This document is a magazine called Paranoia that publishes articles on conspiracy theories. It contains information about subscribing, submissions, disclaimer, staff, and advertisement rates. Some article topics mentioned include The Dragons of Eden, The Reptilian Agenda for the New World Order, JFK and the Manchurian Candidate, and Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars.
Series of case studies to present a different approach to game as marketing tools. Games could be more than entertainment: as lenses to read and reasoning upon several serious and real themes, they represent an unprecedented chance to design meaningful experiences for brands even beyond points and badge.
Master In Brand Communication at PoliMi, Politecnico Milano, Italy
Modeling avengers – open source technology mix for saving the worldCédric Brun
Planet earth is facing massive challenges: global warming and scarcity of natural resources among others. Those challenges are reaching a level of complexity unknown yet and trying to address those requires deep scientific understanding, real world data, specialized tools, inter-disciplinary collaboration and the ability to evaluate “What If” scenarios.
In collaboration with scientists from INRA (the French National Institute for Agricultural Research) we experienced one of those challenges: the use of natural resources for agricultural activities, especially water consumption. While the scientists insight was required in smart technologies like smart farms, this understanding was required to be expressed at an higher level of abstraction through specific tooling. They felt that providing highly dedicated tools with a small budget would require super powers. To us modeling people it looked like a very good fit for DSL’s (Domain Specific Languages), hence suitable for an experiment : let’s build specific modeling tools for smart farming systems!
This experiment represents a few days of work bringing open-source technologies together: EMF, Xtext, Sirius, Gemoc (a model debugging environment, including specific features for concurrency constraints), OptaPlanner (a constraint satisfaction solver from the JBoss community) and Acceleo, resulting in a collection of Eclipse based tools for farming systems (published on github). Just like in The Avengers, each technology bring its own capability but it is the amalgamation of all of them which lead to amazing power!
The session will start with a demo of the Smart Farming System Tooling, an environment to model, analyze and simulate an agricultural exploitation, biomass growth and water consumption based on user input and open data. Then we will dig deeper in how the technologies are mixed and used, among other questions: which of the textual or graphical syntax is better suited for a given aspect? how can we achieve a “perfect blend” of those syntaxes? how OptaPlanner and EMF can create a powerful synergy? how data from INRA can be structured and fed into the tool?
The talk will then evaluate how useful open-source technologies are in addressing this class of problems and how modeling can be used to support sustainability, enable broader engagement of the community, and facilitate more informed decision-making.
Series of case studies to present a different approach to game as marketing tools. Games could be more than entertainment: as lenses to read and reasoning upon several serious and real themes, they represent an unprecedented chance to design meaningful experiences for brands even beyond points and badge.
Master In Brand Communication at PoliMi, Politecnico Milano, Italy
Modeling avengers – open source technology mix for saving the worldCédric Brun
Planet earth is facing massive challenges: global warming and scarcity of natural resources among others. Those challenges are reaching a level of complexity unknown yet and trying to address those requires deep scientific understanding, real world data, specialized tools, inter-disciplinary collaboration and the ability to evaluate “What If” scenarios.
In collaboration with scientists from INRA (the French National Institute for Agricultural Research) we experienced one of those challenges: the use of natural resources for agricultural activities, especially water consumption. While the scientists insight was required in smart technologies like smart farms, this understanding was required to be expressed at an higher level of abstraction through specific tooling. They felt that providing highly dedicated tools with a small budget would require super powers. To us modeling people it looked like a very good fit for DSL’s (Domain Specific Languages), hence suitable for an experiment : let’s build specific modeling tools for smart farming systems!
This experiment represents a few days of work bringing open-source technologies together: EMF, Xtext, Sirius, Gemoc (a model debugging environment, including specific features for concurrency constraints), OptaPlanner (a constraint satisfaction solver from the JBoss community) and Acceleo, resulting in a collection of Eclipse based tools for farming systems (published on github). Just like in The Avengers, each technology bring its own capability but it is the amalgamation of all of them which lead to amazing power!
