Guidance and navigation computer used in Apollo spacecraft
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Astronomy Daily - The Podcast: S03E239Welcome to Astronomy Daily, your go-to source for the latest in space exploration and astronomical discoveries. I'm your host, Anna, and today we have an exciting lineup of stories that range from NASA's mission delays to innovative scientific theories about our universe.Highlights:- NASA Mission Delays: Discover the reasons behind NASA's decision to postpone the launch of three critical missions, including the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe. Learn about the impacts on other missions sharing the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and the importance of these solar studies.- Orion's Heat Shield Challenge: Explore the unexpected issues encountered with the Orion spacecraft's heat shield following its Artemis 1 mission. Understand the engineering challenges and solutions being developed to ensure astronaut safety in future missions.- Parker Solar Probe's Daring Journey: Get the latest updates on the Parker Solar Probe as it prepares for its closest approach to the Sun. Discover the groundbreaking data it's collecting and its significance for understanding solar phenomena.- Apollo Instruments' Moonwatch: Dive into the innovative creation of a wearable timepiece replicating the Apollo Guidance Computer's interface. Learn how this fusion of history and technology offers an educational tool for space enthusiasts.- China's Sea-Based Launch Success: Follow the achievements of Galactic Energy, a Beijing-based private rocket manufacturer, as it successfully launches satellites from a sea-based platform, marking a milestone in China's space sector.- Testing the Anthropic Principle: Delve into the groundbreaking research proposing an experimental framework to test the anthropic principle. Understand the potential implications for our understanding of the universe's conditions for life.For more cosmic updates, visit our website at astronomydaily.io. Sign up for our free Daily newsletter to stay informed on all things space. Join our community on social media by searching for #AstroDailyPod on Facebook, X, Tumblr, YouTube, YouTubeMusic, and TikTok. Share your thoughts and connect with fellow space enthusiasts.Thank you for tuning in. This is Anna signing off. Until next time, keep looking up and stay curious about the wonders of our universe.00:00 - NASA announces significant delays in three important missions aimed at studying our Sun01:44 - Orion's heat shield suffered significant damage during its Artemis 1 mission03:37 - NASA's Parker Solar Probe is preparing for its closest ever approach to sun05:25 - British startup Apollo Instruments has created a fully functional Apollo Guidance Computer watch07:08 - Beijing based private rocket manufacturer Galactic Energy has successfully launched four satellites08:41 - The anthropic principle suggests that our universe is fine tuned to support life11:35 - Astronomy Daily brings you the latest developments in space exploration and astronomy✍️ Episode ReferencesNASAhttps://www.nasa.gov/SpaceX Falcon 9https://www.spacex.com/vehicles/falcon-9/Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratoryhttps://www.jhuapl.edu/Apollo Instrumentshttps://www.apolloinstruments.com/Roscohttps://www.rosco.com/Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physicshttps://iopscience.iop.org/journal/75167--- Lightbird satellitehttps://www.isas.jaxa.jp/en/missions/spacecraft/future/lightbird.htmlGalactic Energyhttp://www.galactic-energy.com/Guodian Gaokihttps://www.guodiangaoki.com/Astronomy Dailyhttps://astronomydaily.io/Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/astronomy-daily-the-podcast--5648921/support.
