used all the space on the drive, or if you already had stuff stored on an SD card. With that in mind, the company's coming out with the MobileLite Wireless, which ditches internal storage in favor of an SD slot and USB 2.0 port. (It will also ship with a microSD adapter.) At the same time, it packs a modest five-hour battery you can use to recharge USB-powered gadgets; Kingston says there's enough juice in there to fully charge a phone, but probably not a tablet.

Technically speaking, you can access everything stored on the device by typing the MobileLite's IP address into a browser. But for all intents and purposes, this is currently an iOS exclusive, as that's the only platform for which you can download an app. As with the Wi-Drive, though, Kingston plans to add an Android app, as well as one for WP8. In the beginning, at least, it will be available through just a couple sellers (Amazon and Staples), with street prices expected to fall somewhere between $50 and $70. Any questions? We hope not: this thing's aimed squarely at mainstream users, so if Engadget readers don't get it, we're going to be seriously concerned about all the regular folk.

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Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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The Cure for Insomnia: Never Sleep Again [feedly]


 
 
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The Cure for Insomnia: Never Sleep Again
Here's a way to cure those restless nights--stop sleeping!

There just aren't enough hours in the day to get everything done. If there was a DISEASE that robbed us of one-third of our lives, we'd invent a medicine to cure it!

We don't really understand why we sleep in the first place. Different species vary widely in their hours of sleep. Herbivores sleep far less than carnivores (because they have less onerous foods to digest?) Elephants sleep about four hours a night, compared with almost 20 hours for a lion. Humans are omnivores, so our sleep habits fall somewhere in the middle.

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Google Now for iOS here at last, as part of Google Search 3.0 [feedly]


 
 
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Google Now for iOS here at last, as part of Google Search 3.0

One of Android's best features, Google Now, has long been the envy of many iOS users. At least, it has been a source of jealousy for me. Having used it on the HTC One for the past few weeks, I find it hard to live without it. Using some user-inputted interests, and knowing a little about you and where you live and work enables Google Now to ensure you...




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little comis 2 [feedly]


 
 
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little comis 2








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Episode 716 – Mysterious Universe Plus+ [feedly]


 
 
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Episode 716 – Mysterious Universe Plus+
716_ptext2

On this Plus+ episode we discover long lost WWII soldiers, swirling vortexes of death in the bedroom, and the return of the Michelin Man entities. 

Bizarre spelunking encounters then lead us onto subterranean tales of hidden cities and the seductive entities that inhabit "The Cave Heavens" of ancient China.

UFOHostile

Music



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The World’s First Handheld Movie Camera Was Shaped Like a Gun [feedly]


 
 
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The World's First Handheld Movie Camera Was Shaped Like a Gun
You may have expected the first ever portable motion picture camera to be housed in some form of stuffy box—but in fact it was shaped like a rifle, which lends a new accuracy to the idea of shooting some film. More »
    





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The SF Signal Podcast (Episode 187): Interview with APEX Editor/Publisher Jason Sizemore [feedly]


 
 
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The SF Signal Podcast (Episode 187): Interview with APEX Editor/Publisher Jason Sizemore

In episode 187 of the SF Signal Podcast, Patrick Hester chats with APEX Editor/Publisher Jason Sizemore.

About Jason:

Since 2004, Jason Sizemore has followed his passion through Apex Publications, a nationally distributed publisher of science fiction, fantasy, and horror books. He started with just a small print zine (Apex Digest), then a pro-level online zine (Apex Magazine–still going strong), then books, and then ebooks. He edits anthologies, mostly for Apex, occasionally does copy editing (when pressed) and have done plenty of acquisition editing over the years. He also writes.

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Cover & Synopsis: “The Quarry” by Iain Banks [feedly]


 
 
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Cover & Synopsis: "The Quarry" by Iain Banks

Amazon has the cover art and synopsis of the upcoming novel The Quarry by Iain Banks, hittng bookstore shelves on June 20, 2013.

The author credit lacks the "science fictional "M." because this isn't science fiction, however, it is the author's last novel and one whose themes are familiar.

Here's the synopsis:

Kit doesn't know who his mother is. What he does know, however, is that his father, Guy, is dying of cancer. Feeling his death is imminent, Guy gathers around him his oldest friends – or at least the friends with the most to lose by his death. Paul – the rising star in the Labour party who dreads the day a tape they all made at university might come to light; Alison and Robbie, corporate bunnies whose relationship is daily more fractious; Pris and Haze, once an item, now estranged, and finally Hol – friend, mentor, former lover and the only one who seemed to care. But what will happen to Kit when Guy is gone? And why isn't Kit's mother in the picture? As the friends reunite for Guy's last days, old jealousies, affairs and lies come to light as Kit watches on.