The session will start with a demo of the Smart Farming System Tooling, an environment to model, analyze and simulate an agricultural exploitation, biomass growth and water consumption based on user input and open data. Then we will dig deeper in how the technologies are mixed and used, among other questions: which of the textual or graphical syntax is better suited for a given aspect? how can we achieve a “perfect blend” of those syntaxes? how OptaPlanner and EMF can create a powerful synergy? how data from INRA can be structured and fed into the tool?
The talk will then evaluate how useful open-source technologies are in addressing this class of problems and how modeling can be used to support sustainability, enable broader engagement of the community, and facilitate more informed decision-making.
Oplægget blev holdt ved InfinIT-arrangementet Temadag om integrering af usability-arbejde i agile udviklingsprocesser, der blev afholdt den 6. maj 2014. Læs mere om arrangementet her: http://infinit.dk/dk/hvad_kan_vi_goere_for_dig/viden/reportager/hvordan_kombineres_agil_udvikling_og_usability-arbejde.htm
IPC13 Munich: Planning the UnplannableRobert Lemke
Long running projects, be it software or city planning, have something in common: the constant change to their environment. The problems to solve in one, two, or even five years from now will be different from those at hand now – and they are yet unknown. Thus dealing with uncertainty is one of the key issues and a well-planned architecture can help with that.
Spacebrew MADess: Running Your Own ServerJulio Terra
This is the presentation from the Spacebrew workshop that we held at the Museum of Art and Design on June 1st. It gives an overview of Spacebrew, and walks through how to run your own local instance of the Spacebrew server.
Modeling avengers – open source technology mix for saving the world econ frCédric Brun
Planet earth is facing massive challenges: global warming and scarcity of natural resources among others. Those challenges are reaching a level of complexity unknown yet and trying to address those requires deep scientific understanding, real world data, specialized tools, inter-disciplinary collaboration and the ability to evaluate “What If” scenarios.
In collaboration with scientists from INRA (the French National Institute for Agricultural Research) we experienced one of those challenges: the use of natural resources for agricultural activities, especially water consumption. While the scientists insight was required in smart technologies like smart farms, this understanding was required to be expressed at an higher level of abstraction through specific tooling. They felt that providing highly dedicated tools with a small budget would require super powers. To us modeling people it looked like a very good fit for DSL’s (Domain Specific Languages), hence suitable for an experiment : let’s build specific modeling tools for smart farming systems!
This experiment represents a few days of work bringing open-source technologies together: EMF, Xtext, Sirius, Gemoc (a model debugging environment, including specific features for concurrency constraints), OptaPlanner (a constraint satisfaction solver from the JBoss community) and Acceleo, resulting in a collection of Eclipse based tools for farming systems (published on github). Just like in The Avengers, each technology bring its own capability but it is the amalgamation of all of them which lead to amazing power!
The session will start with a demo of the Smart Farming System Tooling, an environment to model, analyze and simulate an agricultural exploitation, biomass growth and water consumption based on user input and open data. Then we will dig deeper in how the technologies are mixed and used, among other questions: which of the textual or graphical syntax is better suited for a given aspect? how can we achieve a “perfect blend” of those syntaxes? how OptaPlanner and EMF can create a powerful synergy? how data from INRA can be structured and fed into the tool?
Conférence - Du bon usage d'une charte graphiqueDavid Endico
Créer une charte graphique ? Rien de plus facile ! Un petit coup de Times New Roman, du rouge pour faire plaisir à ma femme... Au pire, le petit neveu connait Photoshop, non ? Malgré son apparente simplicité, créer une charte graphique ne s’improvise pas. Qu’est-ce qu’une bonne charte graphique ? De quoi est-elle composée et quels sont les pièges à éviter ? Autant de mystères que nous allons ensemble élucider, pour le bien de votre identité !
Conférence animée par David Endico le 8 novembre 2017 à Now Coworking.
How GZIP compression works - JS Conf EU 2014Raul Fraile
Data compression is an amazing topic. Even in today’s world, with fast networks and almost unlimited storage, data compression is still relevant, especially for mobile devices and countries with poor Internet connections.
For better or worse, GZIP compression is the de-facto lossless compression method for compressing text data in websites. It is not the fastest nor the better, but provides an excellent tradeoff between speed and compression ratio. The way Internet works makes it also difficult to use newer compression methods.