Guest Host: JR Warmkessel. Swift Magic... Remotely Piloted Helicopter... JR's English Adventure... GPS Spoofing?... Happy Retirement Hal and Sandy... Congrats Dan Johnson... RIP Ingenuity... Restoring the Apollo Guidance Computer... Gypsy Moth redux. All this and more on Uncontrolled Airspace Podcast. Recorded Feb 8, 2024. (1:03:57) [#725] {21}
In our previous episode, we looked at the history of flight - from dinosaurs to the modern aircraft that carry people and things all over the world. Those helped to make the world smaller, but UAVs and drones have had a very different impact in how we lead our lives - and will have an even more substantial impact in the future. That might not have seemed so likely in the 1700s, though - when unmann Unmanned Aircraft Napoleon conquered Venice in 1797 and then ceded control to the Austrians the same year. He then took it as part of a treaty in 1805 and established the first Kingdom of Italy. Then lost it in 1814. And so they revolted in 1848. One of the ways the Austrians crushed the revolt, in part employing balloons, which had been invented in 1783, that were packed with explosives. 200 balloons packed with bombs later, one found a target. Not a huge surprise that such techniques didn't get used again for some time. The Japanese tried a similar tactic to bomb the US in World War II - then there were random balloons in the 2020s, just for funsies. A few other inventions needed to find one another in order to evolve into something entirely new. Radio was invented in the 1890s. Nikola Tesla built a radio controlled boat in 1898. Airplanes came along in 1903. Then came airships moved by radio. So it was just a matter of time before the cost of radio equipment came down enough to match the cost of building smaller airplanes that could be controlled with remote controls as well. The first documented occurrence of that was in 1907 when Percy Sperry filed a patent for a kite fashioned to look and operate like a plane, but glide in the wind. The kite string was the first remote control. Then electrical signals went through those strings and eventually the wire turned into radio - the same progress we see with most manual machinery that needs to be mobile. Technology moves upmarket, so Sperry Corporation the aircraft with autopilot features in 1912. At this point, that was just a gyroscopic heading indicator and attitude indicator that had been connected to hydraulically operated elevators and rudders but over time would be able to react to all types of environmental changes to save pilots from having to constantly manually react while flying. That helped to pave the way for longer and safer flights, as automation often does. Then came World War I. Tesla discussed aerial combat using unmanned aircraft in 1915 and Charles Kettering (who developed the electric cash register and the electric car starter) gave us The Kettering Bug, a flying, remote controlled torpedo of sorts. Elmer Sperry worked on a similar device. British war engineers like Archibald Low were also working on attempts but the technology didn't evolve fast enough and by the end of the war there wasn't much interest in military funding. But a couple of decades can do a lot. Both for miniaturization and maturity of technology. 1936 saw the development of the first navy UAV aircraft by the name of Queen Bee by Admiral William H. Stanley then the QF2. They was primarily used for aerial target practice as a low-cost radio-controlled drone. The idea was an instant hit and later on, the military called for the development of similar systems, many of which came from Hollywood of all places. Reginald Denny was a British gunner in World War I. They shot things from airplanes. After the war he moved to Hollywood to be an actor. By the 1930s he got interested in model airplanes that could fly and joined up with Paul Whittier to open a chain of hobby shops. He designed a few planes and eventually grew them to be sold to the US military as targets. The Radioplane as they would be known even got joysticks and they sold tens of thousands during World War II. War wasn't the only use for UAVs. Others were experimenting and by 1936 we got the first radio controlled model airplane competition in 1936, a movement that continued to grow and evolve into the 1970s. We got the Academy of Model Aeronautics (or AMA) in 1936, who launched a magazine called Model Aviation and continues to publish, provide insurance, and act as the UAV, RC airplane, and drone community representative to the FAA. Their membership still runs close to 200,000. Most of these model planes were managed from the ground using radio remote controls. The Federal Communications Commission, or FCC, was established in 1934 to manage the airwaves. They stepped in to manage what frequencies could be used for different use cases in the US, including radio controlled planes. Where there is activity, there are stars. The Big Guff, built by brothers Walt and Bill Guff, was the first truly successful RC airplane in that hobbiest market. Over the next decades solid state electronics got smaller, cheaper, and more practical. As did the way we could transmit bits over those wireless links. 1947 saw the first radar-guided missile, the subsonic Firebird, which over time evolved into a number of programs. Electro-mechanical computers had been used to calculate trajectories for ordinances during World War II so with knowledge of infrared, we got infrared homing then television cameras mounted into missiles and when combined with the proximity fuse, which came with small pressure, magnetic, acoustic, radio, then optical transmitters. We got much better at blowing things up. Part of that was studying the German V-2 rocket programs. They used an analog computer to control the direction and altitude of missiles. The US Polaris and Minuteman missile programs added transistors then microchips to missiles to control the guidance systems. Rockets had computers and so they showed up in airplanes to aid humans in guiding those, often replacing Sperry's original gyroscopic automations. The Apollo Guidance Computer from the 1969 moon landing was an early example of