“NASA will hold a
news conference at 2 p.m. EST (11am PST) on Thursday, Dec. 2, to discuss an astrobiology finding that will impact the search for evidence of extraterrestrial life. Astrobiology is the study of the origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe.” Watch it
HERE live.
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posted by Sprocket
on Dec 1, 2010 -
102 comments
It's been 35 years this month since
the Arecibo message was sent from the
Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, when the 1,679 digit message was sent once, towards
Messier 13. More messages have been sent sky-wards since, in attempts for
communication with extra terrestrial intelligence (
CETI), with the (
ill-fated)
Team Encounter was instrumental in
Cosmic Call 1999 and 2003 (more details:
58 page PDF). The more complex three-section
Teen-Age Message was sent out in 2001, including a musical piece entitled
1st Theremin Concert for Aliens. In 2008
NASA sent the Beatles into space, transmitting "Across the Universe" for the 40th anniversary of the song's recording, the 45th anniversary of the
Deep Space Network (DSN), and the 50th anniversary of NASA (
prev). If you felt left out of the sending of signals,
Talk To Aliens offered a "deep space e-mail service" and a certificate of interstellar broadcast (
prev), but no more. Now
Sent Forever offers a
long-lasting alternative to traditional greeting cards, or simply
the worst tie-in for Apollo 11.
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posted by filthy light thief
on Nov 23, 2009 -
14 comments
Fans of Flight Simulators and Michinima might be familiar with the adventures of Bill and John. If you're not, download episode 1 along with the subtitles and and familiarize yourself with a very funny piece of machinima, even more impressive because it's not only in
Lock On: Modern Air Combat, but in French to boot. Well they're back, winning Best Picture at the
Machinima 2006 film festival,
The Adventures of Bill Et John II. Browse the rest of the nominees and winners on the Machinima.com
festival page.
posted by Lord_Pall
on Nov 12, 2006 -
7 comments
ET Could Hack SETI. SETI, which uses down time on the computers of thousands of volunteers to search for intelligent signals from space, has a potential problem—besides information, a broadcast to us from an alien intelligence could also carry a computer virus.
Leonard David writes in the main link's space.com article that physicist Richard Carrigan (who works
here) takes it seriously. He thinks SETI should figure out how to decontaminate any signals it receives.
posted by jasonspaceman
on Nov 24, 2003 -
35 comments
Life Elsewhere? In an attempt to get away from the Chinese-American situation, scientists have recently discovered 11 new planets, with one possibly inhabiting a "Life-Zone."
posted by da5id
on Apr 5, 2001 -
9 comments