This talk examines how GZIP works internally, explaining the internals of the DEFLATE algorithm, which is a combination of LZ77 and Huffman coding. Different implementations will be compared, such as GNU GZIP, 7-ZIP and zopfli, focusing on why and how some of these implementations perform better than others.
Finally, we will try to go beyond GZIP, preprocessing our data to achieve better results. For example, transposing JSON.
Week 4 Assignment 2Self-assessment of Communication Skills.docxmelbruce90096
Week 4 Assignment 2
Self-assessment of Communication Skills
As a student studying healthcare administration and leadership in healthcare, you should be developing your own personal development plan to include a personal assessment of your communication skills.
Listening is an integral part of the communication process. Communication in the healthcare setting is vital. This includes communication between doctors and patients, doctors and nurses, clinicians and administrators, and so on.
Based on your learning, answer the following questions:
· Which topic of conversation makes you uncomfortable? What is the topic? Do you know why you find it difficult to talk about this topic?
<Enter your response here.>
· What do you do when you become uncomfortable during a conversation? Do you withdraw? Do you try to change the topic? Do you speak louder or softer? Do you begin to gesticulate?
<Enter your response here.>
· Have you had an occasion to talk to a very persuasive or very aggressive person? If you and this person hold different opinions, can you hold to your position? Are you easily “led” in a conversation?
<Enter your response here.>
· Are you flexible in a conversation? If a comment made by someone takes the conversation in an unexpected direction, can you adjust quickly? Can you assimilate new information, reassess your position, and continue the conversation?
<Enter your response here.>
· When entering into a conversation, do you attempt to eliminate potential distractions and interruptions?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you consciously avoid having important conversations in high traffic public areas where environmental distractions are likely possible? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you put your cell phone in the silence mode when you are likely to have conversations? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you listen without interruption and sufficiently control the conversation to minimize interruption? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When engaged in a conversation, do you give your undivided attention to the matters being discussed? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When engaged in discussion, do you develop reflective questions pertinent to the conversation? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When engaged in discussion, do you make conscious eye contact? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When involved in conversations, are you cognizant of body language, both the individual you are conversing with and your own? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you have an understanding of body language gestures and posturing?
<Enter your response here.>
In a self-assessment summary, provide a list of your communication strengths and weaknesses. Also, provide a plan to address the weaknesses identified.
<Enter your response here.>
My Strengths
<Enter your response here.>
My Weaknesses
<Enter your response here.>
My Plan for Improving My Communication Skills
<Enter your response here.>
Page 1.
Oplægget blev holdt ved InfinIT-arrangementet Temadag om integrering af usability-arbejde i agile udviklingsprocesser, der blev afholdt den 6. maj 2014. Læs mere om arrangementet her: http://infinit.dk/dk/hvad_kan_vi_goere_for_dig/viden/reportager/hvordan_kombineres_agil_udvikling_og_usability-arbejde.htm
IPC13 Munich: Planning the UnplannableRobert Lemke
Long running projects, be it software or city planning, have something in common: the constant change to their environment. The problems to solve in one, two, or even five years from now will be different from those at hand now – and they are yet unknown. Thus dealing with uncertainty is one of the key issues and a well-planned architecture can help with that.
Spacebrew MADess: Running Your Own ServerJulio Terra
This is the presentation from the Spacebrew workshop that we held at the Museum of Art and Design on June 1st. It gives an overview of Spacebrew, and walks through how to run your own local instance of the Spacebrew server.
Modeling avengers – open source technology mix for saving the world econ frCédric Brun
Planet earth is facing massive challenges: global warming and scarcity of natural resources among others. Those challenges are reaching a level of complexity unknown yet and trying to address those requires deep scientific understanding, real world data, specialized tools, inter-disciplinary collaboration and the ability to evaluate “What If” scenarios.