times when humans even put their lives in the hands of computers - with manual override capabilities of course. Then as the price of chips fell in the 1980s we started to see them in model airplanes. Modern Drones By now, radio controlled aircraft had been used for target practice, to deliver payloads and blow things up, and even for spying. Aircraft without humans to weight them down could run on electric motors rather than combustable engines. Thus they were quieter. This technology allowed the UAVs to fly undetected thus laying the very foundation for the modern depiction of drones used by the military for covert operations. As the costs fell and carrying capacity increased, we saw them used in filmmaking, surveying, weather monitoring, and anywhere else a hobbyist could use their hobby in their career. But the cameras weren't that great yet. Then Fairchild developed the charge-coupled device, or CCD, in 1969. The first digital camera arguably came out of Eastman Kodak in 1975 when Steven Sasson built a prototype using a mixture of batteries, movie camera lenses, Fairchild CCD sensors, and Motorola parts. Sony came out with the Magnetic Video Camera in 1981 and Canon put the RC701 on the market in 1986. Fuji, Dycam, even the Apple QuickTake, came out in the next few years. Cameras were getting better resolution, and as we turned the page into the 1990s, those cameras got smaller and used CompactFlash to store images and video files. The first aerial photograph is attributed to Gaspar Tournachon, but the militaries of the world used UAVs that were B-17 and Grumman Hellcats from World War II that had been converted to drones full of sensors to study nuclear radiation clouds when testing weapons. Those evolved into Reconnaisance drones like the Aerojet SD-2, with mounted analog cameras in the 50s and 60s. During that time we saw the Ryan Firebees and DC-130As run thousands of flights snapping photos to aid intelligence gathering. Every country was in on it. The USSR, Iran, North Korea, Britain. And the DARPA-instigated Amber and then Predator drones might be considered the modern precursor to drones we play with today. Again, we see the larger military uses come down market once secrecy and cost meet a cool factor down-market. DARPA spent $40 million on the Amber program. Manufacturers of consumer drones have certainly made far more than that. Hobbyists started to develop Do It Yourself (DIY) drone kits in the early 2000s. Now that there were websites, we didn't have to wait for magazines to show up, we could take to the World Wide Web forums and trade ideas for how to do what the US CIA had done when they conducted the first armed drone strike in 2001 - just maybe without the weapon systems since this was in the back yard. Lithium-ion batteries were getting cheaper and lighter. As were much faster chips. Robotics had come a long way as well, and moving small parts of model aircraft was much simpler than avoiding all the chairs in a room at Stanford. Hobbyists turned into companies that built and sold drones of all sizes, some of which got in the way of commercial aircraft. So the FAA started issuing drone permits in 2006. Every technology had a point, where the confluence of all these technologies meets into a truly commercially viable product. We had Wi-Fi, RF (or radio frequency), iPhones, mobile apps, tiny digital cameras in our phones, and even in spy teddy bears, we understood flight, propellers, plastics were heavier-than-air, but lighter than metal. So in 2010 we got the Parrot AR Drone. This was the first drone that was sold to the masses that was just plug and play. And an explosion of drone makers followed, with consumer products ranging from around $20 to hundreds now. Drone races, drone aerogymnastics, drone footage on our Apple and Google TV screens, and with TinyML projects for every possible machine learning need we can imagine, UAVs that stabilize cameras, can find objects based on information we program into it, and any other use we can imagine. The concept of drones or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) has come a long way since the Austrians tried to bomb the Venetians into submission. Today there are mini drones, foldable drones, massive drones that can carry packages, racing drones, and even military drones programmed to kill. In fact, right now there are debates raging in the UN around whether to allow drones to autonomously kill. Because Skynet. We're also experimenting with passenger drone technology. Because autonomous driving is another convergence just waiting in the wings. Imagine going to the top of a building and getting in a small pod then flying a few buildings over - or to the next city. Maybe in our lifetimes, but not as soon as some of the companies who have gone public to do just this thought.
The NASA space project advanced the technological progress of the human race by leaps and bounds. Examples of these revolutionary developments abound. But one extra-special item was in its computer. The Apollo Guidance Computer or AGC was one of the first to use silicon-based integrated circuits. Their adoption heralded a revolutionary technology about to make a titanic impact on the world. And the beginning of Silicon Valley as we know it. I try not to make videos about America because it gets me yelled at but I really like this topic. In this video, we are going to look at how the silicon integrated circuit supercharged the AGC and guided us - literally - to the moon.
The NASA space project advanced the technological progress of the human race by leaps and bounds. Examples of these revolutionary developments abound. But one extra-special item was in its computer. The Apollo Guidance Computer or AGC was one of the first to use silicon-based integrated circuits. Their adoption heralded a revolutionary technology about to make a titanic impact on the world. And the beginning of Silicon Valley as we know it. I try not to make videos about America because it gets me yelled at but I really like this topic. In this video, we are going to look at how the silicon integrated circuit supercharged the AGC and guided us - literally - to the moon.
