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Showing posts from June, 2012
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EARTH TO COLLIDE WITH NIBIRU ON JULY 21, 2012! By Frank Lake on June 11, 2012 NASA scientists have reportedly confirmed that the planet Nibiru will collide with Earth in July of this year. The Nibiru collision with Earth in 2012 has been predicted for a long time, but astrophysicists, cosmologists and astronomers around the world have now come to a consensus that Earth will indeed collide with the planet, which lies just outside Pluto. Nibiru, in Babylonian Astronomy translates to “Planet of Crossing” or “Point of Transition”, especially of rivers, i.e. river crossings or ferry-boats, a term of the highest point of the ecliptic, i.e. the point of summer solstice, and its associated constellation. The establishment of the Nibiru point is described in tablet 5 of the Enuma Elish. Its cuneiform sign was often a cross, or various winged disc. The Sumerian culture was located in the fertile lands between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, at the southern part of today’s Iraq.
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6% Click to View More Images: Karbonn Smart Tab 1 Warranty: Standard Manufacturer Warranty Quantity :   Check delivery to my pincode Click here to Buy Call 0922-353-7000 to Order Add to Wishlist User Review Q & A Specifications Report Product Error Price Challenge Share with Friend Product Details Karbonn Smart Tab 1 Karbonn has unveiled its first table
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Aakash Tab UBISLATE 7 features The tablet is small and compact and its external dimensions are 190.5×118.5×15.7mm. At 350gms it is light weight and portable and can easily fit in to a school bag or handbag. The fully loaded tablet has all the essentials required in a computing device. It is built using the latest technology and has a 7” resistive touch screen, with a picture resolution of 800×400 pixel. The tablet has 2 USB ports for connectivity. Since the model that has been launched is basic, it is only Wi-Fi enabled. The advanced models which will be launched at a later date are proposed to be Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) and General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) enabled. They would be priced slightly higher because of these extra features, but would still be highly affordable. unbeatable price Only Rs.2,999 for the UbiSlate Monthly internet charges: Rs.98 / 2GB High
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All You Wanted To Know About Low-cost Tablets Aakash & UbiSlate It has just been a little over a week since the world’s cheapest Tablet ‘Aakash’ was made available for online purchase and it is already sold out . Techcircle got in touch with the spokesperson of DataWind Ltd (the company behind the Aakash and UbiSlate Tablets) and tried to answer some obvious queries for a tech enthusiast related to the most sought after Tablet in the Indian market. We had earlier covered the specs and what do you get in such a low priced product. Here we throw light on some important news such as UbiSlate to become available across offline and online retailers soon, DataWind’s upcoming more feature packed Tabs in the next six months and more. Availability & Demand First of all, the move by DataWind to start selling Aakash online was surprising given that the Tablet was originally meant to be sol
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0 reasons why Aakash tablet can be a failure Last Updated: Friday, January 13, 2012, 14:38      309   Tags : Aakash tablet review , Aakash tablet specs , Aakash tablet specifications , Aakash Ubislate review Zeenews Bureau New Delhi: Days after the big bang launch of the Aakash Tablet by the government doubts are being raised over its efficiency and durability. If experts of the industry are to be believed, technical flaws, no hands-on experience, and the total cost of procuring it make the much-hyped gadget a disappointment for the buyers. The after sale report about the Aakash Tablet are extremely disappointing and those who bought the low cost gadget have only one reason to be happy- they are the privileged early users of the gadget. During its launch, Union HRD Minister Kapil Sibal said, “To improve the system of education in India. Soon, a 35 dollar computer will be made available to every child in school. The tablet shall help enhance the q
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Why Won't the Supernova Explode? Play ScienceCast Video Join Mailing List June 15, 2012: Somewhere in the Milky Way, a massive old star is about to die a spectacular death. As its nuclear fuel runs out, the star begins to collapse under its own tremendous weight. Crushing pressure triggers new nuclear reactions, setting the stage for a terrifying blast. And then... nothing happens. At least that's what supercomputers have been telling astrophysicists for decades. Many of the best computer models of supernovas fail to produce an explosion. At the end of the simulation, gravity wins the day and the star simply collapses. Clearly, physicists are missing something. A new ScienceCast video explains how NASA's NuSTAR observatory will explore the mystery of exploding stars. Play it . "We don't fully understand how supernovas of massive stars work yet," says Fiona Harrison, an astrophys
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Scientific Method / Science & Exploration New detector weighs in: neutrinos don't exceed light speed After controversial results suggesting that neutrinos move faster than light, …   Mar 16 2012, 8:56pm IST We now have yet another indication that neutrinos cannot travel faster than the speed of light after all, provided by a neighbor of the OPERA detector that set off the fuss in the first place . OPERA's detector sits deep underground at Gran Sasso in Italy, where it receives neutrinos from a beam generated at CERN, 730km away on the French-Swiss border. Because the neutrino beam spreads out over the intervening distance, it's possible to run multiple detectors at the same site, all listening in on the same beam. The team running one of Gran Sasso's other detectors (called ICARUS) has now performed time-of-flight measurements on neutrinos and determined that they don't seem to be
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Transits happen when a planet crosses between Earth and the sun. Only Mercury and Venus, which are closer to the sun than our planet, can undergo this unusual alignment. With its relatively tight orbit, Mercury circles the sun fast enough that we see the innermost planet transit every 13 to 14 years. But transits of Venus are exceedingly rare, due to that world's tilted orbit: After the 2012 Venus transit, we won't see another until 2117. During the upcoming transit, Venus will look like a black dot gliding across the face of the sun over the course of about six hours. "Venus's diameter will appear only about a 30th the diameter of the sun, so it will be ... like a pea in front of a watermelon," said Jay Pasachoff , an astronomer at Williams College in Massachusetts. (Read a Q&A with Pasachoff about Venus transits .) "The effect won't be visually impressive, but that black dot against the sun is a remarkable thing to see
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What is a transit of Venus? Venus Transit When Venus passes directly between earth and the sun, we see the distant planet as a small dot gliding slowly across the face of the sun.  Historically, this rare alignment is how we measured the size of our solar system.  The view is like a front row seat to the transit method, by which we now find planets around distant stars.   When is it? Observers in North America see Venus on June 5 around 6:04 p.m. EDT until sunset. The entire transit lasts over six hours.  This will be the last transit of Venus to occur in your lifetime.  Next chance: December 2117.   Venus glides across the sun's face during its previous transit, seen from Flagler Beach Pier in Florida.