In collaboration with scientists from INRA (the French National Institute for Agricultural Research) we experienced one of those challenges: the use of natural resources for agricultural activities, especially water consumption. While the scientists insight was required in smart technologies like smart farms, this understanding was required to be expressed at an higher level of abstraction through specific tooling. They felt that providing highly dedicated tools with a small budget would require super powers. To us modeling people it looked like a very good fit for DSL’s (Domain Specific Languages), hence suitable for an experiment : let’s build specific modeling tools for smart farming systems!
This experiment represents a few days of work bringing open-source technologies together: EMF, Xtext, Sirius, Gemoc (a model debugging environment, including specific features for concurrency constraints), OptaPlanner (a constraint satisfaction solver from the JBoss community) and Acceleo, resulting in a collection of Eclipse based tools for farming systems (published on github). Just like in The Avengers, each technology bring its own capability but it is the amalgamation of all of them which lead to amazing power!
The session will start with a demo of the Smart Farming System Tooling, an environment to model, analyze and simulate an agricultural exploitation, biomass growth and water consumption based on user input and open data. Then we will dig deeper in how the technologies are mixed and used, among other questions: which of the textual or graphical syntax is better suited for a given aspect? how can we achieve a “perfect blend” of those syntaxes? how OptaPlanner and EMF can create a powerful synergy? how data from INRA can be structured and fed into the tool?
Conférence - Du bon usage d'une charte graphiqueDavid Endico
Créer une charte graphique ? Rien de plus facile ! Un petit coup de Times New Roman, du rouge pour faire plaisir à ma femme... Au pire, le petit neveu connait Photoshop, non ? Malgré son apparente simplicité, créer une charte graphique ne s’improvise pas. Qu’est-ce qu’une bonne charte graphique ? De quoi est-elle composée et quels sont les pièges à éviter ? Autant de mystères que nous allons ensemble élucider, pour le bien de votre identité !
Conférence animée par David Endico le 8 novembre 2017 à Now Coworking.
How GZIP compression works - JS Conf EU 2014Raul Fraile
Data compression is an amazing topic. Even in today’s world, with fast networks and almost unlimited storage, data compression is still relevant, especially for mobile devices and countries with poor Internet connections.
For better or worse, GZIP compression is the de-facto lossless compression method for compressing text data in websites. It is not the fastest nor the better, but provides an excellent tradeoff between speed and compression ratio. The way Internet works makes it also difficult to use newer compression methods.
This talk examines how GZIP works internally, explaining the internals of the DEFLATE algorithm, which is a combination of LZ77 and Huffman coding. Different implementations will be compared, such as GNU GZIP, 7-ZIP and zopfli, focusing on why and how some of these implementations perform better than others.
Finally, we will try to go beyond GZIP, preprocessing our data to achieve better results. For example, transposing JSON.
Week 4 Assignment 2Self-assessment of Communication Skills.docxmelbruce90096
Week 4 Assignment 2
Self-assessment of Communication Skills
As a student studying healthcare administration and leadership in healthcare, you should be developing your own personal development plan to include a personal assessment of your communication skills.
Listening is an integral part of the communication process. Communication in the healthcare setting is vital. This includes communication between doctors and patients, doctors and nurses, clinicians and administrators, and so on.
Based on your learning, answer the following questions:
· Which topic of conversation makes you uncomfortable? What is the topic? Do you know why you find it difficult to talk about this topic?
<Enter your response here.>
· What do you do when you become uncomfortable during a conversation? Do you withdraw? Do you try to change the topic? Do you speak louder or softer? Do you begin to gesticulate?
<Enter your response here.>
· Have you had an occasion to talk to a very persuasive or very aggressive person? If you and this person hold different opinions, can you hold to your position? Are you easily “led” in a conversation?
<Enter your response here.>
· Are you flexible in a conversation? If a comment made by someone takes the conversation in an unexpected direction, can you adjust quickly? Can you assimilate new information, reassess your position, and continue the conversation?
<Enter your response here.>
· When entering into a conversation, do you attempt to eliminate potential distractions and interruptions?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you consciously avoid having important conversations in high traffic public areas where environmental distractions are likely possible? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you put your cell phone in the silence mode when you are likely to have conversations? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you listen without interruption and sufficiently control the conversation to minimize interruption? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When engaged in a conversation, do you give your undivided attention to the matters being discussed? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When engaged in discussion, do you develop reflective questions pertinent to the conversation? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When engaged in discussion, do you make conscious eye contact? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· When involved in conversations, are you cognizant of body language, both the individual you are conversing with and your own? Why?