Podcast Episode! Builders and the Developer Spectrum with Riley RaineyJames and I spoke with the super-interesting Riley Rainey. Before you get to any of the regular industry-specific goodness we talk about, check out his GitHub repositories focused around replicating the Apollo Guidance Computer. I was tempted not to talk about anything in the SAP or development world and just blast on about nerdy space things. But we did eventually move on to things in the here-and-now, and it was great fun. Riley and Episode HighlightsAt SAP for 8 years, past 3 in developer relationsStudied computer science in school, jumped into financial modeling“Rambled around” in software from case management tools, to mobility, cloud, platforms, to developer relations — and othersBuilt an open-source multiplayer flight simulator!We coaxed Riley into this photo by pretending to be rocket scientistsKill a week — go find the NASA tech report server .From Riley's perspective, pro-code does have an important distinction from citizen developers using low-code.The important thing is the guard rails set up in the citizen developer universe.All heads nodding in agreement: SAP CoE's still largely isolated from other tech teamsThe promise is there for low-code tools to eat away at IT backlogs. Money QuotesRileyFind a way to get out and do something different! You get exposed to different classes of problems.A builder is anybody who is involved in the construction of software for other people. When you graduate to doing things for more than just yourself…the considerations become very different. Now we're all citizen developers. Are we all citizen security people? Are we all citizen designers?JamesFigure out ways to bring the right teams together so everyone can play to their respective strengths. The community aspect is so important. [re: low-code and pro-code skillsets mingling together]PaulThere are so many ways to produce so many software artifacts for so many different audiences.The tools are ahead of the governance they require.
Welcome to the Electromaker Show, episode 53! This week's maker news stories include NodeMCU ESP32-C3 boards released, an Arduino-powered Apollo guidance computer, and more DIY delights! Tune in for the latest maker, tech, DIY, IoT, embedded, and crowdfunding news stories from the week! We publish a new show every week. Subscribe here! Don't have time to watch the show? Listen to the Electromaker Show in podcast format on your favourite podcast platform! Human Following Utility Trailer Arduino powered Apollo Guidance Computer Build Machine Learning library for even tiny MCUs Pico Keypad on Electromaker Wappsto:bit on Crowd Supply IZIRUN modular STM32 dev boards: Electromaker NXP Hackathon Complete! NodeMCU ESP32-C3 boards now available HomeSpan - library for Apple Homekit Getting Started with FPGAs
Poslechněte si závěrečný druhý díl Wolfcastu o cestě člověka na Měsíc – řeč bude tentokrát nejen o použitých počítačích, ale i o tom, jakým způsobem se přistávalo, nebo jaká kosmonautům hrozila rizika. Michal Rybka vám v tomto díle svého podcastu přiblíží, jak fungoval naváděcí počítač Apollo Guidance Computer a jakým způsobem jej kosmonauti ovládali. Při té příležitosti samozřejmě neopomene na jednu ze zakladatelek softwarového inženýrství, Margarette Hamiltonovou. Jaké byly její zásluhy na projektu Apollo? Proč dostala nejvyšší státní vyznamenání od někdejšího presidenta USA Baracka Obamy? A jak je možné, že se objevila jako jedna z figurek speciální edice LEGO? Poslouchejte a dozvíte se víc! Společně s Martinem Vaněm se Michal vrátí v čase a krok po kroku odhalí, co konkrétně se při Apollu 11 dělo, když kosmonauti přistávali s lunárním modulem na Měsíci. Opakování jednoho příkazu Buzze Aldrina mělo za následek neustálé restarty a samotné přistání i díky tomu bylo riskantním podnikem – reálně totiž hrozilo, že by se z Měsíce nikdo nemusel dostat zpátky na Zemi. O tomhle i o dalších děsivých chybách, které lety Apollo postihly, se Michal rozpovídá v závěru podcastu. Podívejte se na https://www.retronation.cz na další skvělé výlety do herního retra!
