Fatbat: LotsOZeroes certainly is. (See post #15 above)
Derp... dunno how I missed that.
Fatbat: LotsOZeroes certainly is. (See post #15 above)
I love SciFi, UFO, space...etc. I spend a lot of time with this.
Most interesting so far would be Philip Schneider and definitely William Rutledge's story.
William Rutledge suppose to be Apollo 20 pilot, a mission that never happened. He claim that they found billion years old huge space ship on the moon, with two women bodies on board. You can search for this videos on YouTube. Most interesting is Nasa pictures of the Moon, where you can see something, that William says it's the space ship.
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This is hard to believe and probably hoax, but i'm 100% sure it would make excellent movie.![]()
In other news, a user named Gertex here was suddenly stricken with an unexplained illness and passed away this afternoon...
ROFL!In other news, a user named Gertex here was suddenly stricken with an unexplained illness and passed away this afternoon...
Yeah, we need a way to make Mining the moon (presumably for helium 3) profitable, and while we're there, sell real estate.
It would be the shiznit to go for a vacation on the moon... Perhaps a week in low gravity at a time... Even if they can't make grand palaces there yet; surely some resort & casino is going to put up one before too long for all of the space tourists to come and stay/play at.
Moxie: What possible incentive would they have to share advanced tech with us? Do we share advanced tech with newly-discovered tribes in the amazon? & don't forget about the Prime Directive!
Area 51 has been closed for a long time now
They still use the base for something; workers get flown out every day.
European technology firm Astrium is teaming up with US company Alliant to make a "low-cost" space rocket launcher that could one day take tourists into orbit, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.
It said the companies plan a 300-foot (91-metre) launcher dubbed "Liberty" to take astronauts and scientific payloads into space for about $180 million (132 million euros) a time, 40 percent cheaper than some current launches.
The newspaper said the project's backers hope to gain funding from US space agency NASA for the project, which they say could lead eventually to commercial projects such as orbiting hotels for space tourists.
Astrium, a subsidiary of defence giant EADS, is the main maker of the Ariane commercial rocket, used to launch satellites. US firm Alliant Techsystems is a leading maker of space shuttles.
The companies hope to test the new "low-cost commercial launcher" as soon as 2013, the report said.