<Enter your response here.>
· Do you have an understanding of body language gestures and posturing?
<Enter your response here.>
In a self-assessment summary, provide a list of your communication strengths and weaknesses. Also, provide a plan to address the weaknesses identified.
<Enter your response here.>
My Strengths
<Enter your response here.>
My Weaknesses
<Enter your response here.>
My Plan for Improving My Communication Skills
<Enter your response here.>
Page 1.
Presented by Bruce Harwood: July 2016
Have you heard about traditional media but aren't quite sure what it is?
This session on how to plan and buy traditional media will give you some context on why advertisers use it and how you should think about it.
As each medium is different in its own way and we will explore the nuances of each and how they are adapting in today's digital landscape.
TMK.edu Traditional Media Buying Presentation: August 2015The Media Kitchen
Presented by Ludmila Palasin: August 12, 2015
This presentation provides a recap of our suite of research tools to be sure that everyone knows what is available. But there is a lot more out there – a lot of it for free. This presentation will go into depth on what these are and how to access and use them.
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
THE IMPORTANCE OF MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE SAMPLE RETURN.Sérgio Sacani
The return of a sample of near-surface atmosphere from Mars would facilitate answers to several first-order science questions surrounding the formation and evolution of the planet. One of the important aspects of terrestrial planet formation in general is the role that primary atmospheres played in influencing the chemistry and structure of the planets and their antecedents. Studies of the martian atmosphere can be used to investigate the role of a primary atmosphere in its history. Atmosphere samples would also inform our understanding of the near-surface chemistry of the planet, and ultimately the prospects for life. High-precision isotopic analyses of constituent gases are needed to address these questions, requiring that the analyses are made on returned samples rather than in situ.
Cancer cell metabolism: special Reference to Lactate PathwayAADYARAJPANDEY1
Normal Cell Metabolism:
Cellular respiration describes the series of steps that cells use to break down sugar and other chemicals to get the energy we need to function.
Energy is stored in the bonds of glucose and when glucose is broken down, much of that energy is released.
Cell utilize energy in the form of ATP.
The first step of respiration is called glycolysis. In a series of steps, glycolysis breaks glucose into two smaller molecules - a chemical called pyruvate. A small amount of ATP is formed during this process.
Most healthy cells continue the breakdown in a second process, called the Kreb's cycle. The Kreb's cycle allows cells to “burn” the pyruvates made in glycolysis to get more ATP.
The last step in the breakdown of glucose is called oxidative phosphorylation (Ox-Phos).
It takes place in specialized cell structures called mitochondria. This process produces a large amount of ATP. Importantly, cells need oxygen to complete oxidative phosphorylation.
If a cell completes only glycolysis, only 2 molecules of ATP are made per glucose. However, if the cell completes the entire respiration process (glycolysis - Kreb's - oxidative phosphorylation), about 36 molecules of ATP are created, giving it much more energy to use.
IN CANCER CELL:
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
Unlike healthy cells that "burn" the entire molecule of sugar to capture a large amount of energy as ATP, cancer cells are wasteful.
Cancer cells only partially break down sugar molecules. They overuse the first step of respiration, glycolysis. They frequently do not complete the second step, oxidative phosphorylation.
This results in only 2 molecules of ATP per each glucose molecule instead of the 36 or so ATPs healthy cells gain. As a result, cancer cells need to use a lot more sugar molecules to get enough energy to survive.
introduction to WARBERG PHENOMENA:
WARBURG EFFECT Usually, cancer cells are highly glycolytic (glucose addiction) and take up more glucose than do normal cells from outside.
Otto Heinrich Warburg (; 8 October 1883 – 1 August 1970) In 1931 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology for his "discovery of the nature and mode of action of the respiratory enzyme.
WARNBURG EFFECT : cancer cells under aerobic (well-oxygenated) conditions to metabolize glucose to lactate (aerobic glycolysis) is known as the Warburg effect. Warburg made the observation that tumor slices consume glucose and secrete lactate at a higher rate than normal tissues.
