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    Round 2: 1Gig Now and 20 Years Ago.

    Check this out. Round 2 for some history of Hard Drives. Here is two, one is now the SD drive and the other is Hard Drive that was made 20 years ago. Huh, I guess it makes a big difference with a comparisons to our all new 1 TB Drives.

     

    Photo source [bestpicever]


     

     

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    We have broken speed of light. Maybe not.

    A pair of German physicists claim to have broken the speed of light - an achievement that would undermine our entire understanding of space and time.

    According to Einstein’s special theory of relativity, it would require an infinite amount of energy to propel an object at more than 186,000 miles per second.

    However, Dr Gunter Nimtz and Dr Alfons Stahlhofen, of the University of Koblenz, say they may have breached a key tenet of that theory.

    The pair say they have conducted an experiment in which microwave photons - energetic packets of light - travelled "instantaneously" between a pair of prisms

    that had been moved up to 3ft apart.

    Being able to travel faster than the speed of light would lead to a wide variety of bizarre consequences.

    For instance, an astronaut moving faster than it would theoretically arrive at a destination before leaving.

    The scientists were investigating a phenomenon called quantum tunnelling, which allows sub-atomic particles to break apparently unbreakable laws.

    Dr Nimtz told New Scientist magazine: "For the time being, this is the only violation of special relativity that I know of."

    By Nic Fleming, Science Correspondent

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    Two Skeleton Lover from 5000 years. (That’s what I call Love)

    ROME (Reuters) - Call it the eternal embrace.

    Archaeologists in Italy have discovered a couple buried 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, hugging each other.

    "It's an extraordinary case," said Elena Menotti, who led the team on their dig near the northern city of Mantova.

    "There has not been a double burial found in the Neolithic period, much less two people hugging — and they really are hugging."

    Menotti said she believed the two, almost certainly a man and a woman although that needs to be confirmed, died young because their teeth were mostly intact and not worn down.

    "I must say that when we discovered it, we all became very excited. I've been doing this job for 25 years. I've done digs at Pompeii, all the famous sites," she told Reuters.

    "But I've never been so moved because this is the discovery of something special."

    A laboratory will now try to determine the couple's age at the time of death and how long they had been buried.


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