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1J2RMorJXMRobert Wills introduces the amazing hardware and software that made up the Apollo Guidance Computer, walks you through the landing procedure step-by-step, and talks about the pioneering design principles that were used to make the landing software robust against any failure. He also explains the problems that occurred during the Apollo 11 landing, and shows you how the Apollo Guidance Computer played its part in saving the mission.Recorded: 26th October, 2019.pullupandshop.com/collections/all —————————————————————————————————#Google #Web #dogecoin #doge #Light #Years #Ahead | The 1969 Apollo Guidance Computer#elonmuskdogen #happy #cute #like4like #tbt #xibit #bbc #buy #takeit #UNISEX #ClimateAction #ClimatResilience #climatecrises #summer #omg #shopping #lover #wow #gaming #tiktok #pink #rose #DISNEYLAND #sale #climatechange #blackandwhite
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News MEV-2 si è agganciato al satellite Intelsat 10-02 [Link]I primi voli di Ingenuity [Link]Sarà SpaceX a riportare l’umanità sulla Luna [Link] I supporter di questo episodio Grazie a Vittorino T., Gianpietro F., Lorenzo M. per il supporto. Rubriche Le storie di Nonno Apollo: La celebrità di Jurij Gagarin Link della settimana Font Apollo Guidance Computer [Link] AstronauticAgenda Versione a griglia, Google Calendar e Timeline La puntata su YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5GgpVls4gn8 Sigle e musiche di accompagnamento Sigla iniziale: Discov2 di eslade (https://www.jamendo.com/track/467466/discov2)Sigla finale: Prometheus di ANtarticbreeze (https://www.jamendo.com/track/1229086/prometheus)
In this episode, our Geek Dads explore hacks that have been helping them with working from home. These include improving productivity, balancing homeschooling and tech tips to get a better WiFi signal around your house. We also have an exclusive interview with Marc Verdiell, a key member of the team who restored an original Apollo Guidance Computer, the first computer to use integrated circuits, with a 1MHz clock, four 16-bits registers, 4K RAM, and 32K ROM. Robbie, Pete and Dave also debate which streaming service is the best, and answer the question of which they would have if they could only access one for the rest of their lives.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week Alexis Gallagher returns to geek out on iOS and math. Prompted by askMTJC from Mike Hendley we discuss using keyboards on the iPad and Macs. 7 Awesome Open Source SwiftUI Projects To Inspire You. Mini LED technology will be coming to MacBooks and iPads in the near future. Apple will release at least four new iPhones with 5G and OLED displays. Apple launches Apple Music and well as App and Games Awards. Do we care about new HomeKit integrations? It is now too late to order engraved AirPods Pro for Christmas. Does iOS 13 on iOS and tvOS support Nintendo Switch Pro controllers or not? Paul Hudson reviews the new MBP in terms of Swift compile times. Picks: How to free up space on your developer Mac, The Apollo Guidance Computer, 13 Minutes to the Moon, Ted Gioia’s best Music of 2018 - Apple Music playlist, GymBook, Oura, sleep-tracking Ring. After Show: Apple TV+ shows, Affinity Publisher, Spectre, Moleskin notes and Home Pod. Special Guests: Alexis Gallagher and Mike Vinakmens.
This week Dave (https://twitter.com/davidegts) and Gunnar (http://atechnologyjobisnoexcuse.com/about) talk about failing with public relations, failing with smart TVs, failing with zip files, and failing with collaboration tools Emma Long Metropolitan Park (http://www.austintexas.gov/department/emma-long-metropolitan-park) How Amazon and the Cops Set Up an Elaborate Sting Operation That Accomplished Nothing (https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/43jmnq/how-amazon-and-the-cops-set-up-elaborate-sting-operation-that-accomplished-nothing) Samsung asks users to please virus-scan their TVs (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2019/06/samsung-please-virus-scan-your-tv/) A better zip bomb (https://www.bamsoftware.com/hacks/zipbomb/) Microsoft says Teams now has 13M daily active users (https://techcrunch.com/2019/07/11/microsoft-says-its-slack-competitor-teams-now-has-13-million-daily-active-users/) The Slackification of the American Home (https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2019/07/families-slack-asana/593584/) Cutting Room Floor * Mining Bitcoin on the Apollo Guidance Computer (https://blog.hackster.io/mining-bitcoin-on-the-apollo-guidance-computer-62691628514) * CPAP Facehugger (https://www.jaredisgray.com/tinker-gnome-cpap-facehugger/) We Give Thanks * The D&G Show Slack Clubhouse for the discussion topics!