Deep Behavioral Phenotyping in Systems Neuroscience for Functional Atlasing a...Ana Luísa Pinho
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) provides means to characterize brain activations in response to behavior. However, cognitive neuroscience has been limited to group-level effects referring to the performance of specific tasks. To obtain the functional profile of elementary cognitive mechanisms, the combination of brain responses to many tasks is required. Yet, to date, both structural atlases and parcellation-based activations do not fully account for cognitive function and still present several limitations. Further, they do not adapt overall to individual characteristics. In this talk, I will give an account of deep-behavioral phenotyping strategies, namely data-driven methods in large task-fMRI datasets, to optimize functional brain-data collection and improve inference of effects-of-interest related to mental processes. Key to this approach is the employment of fast multi-functional paradigms rich on features that can be well parametrized and, consequently, facilitate the creation of psycho-physiological constructs to be modelled with imaging data. Particular emphasis will be given to music stimuli when studying high-order cognitive mechanisms, due to their ecological nature and quality to enable complex behavior compounded by discrete entities. I will also discuss how deep-behavioral phenotyping and individualized models applied to neuroimaging data can better account for the subject-specific organization of domain-general cognitive systems in the human brain. Finally, the accumulation of functional brain signatures brings the possibility to clarify relationships among tasks and create a univocal link between brain systems and mental functions through: (1) the development of ontologies proposing an organization of cognitive processes; and (2) brain-network taxonomies describing functional specialization. To this end, tools to improve commensurability in cognitive science are necessary, such as public repositories, ontology-based platforms and automated meta-analysis tools. I will thus discuss some brain-atlasing resources currently under development, and their applicability in cognitive as well as clinical neuroscience.
Multi-source connectivity as the driver of solar wind variability in the heli...Sérgio Sacani
The ambient solar wind that flls the heliosphere originates from multiple
sources in the solar corona and is highly structured. It is often described
as high-speed, relatively homogeneous, plasma streams from coronal
holes and slow-speed, highly variable, streams whose source regions are
under debate. A key goal of ESA/NASA’s Solar Orbiter mission is to identify
solar wind sources and understand what drives the complexity seen in the
heliosphere. By combining magnetic feld modelling and spectroscopic
techniques with high-resolution observations and measurements, we show
that the solar wind variability detected in situ by Solar Orbiter in March
2022 is driven by spatio-temporal changes in the magnetic connectivity to
multiple sources in the solar atmosphere. The magnetic feld footpoints
connected to the spacecraft moved from the boundaries of a coronal hole
to one active region (12961) and then across to another region (12957). This
is refected in the in situ measurements, which show the transition from fast
to highly Alfvénic then to slow solar wind that is disrupted by the arrival of
a coronal mass ejection. Our results describe solar wind variability at 0.5 au
but are applicable to near-Earth observatories.
Le magazine Paranoia, Automne 2003. Vol 10, No 2, Issue 33
1. y Reja de r i ^ u e 3 3 ,
r
^
f^
/
•
*
%
W "
» 5^
Ma ste r o f t he
Re ptilia n Mytho s
0 2 >
n 7 4 4 7 n
"
8 4 9 7 9
"
7
2. "
T h e p o t e n t ia l f o r t h e
d i s t a s t r o u s r is e o f
m is p l a c e d p o w e r e x i st s
a n d w i l l p e r s i s t .
"
D w ig li t D E is e i i li o w e r
,
19 6 1
P A R A N O IA
Fa ll 2 0 0 3
V o l 10 N o 2 Is s u e 3 3
S U B S C R I B E
W e p u b lis h 3 x p e r
y e a r
(A p r ,
A u
g ,
D e c ) G e t 3 is s u e s
(1 -
y r ) f o r $ 1 8
(C a n a d a :$ 2 4 ,
l n t e r n a t io n a l: $ 3 6 .