Book info as per Amazon US [Also available via Amazon UK]:

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown (June 20, 2013)
  • ISBN-10: 1408703947
  • ISBN-13: 978-1408703946

[via Upcoming4.me]




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Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Tidbits for 4/29/13 [feedly]


 
 
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Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Tidbits for 4/29/13

Interviews & Profiles

News

Crowd Funding

Articles

Art

More Fun Stuff

Want More? See SF Signal's Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ pages for additional tidbits not posted here!



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The “Ata” Controversy: Should We Suspend our Disbelief? [feedly]


 
 
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The "Ata" Controversy: Should We Suspend our Disbelief?
alienxray

Since the release of Dr. Steven Greer's latest documentary film, Sirius, the primary focus remains on the series of tests featured in the movie, regarding a small humanoid nicknamed "Ata". Greer presents it, rather hopefully, as evidence of extraterrestrial life that has visited Earth.

However, the general consensus among the media, of course, has been that the small creature is of human origin,based on results that appear in Greer's film that seem to lead to this conclusion. My pal Lee Speigel, writing for the Huffington Post, even noted following the film's release that, "now that the film is available to everybody, and DNA analysis shows that Ata was human, was that early PR hype about the humanoid a bit premature?" It remains a fair question.

I had expressed previously here at Mysterious Universe that the miniature humanoid, if proven to be anything but human, would still not actually prove the existence of extraterrestrials. If anything, it would prove the existence of anomalies here on Earth, which may challenge conventional views held in the fields of archeology, anthropology, and the scientific study of our evolution as a species… perhaps even the evolution of other humanoid beings believed to exist, as represented largely in the more "fringe" literature of today.

humanoid

Either prospect–an extraterrestrial, or a tiny nonhuman earthling–would have been fascinating. But as we've mentioned, the evidence seems to suggest that the diminutive mummy is indeed of human origin. Still, what does this prove for us at this stage in the game, and are there elements that would still warrant a suspension of disbelief until further information is provided? Indeed, perhaps the verdict is still out on the Atacama humanoid, and here's why.

ataback

Over at The Gralien Report, a very thoughtful comment about this was recently made by Tyler Kokjohn, Ph.D, in relation to both the merit of Greer's treatment thus far, as well as why we may wish to withhold harsh criticism of the so-called "humanoid" until further information is provided:

The analyses of the entity are incomplete, tentative and not yet vetted by peer review, the gold standard for scientific data… When scientists issue 'preliminary' findings, be careful. That means they are subject to revision. If they comport with your opinion, be even more cautious because that is when you are most likely to make the error of being insufficiently critical.

Unless and until the complete data are available for scrutiny, this story remains a story, not scientifically established fact. Dr. Greer has found competent collaborators who should be able to meet the customary requirements to produce a quality scientific publication detailing the full data and results. Until that happens I believe neither Dr. Greer nor his scientist collaborators. Maybe each and every assertion made to date will turn out to be the absolute truth. And maybe none of it will hold up to external, independent scrutiny. Time will tell all.

Indeed, scientific process (especially in the world of publication) requires not just the serious, technical and skeptical treatment of such subjects, but also in a manner that features the work of qualified experts which is then peer-reviewed by other qualified experts. As Kokjohn points out in the commentary above, we should note that Dr. Greer, to his credit (and despite making somewhat sensational claims about the "alien" find early on), nonetheless followed through with arranging study of the anomalous mummy by qualified individuals. Whether this goes on to be studied further, questioned, reevaluated, and then presented for peer review remains to be seen… but if it does, and despite the outcome, perhaps Greer's work will help set new (and truly scientific) precedents with regard to the serious (or should I say "Sirius") study of the unexplained.

atafullbody

Greer's presentation can be more than a bit biased, at times, toward belief in the extraterrestrial component regarding UFOs. And of course, his meditative remote-viewing sessions for purposes of creating CE-5 "encounters" borders on being outright kooky. And yet, when presented with possible evidence of the imposible, he also managed to raise funding for proper scientific testing, and then released his findings, to date, in a documentary film. Arguably, this is more than most in the field have managed to achieve, and thus perhaps it warrants a suspension of our disbelief until further scientific information can be presented about the final determination on the Atacama Humanoid.




Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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UFOs and the Oceans [feedly]


 
 
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UFOs and the Oceans
usounderwater

Although many people look to the skies for answers concerning the UFO puzzle, there are more than a few reports on file demonstrating that UFOs have a deep connection to the oceans of our world. Indeed, I have many such cases in my files, and here's just a few of them. Puerto Rico, or to give it its correct title, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, is what is known as an unincorporated territory of the United States, located in the Caribbean Sea. And according to some, it may very well be the one place – possibly more than any other on the planet – that is home to not just one secret base, but to an overwhelming plethora of classified locations, certainly of a governmental nature, and maybe even of an alien nature, too.