Episode 179: Fly Me To The Moon Randy Walsh is a Commercial Pilot and a Certified Flight Instructor in the general aviation industry. He is a revisionist and an avid researcher with an interest in history, aviation, the space industry, and music. As an author, Randy chose for his first book the subject of The Apollo Moon Missions Hoax. Randy is the author of the book “The Apollo Moon Missions: Hiding a Hoax in Plain Sight”. Randy recently was featured in Vice News to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the moon landing — “one of the greatest achievements in human history.” Included in Part 1 of this series, are the following key points:➢ The Saturn V rocket and the fraudulent claims on the powerful F-1 engines, without which the Apollo landings could not have taken place.➢ The Apollo Guidance Computer had no capacity or memory to run the programs necessary to navigate a 480,000-mile round trip.➢ The conflicting and contradictory information regarding the radiation intensity between the Earth and Moon, which would have prevented any manned lunar landing.➢ The inadequate shielding for both the Command Module and Lunar Module, which would have ended any manned mission outside of Low Earth Orbit in a matter of minutes if not seconds.➢ And the incomplete, missing and/or destroyed documents along with the thousands of missing reels of telemetry tapes containing data that has been ‘lost’ forever. On the second half of the show featured Ronny Dawson. A bizarre Alien/UFO experience by Ronny Dawson (Texas Oilfield Worker). Dawson came across the Aliens and their craft while working nights in the Texas oilfield. For 30 years he never encountered anything like the events that began in 2010 and continue to this day. His experience includes many UFO sightings including the flyover of a mile-long craft, cattle abduction, alien home invasion, paranormal activity around his home, death of a co-witness, alien first contact, dimensional travel to alien galaxy, alien planet observations, genetic sample donations via sexual contact with a non-human species, spiritual separation from the body, experience of moving through solid matter, and disclosure conversation with representative alien entities. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Episode 179: Fly Me To The Moon Randy Walsh is a Commercial Pilot and a Certified Flight Instructor in the general aviation industry. He is a revisionist and an avid researcher with an interest in history, aviation, the space industry, and music. As an author, Randy chose for his first book the subject of The Apollo Moon Missions Hoax. Randy is the author of the book “The Apollo Moon Missions: Hiding a Hoax in Plain Sight”. Randy recently was featured in Vice News to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the moon landing — “one of the greatest achievements in human history.” Included in Part 1 of this series, are the following key points:➢ The Saturn V rocket and the fraudulent claims on the powerful F-1 engines, without which the Apollo landings could not have taken place.➢ The Apollo Guidance Computer had no capacity or memory to run the programs necessary to navigate a 480,000-mile round trip.➢ The conflicting and contradictory information regarding the radiation intensity between the Earth and Moon, which would have prevented any manned lunar landing.➢ The inadequate shielding for both the Command Module and Lunar Module, which would have ended any manned mission outside of Low Earth Orbit in a matter of minutes if not seconds.➢ And the incomplete, missing and/or destroyed documents along with the thousands of missing reels of telemetry tapes containing data that has been ‘lost' forever. On the second half of the show featured Ronny Dawson. A bizarre Alien/UFO experience by Ronny Dawson (Texas Oilfield Worker). Dawson came across the Aliens and their craft while working nights in the Texas oilfield. For 30 years he never encountered anything like the events that began in 2010 and continue to this day. His experience includes many UFO sightings including the flyover of a mile-long craft, cattle abduction, alien home invasion, paranormal activity around his home, death of a co-witness, alien first contact, dimensional travel to alien galaxy, alien planet observations, genetic sample donations via sexual contact with a non-human species, spiritual separation from the body, experience of moving through solid matter, and disclosure conversation with representative alien entities.
We take a look at the amazing abilities of the Apollo Guidance Computer and Jim breaks down everything you need to know about the ZFS ARC. Plus an update on ZoL SIMD acceleration, your feedback, and an interesting new neuromorphic system from Intel.
We take a look at the amazing abilities of the Apollo Guidance Computer and Jim breaks down everything you need to know about the ZFS ARC.
We take a look at the amazing abilities of the Apollo Guidance Computer and Jim breaks down everything you need to know about the ZFS ARC.
We take a look at the amazing abilities of the Apollo Guidance Computer and Jim breaks down everything you need to know about the ZFS ARC.