M o n e y O r d e r U S
F u n d s )
S U B M IS S IO N S
W e w e lc o m e
r e s e a r c h a r t ic le s o n
d is k ,
4 -
8 p g s ,
s in g le
s p a c e d ,
w it h
s o u r c e s
C o n t r i b u t io n s c a n n o t
b e r e t u r n e d o r p a id
D IS C L A IM E R
A ll s t a t e m e n t s
p u b lis h e d a re n o t
n e c e s s a r il
y h e ld o r
p r o m o t e d b y
P a r a n o ia P u b lis h in
g
C O -
P U B L I S H E R S
J o a n d
'
A rc
A l H Id e ll
C O -
E D IT O R S
A l H id e ll
J o a n d
'
A r c
D E S IG N
A l H id e l l
P A RA N O IA
P O B o x 1 0 4 1
P r o v id e n c e ,
R l
0 2 9 0 1
a lh id e ll @ a o l c o m
jo a n d a rc ®
c o m p u s e rv e c o m
T he D r a g o n s o f Ed e n
^ R. Bo u lc y
The Re pt ilia n A g e n da fo r
t he Ne w W o r ld Or de r
St e o li n
'
t he S ho w :
D is n e y I n f lu e n c e In t h e
A g e o f K n o w le d g e
J FK a n d t he M a n c hu r ia n
Ca n d ida t e
D a r w in a n d t h e
Sc ie n t if ic
D ic t a t o r s h ip
W e A ll Liv e in a Ye llo w
Su b m a r in e
^ t k ^
T h e H id d e n F a c e
o f T e r r o r is m
A Fu n n y Th in g F
Ja p pe n e d
o n t he W a y t o t he M o o n
Sile n t We a p o n s f o r
Q u ie t W a r s
W ha t Ev il is a n d
W h y It M a tt e r s
S I L E N T
W E A P O N S
F O R
O U I E T
WA R S
s
1 4
4 4
I n t e r v ie w w it h
D a v id Ic k e
Ra n d y Ko p p a n g
J^
*
! J o h n M c Lo u g h li n
3 0
Phillip D a r r e ll
C o llin s
A d a m G o r ig ht ly
Pa u l D a v id C o llin s
Ba r t W i n f ie ld
Si b r e l
O p e r a t io n s Te c h n ic a l
M a n u a l
J o hn P a u l J o n e s
T H K L A 1
E L E V A T E D □ □ 3 1
Z!
Q n f t c a r * R i a k T f Te r r c r t r t " t t^ J
c
r
^
P a r a n o ia i s di s t r i bu t e d b y ; I P D i n C A ; U b iq u it y m B r o o k l y n ; L a s t U a s
p in Sa n
F r a n c i s c o ; B e a r F a m il y D is t r i b u t o r s i n T u c s o n
,
a n d M e di a So lu t io n s P a r a n o ia is
a v a ila b l e a t a ll T o w e r R e c o r d s s to r e s A l l a r ti c l e s c o
py r
i ght 2(X D b y t h e a u t h o r
C o v e r il lu s t r a t i o n b v E r i c Wh it e a t w w w . e w li it e . c o m
D e a d l i n e s : a
^ c
iz e W X H 1 t i m e 2 +
F e b l
J u n e 1
1 / 8 p a g e
1 /4 p a g e
1 /2 p a g e
f u l l p a g e
3 1/ 4 X 2
3 1 / 4 X 4 1 / 4
6 1/ 2 X 4 1 / 4
6 1 / 2 X 9
i n s id e c o v e r
^ 1/ 2 x 1 0
$6 0 $5 1 / e a
$9 0 $7 6 / e a
$1 2 5 $1 0 6 / e a
$2 0 0 $1 7 0/ e a
$2 5 0 $2 1 2/ e a
A d Ro t e s
T a k e a 15 % d i s c o u n t f o r 2 o r
m o r e i n s e r t io n s ! R a t e s a r e p e r is
¬
s u e . JP G o r T I F f
i l e s ,
o r a p r in t
¬
o u t ,
a r e r e q u i r e d I f y o u w a n t u s
to d e s i g n a n d t y p e s e t y o u r a d ,
s e n d u s t h e c o p y (w o r d s ) a n d a r t
a n d A D D $1 5 to t h e l i s t e d c o s t