Over the course of the last twenty-years or so, the people of Puerto Rico have been swamped by a multitude of UFO encounters, sightings of strange and unearthly-looking craft surfacing from both mountainous and cavernous lairs, and run-ins with strange, vampire-style creatures that one might accurately describe as the distinctly evil-twin to Steven Spielberg's benign E.T.: the Chupacabras. And then there are the USOs (Unidentified Submarine/Submersible Objects) of Puerto Rico.

USOjellywelly

In 2004, when I visited Puerto Rico for the first time – in search of the Chupacabras – I was told of the account of a former civil-defense employee, who had seen a gigantic, unknown craft rise silently out of the coastal waters of the island, while he was on an early-morning jog in the spring of 1999. In this case, the vast device, which was viewed at a distance of around half-a-mile off the coast, or perhaps slightly more, wobbled slightly – rather like a falling-leaf – as it took to the skies, and then streaked vertically at a fantastic speed, before finally vanishing from view as it grew ever smaller, and was finally lost due to the effects of the bright, rising sun.

Further rumors of a potentially-related nature were also provided to me on that same expedition to the island. They came from a retired police-officer who had heard rumors to the effect that, somewhere off the coast of Puerto Rico – he was not entirely sure where exactly – in late-1993, elements of the U.S. Navy spent several days tracking, via sonar, the movements of a huge USO in the deep waters off Puerto Rico. Perhaps aware of its potentially hazardous nature, the U.S. Navy contingent was ordered to merely carefully log the movements of the undersea craft, but never to engage it any way, shape or form whatsoever that might be interpreted as hostility.

USOTaking the above into thoughtful consideration, is it truly feasible that Puerto Rico might be home to a massive undersea installation? When one realizes that we, the Human Race, have had the ability to construct such science-fiction-like facilities for decades, then the possibility becomes all-too-real, and not so unbelievable, after all. And, make no mistake: evidence of our very own undersea abilities is far from lacking.

For example, an October 1966 document prepared by one C.F. Austin, of the U.S. Naval Ordnance Test Station at China Lake, California, includes a truly remarkable statement. Titled Manned Undersea Structures – The Rock-Site Concept, it states in part that: "Large undersea installations with a shirt-sleeve environment have existed under the continental shelves for many decades. The technology now exists, using off-the-shelf petroleum, mining, submarine, and nuclear equipment, to establish permanent manned installations within the sea floor that do not have any air umbilical or other connection with the land or water surface, yet maintain a normal one-atmosphere environment within."

If, as this previously-classified U.S. Navy document demonstrates, the government of the United States was constructing undersea installations – with a comfortable shirt-sleeve environment, no less – a number of decades before the documentation was even prepared in the mid-1960s, perhaps someone else, someone from a world far, far away, has secretly been doing likewise. And, maybe, they chose Puerto Rico as their secret base of both underground and undersea operations.

Extending from Bermuda in the north to southern Florida, and then east to a point through the Bahamas past Puerto Rico and then back again to Bermuda, is a truly ominous realm of wild, churning and turbulent waters known infamously as the Bermuda Triangle, a permanent fixture in the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean, and one that has become renowned for the hundreds of aircraft, ships, boats and unfortunate souls that have disappeared in the area without trace – and for decades, too.

masterbrainuso

Down to earth explanations for such vanishings, it goes without saying, most certainly proliferate. Compass malfunctions, disorientation, sudden and violent bouts of severe weather, mechanical and electrical failure, and pilot error are just some of the conventional theories that have been offered as answers relative to why there should have been so many disappearances in such a clearly delineated area over so many years.

But, not everyone is quite so sure that those particular theories provide all the clues to solving the maritime mystery; one of the reasons being that on numerous occasions USOs have been seen in the area.

One particularly significant case involving a craft of distinctly unknown origin occurred in April 1973 when a Captain Dan Delmonico, a calm and collected character with a fine reputation for being grounded and logical, had an encounter that could be considered anything but grounded and logical.

It was around 4.00 p.m., while negotiating the waters of the Gulf Stream, specifically between Great Isaac Light, north of Bimini, and Miami, when Delmonico was amazed by the sight of a large cigar-shaped object – nearly two hundred feet in length, grey in color, and with rounded ends – which shot through the water, not surprisingly amazing and astounding Delmonico in the process. Who, or what, piloted the strange submersible on that April 1973 afternoon remains unknown.

Ninety sixty-six saw an unusual event occur at Pasajes, Northern Spain that caught the attention of the Ministry of Defense. From a radio officer attached to the S.S. Patrick M. Rotterdam, came the following, which I found in 1997, in a then-newly-released batch of formerly classified British Ministry of Defense files on UFOs. This case does not involve a USO directly, but since the witnesses were at sea, it may be of some relevance. A letter sent to the MoD by the ship's captain reads thus:

usobase

"Perhaps the following will be of some interest to you or Jodrell Bank. Whilst at Anchor at Pasajes, North Spain on 22 April at 2100 Bst in a very clear sky, one of the crew noticed a bright patch in the sky and drew my attention to it. It appeared stationary and squarish, the area being about 4 times the size of a full moon. Several of the crew watched, being interested and of course at anchor, there is very little to do.