Donate Bitcoin: 3NqhJSAikoFiYmZm3ACGzdw9Lr86ZiLT7KSupport the Show: https://www.patreon.com/madbitcoinsChangellyhttp://changelly.comListen to WCN Audio Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/w...Call Us LIVE!SKYPE WorldCryptoNetworkCheck out the brand new http://WorldCryptoNetwork.com/Follow WCN on Twitter: https://twitter.com/WorldCryptoNetMad Bitcoins is on Tallycoin crowdfunding for Bitcoin and Lightning.https://tallyco.in/s/xb9w8m/
This week AC and CJ discuss goings on in the cloud world with Microsoft, Azure, StackOverflow, OneDrive and more. They discuss moving the cloud show site to a new platform.Banter Static website hosting in Azure Storage News The Evolving Infrastructure of .NET Core Introducing OneDrive community samples GitHub repository Azure Data Box Heavy is now generally available How the Seattle Seahawks use data to win — on and off the field Scoop: Bipartisan senators want Big Tech to put a price on your data British Airways faces record £183m fine for data breach Sneaky fingerprinting script in Microsoft ad slips onto StackOverflow, against site policy Azure DevOps adds new features including bi-directional traceability between Releases and Jira issues Picks AC’s Pick 8 Days to the Moon and Back CJ’s Pick Bitcoin mining on an Apollo Guidance Computer: 10.3 seconds per hash
Dome Life with Paul and Mitch Special Edition 3 Title: Author Randy Walsh (Apollo Moon Hoax) domelifepodcast.com AND LEAVE US A VOICE MESSAGE TO BE READ ON THE AIR! Websites and Social Media Links: paulontheplane.com potp.net youtube.com/paulontheplane tfrlive.com/paulontheplane facebook.com/justpaulontheplane https:/twitter.com/itsflatfolks Mitchell from Australia’s channel! www.youtube.com/channel/UCoQF34yGg5i8LPdGpK5ezGw mitchellfromaustralia@gmail.com Dome Life on iTunes itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/dome-…aul-on-the-plane Dome Life on SoundCloud @domelife Dome Life on Stitcher www.stitcher.com/podcast/paul-on-…aul-on-the-plane Dome Life on Spotify open.spotify.com/show/3qVzPhdmVIOCwJ1vjc0tDX Show Notes/Links Author Randy Walsh joins me to discuss the research that led to his recently published book - The Apollo Missions - Hiding A Hoax in Plain Sight (Part 1). We discuss Randy's background, the F-1 Engines, Apollo 13, the Apollo Guidance Computer, the Van Allen Radiation Belts, and much more relating to the alleged moon landings. Randy is a Commercial Pilot and a Certified Flight Instructor in the general aviation industry. He is a revisionist and an avid researcher with an interest in history, aviation, the space industry and music. As an author, Randy chose for his first book the subject of The Apollo Moon Missions Hoax. When Randy is not busy flying or researching, he is uploading classical guitar pieces on YouTube. Link to order Randy’s book: https://tinyurl.com/y24v7ukb Email: authorrandy@hotmail.com Website: https://authorrandywalsh.com/ {which has a sign-up form for his monthly Newsletter} Facebook: @authorrandywalsh YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpxOett7FOlSWbY9TPwHOzg For more information, please visit https://www.aulis.com/ and search for the following articles: Xavier Pascal Gennady Ivchenkov Alexander Popov and Andrei Bulatov
En 2019 se celebra el 50º aniversario de la llegada de los primeros seres terrestres a la superficie de la Luna. En este programa conoceremos mejor el Apollo Guidance Computer, la serie de computadores que hicieron posibles los alunizajes. En la sección retroalimentación, además de las preguntas habituales, continuamos comentando la polémica sobre Starlink, la de satélites artificiales de SpaceX. No faltan nuevas e interesantes recomendaciones. Únete a Víctor Manchado (Pirulo Cósmico), Daniel Marín (Eureka), Carlos Pazos (Mola Saber) y Víctor R. Ruiz (Infoastro) en nuestras travesías por el espacio, la ciencia y otras curiosidades.
En 2019 se celebra el 50º aniversario de la llegada de los primeros seres terrestres a la superficie de la Luna. En este programa conoceremos mejor el Apollo Guidance Computer, la serie de computadores que hicieron posibles los alunizajes. En la sección retroalimentación, además de las preguntas habituales, continuamos comentando la polémica sobre Starlink, la de satélites artificiales de SpaceX. No faltan nuevas e interesantes recomendaciones. Únete a Víctor Manchado (Pirulo Cósmico), Daniel Marín (Eureka), Carlos Pazos (Mola Saber) y Víctor R. Ruiz (Infoastro) en nuestras travesías por el espacio, la ciencia y otras curiosidades.
