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https://youtube.com/watch?v=97FhauH1J58

Ready for some mind blowing information…

“The past and the future exist together simultaneously in one geometric object.”

All time exists, all the time.

“Everything everywhere in one frozen moment of time and the past influences the future and the future influences the past in an endless feedback loop. Time is affecting all time, all the time. Every moment is co-creating ever other moment both forward and backward in time.”


This is a well done video that offers a theory of everything and a model that explains how our simulated reality is constructed and how it works. In this article, I’ve summarized the amazing ideas in this video with my own comments. Let’s get into some of the things discussed in “We Are Living In A Simulation – New Evidence!” from Real Spirit Dynamics. The Future Creates the Past, then the Past Creates the Future A higher dimensional Quasicrystal creates a 4D Quasicrystal that then projects a 3D Quasicrystal which is the fundamental substructure of all reality. Quasicrystals, angles and light form these dimensional projections. Read More →

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) — Scientists using images from an orbiting NASA spacecraft have detected eight sites where huge ice deposits near the Martian surface are exposed on steep slopes, a potential source of water that could help sustain future human outposts.

While scientists already knew that about a third of the surface of Mars contains shallow ground ice and that its poles harbor major ice deposits, the research published on Thursday described thick underground ice sheets exposed along slopes up to 100 yards (meters) tall at the planet’s middle latitudes.

“It was surprising to find ice exposed at the surface at these places. In the mid-latitudes, it’s normally covered by a blanket of dust or regolith,” loose bits of rock atop a layer of bedrock, said research geologist Colin Dundas of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Astrogeology Science Center in Flagstaff, Arizona, who led the study.

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With CES 2018 now in full swing, it’s time to explore what Intel, Samsung, Toyota, and other companies have in store for the future of consumer electronics.

The 2018 Consumer Electronics Show is now in full swing. Between now and Friday, January 12, all kinds of technology — both conceptual and practical — will be unveiled and trotted out in front of audiences. We’ve already written about what you can expect to see from CES 2018, but as day one draws to a close, it’s a good time to check-in on what’s already trending.

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If you feel like having one of your fundamental beliefs thrown out the window, try this on for size — under the right conditions, you can boil water until it freezes solid.

Yep, as the Cody’s Lab video above demonstrates, after a few minutes of boiling, water starts to form solid ice crystals, and is actually cold to the touch. Crazy, right?

So what’s going on here?

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Here, $$$$, turn that thing off, you’re making too much cheap power.


New figures show £53m was given to the wind industry last year to keep turbines switched off to regulate electricity supplied to National Grid.

Since wind farms first started receiving constraint payments five years ago, more than £100 million has been handed over in compensation for switching off. Photo: PA

By Robert Mendick, Chief Reporter

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This op-ed originally appeared in the Dec. 12, 2017 of SpaceNews magazine.

America’s space program has long held a special place in the public’s imagination, but NASA missions are limited by budget constraints. NASA must use its funding wisely to implement balanced, cost-efficient programs to develop enabling technologies, such as technologies to power future NASA missions. Speaking as the former project manager of three successful missions — Voyager, Galileo, and Cassini — and the canceled Prometheus-Icy Moons Orbiter, I have a unique perspective to share.

Op-ed | An argument for space fission reactors

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