"The patch elongated and became brighter and to our amazement a complete ring, similar to pictures of flying saucers, bright and distinct with dark centre. For several minutes this object remained visible then returned to a patch, receding elongated again. Then it branched out to form a letter M. When the ring was clear it was about [the] same size as a full moon. We know it was not the moon because the moon was in another quadrant and lying on back at [the] same time. The patch receded away into distance. I can assure you none of us were drunk."

And there you have it: a round-up of just a few of the weirder USO-themed reports from my files, all of which suggest maybe it's not to the stars – but to the seas – that we should be looking for the answers concerning the many UFO-themed mysteries that dominate our world.




Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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Being Afraid of What’s in the Dark [feedly]


 
 
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Being Afraid of What's in the Dark
Dark.Forest

Spiders, snakes and the Bogeyman: each can be terrifying, even when not on a plane! And being scared of a poisonous arachnid or a six foot snake isn't too unusual (especially in Australia). But what about phobias of the more freaky things; fears which spur the tales of the monstrous and mysterious? 

The world is filled with skeptics, naysayers and disbelievers, but whatever's lurking out there in the shadows has become real enough to cause legitimate psychological constructs. But what do we call these? What names have been given to these cases of paranormal induced paranoia?

Uranophobia & Stygiophobia

heaven-and-hell-2

The fears of Heaven (Uranophobia) and Hell (should be obvious now). Not much is really known about what causes either of these two fears, other than an apparent combination of brain chemistry and past experiences. Although, it may not be unreasonable to postulate that a fear of Hell could be derived from certain religions out there (I'm not naming names). These fears just go to show that it's the journey that counts, because the destination might just suck!

Necrophobia

evil-dead

Frankly I feel that those not afraid of the dead need help. Necrophobia should be a fear that we all share because unless the dead are in the ground, they shouldn't be around. Ever. This phobia also extends to incorporate the fear that the spirits of the dead will return to inhabit or haunt the living. All the more reason to not have them around!

Xenophobia

MARS ATTACKS!

Often over-simplified as the fear of strangers, xenophobia is also the irrational fear of the extraterrestrial. Now, I predict that many of you out there in this mysterious universe of ours (see what I did there?) are much more cool, calm and collected when it comes to our visiting space travelers. But that doesn't negate the fact that the history of film and television has collectively depicted inter-stellar beings as violent and ruthless, and this depiction may be enough to alter and scar the minds of many. Pray that they're wrong, and E.T just wants to hang out.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Spectrophobia

article-1288099935473-0bb9aa52000005dc-304815_636x475

Ghosts, spirits, phantoms and spectral beings of all kinds; none are liked by the spectrophobe. Characterized by a fear of mirrors – which, by spectrophobes, are often believed to be gateways to another world or plane – spectrophobia is primarily caused by a traumatic event from the sufferer's childhood.

"When they say 'ghosts', do they mean us?"




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2013-04-28 #650 Le Jazz Affair a Podcast with a Tech Flair [feedly]


 
 
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2013-04-28 #650 Le Jazz Affair a Podcast with a Tech Flair
Toll Free 1-877-526-5204 03:37 Shamie Royston - Inner Strength 08:30 Earl MacDonald - A Change Will Come 16:27 Robert Conti - Hollywood and Sunset 22:05 The Steve Elemer Trio - Delicate Balance 31:32 Shamie Royston - Portraits Background Music - Shamie Royston - Healing Hymns Web Site: http://www.lejazzaffair.com Email: lejazzaffair@gmail.com SKYPE ME - lejazzaffair



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Perth photographer captures hundreds of UFO photos in one session. [feedly]


 
 
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Perth photographer captures hundreds of UFO photos in one session.
A photographer in Perth, Australia has joined the growing number of people who have discovered that taking an interest in UFOs results in a response. After getting a new camera and watching the skies, he has taken what appear to be some good daylight UFO photos. Perhaps, rather than some sort of official disclosure, a worldwide increase in interest is going to work in both directions, until, in the end, we take these unknown objects for granted.



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Two Meteorites Discovered In Antarctica May Be From The Same Supernova [feedly]


 
 
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Two Meteorites Discovered In Antarctica May Be From The Same Supernova
There's nothing more fascinating or TV special-worthy than twins separated at birth. Whether they're reunited at 15 or 50 it's safe to say that there'll be some eerily similar food preferences and a whole lot of crying. But what about two chemically identical grains of silica that haven't seen each other for more than 4.6 billion years? More »
    





Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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