Bem-vindos à edição 044 do Repórter Retro. Links do podcast Feliz 25 anos, Atari Jaguar! O crachá do Hackaday Superconference deste ano tem um emulador de Apple 1 TRON para Apple IIGS Pequenos emuladores, 8 bits por vez Um dos últimos CRTs a saírem das linhas de produção CuriousMarc restaura um Apollo Guidance Computer: um, … Continue lendo Repórter Retro 044 →
Adam Koralik: https://www.youtube.com/user/AdamKoralikKim Justice: https://www.youtube.com/user/elmyrdehorySlope's Game Room: https://www.youtube.com/user/djslopesroomRetro Man Cave: https://www.youtube.com/user/RetroManCaveClaim your FREE copy of The Economist - Text RETRO to 78070 Thanks to our amazing donators this week: Samu, Mathew Cooper, Carl Parkes, Matthew Martin Audioboom new channel: https://audioboom.com/channel/theretrohourAudioboom RSS feed: https://audioboom.com/channels/4970769.rssJoin our Discord channel: https://discord.gg/GQw8qp8Our website: http://theretrohour.comOur Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theretrohour/Our Twitter: https://twitter.com/retrohourukOur Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/retrohouruk/Events we'll be at:PLAY Expo Blackpool: https://www.playexpoblackpool.com/RCM Christmas party: http://www.retrocomputermuseum.co.uk/forum/index.php?topic=5946.0 Show notes:Nintendo wins $12million from ROM sites: https://bit.ly/2z6Q0NM The 'mini PC Classic' is coming: https://bit.ly/2Ke02RP Sega apply for trademarks of their classic consoles: http://www.japanesenintendo.com/post/180043434269 Restoring the Apollo Guidance Computer: https://youtu.be/2KSahAoOLdU
Tell Me How People Hurt YouMashup episode with Embedded.FM Elecia White and Christopher White are the hosts of the Embedded.FM podcast It is a podcast dedicated to the many aspects of engineering Elecia and Christopher talk about the how, why, and what of engineering, usually devices The focus is bringing on guests and experts onto the podcast How to make Software and Hardware Engineers work better together Schematics for the Apollo Guidance Computer and their Kicad replica on github Announcements Twitter Chat Info May 11th Friday at 1PM CST MacroFab Monthly Electronics Meetup May 23rd 6PM at MacroFab HQ in Houston Brandon Satrom from Particle. Going to give a talk about IoT fundamentals. Houston Hardware Happy Hour June 7th at Slowpokes Bring hacks and hang out Visit our Slack Channel and join the conversation in between episodes and please review us, wherever you listen (PodcastAddict, iTunes). It helps this show stay visible and helps new listeners find us.Tags: Christopher, Elecia, electronics podcast, Embedded.FM, firmware, MacroFab, macrofab engineering podcast, MEP, Podcast, Software Engineers
Stephen Kraig (@Macro_Ninjaneer) and Parker Dillmann (@LnghrnEngineer), of Macrofab (@MacroFab) joined us to chat about getting hardware and software to work together. Stephen and Parker are also hosts of the Macrofab podcast. We compared out-the-ordinary podcast guests. For MacroFab episode 112 it was their conversation with a patent lawyer. For Embedded episode 150 it was our conversation with a tax accountant. Schematics for the Apollo Guidance Computer (and their Kicad replica on github).
This week, we discuss the computers and software of the Apollo Program, with a special focus on the memory system of the Apollo Guidance Computer.
Hoaxilla Folge zu Slender Man http://www.hoaxilla.com/hoaxilla-118-slender-man/ The code that took America to the Moon was just published to GitHub http://qz.com/726338/the-code-that-took-america-to-the-moon-was-just-published-to-github-and-its-like-a-1960s-time-capsule/ Ron Burkey's Apollo Guidance Computer Engine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyhI85Rd1kI&feature=youtu.be Simulation des Apollo Guidance Computer im Browser http://svtsim.com/moonjs/agc.html Das Repository mit dem AGC-Code auf GitHub https://github.com/chrislgarry/Apollo-11/ Assemblersprache (Wikipedia) https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assemblersprache Der Reddit-Thread https://www.reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/comments/4ro9v9/apollo_11_guidance_computer_source_code_now_on/ PC Music Netlabel http://pcmusic.info/ Magnificent Montague (Wikipedia) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnificent_Montague Voyager Golden Record (Wikipedia) https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voyager_Golden_Record Bilder auf der Voyager Golden Record (Wikipedia) https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilder_auf_der_Voyager_Golden_Record
This episode is a mix between computer architecture, programming and (historic) space flight. We cover the ins and outs of the Apollo Guidance Computer. Our guest ist Frank O'Brien, who wrote an incredibly detailed book about this machine. In the episode we cover the hardware architecture, the instruction set, the various layers (native, executive and interpreter) as well as some mission programs.