Re: Do Kolegi z firmy oferujacej Internet satelitarny US-Poland

Autor: Andrzej Slomski (andrzej_at_slomski.pl)
Data: Sun 01 Apr 2001 - 14:17:03 MET DST


Jak widze (niezbyt czesto tu zagladajac) niektorzy wymagaja intensywnej
terapii -
pomoc psychiatry jest im niezbedna !
Dariusz !
Znajdz "EXPERTA" od zdrowia i podyskutuj z nim ! Wymiencie doswiadczenia
itp...
Jak juz Ci pomoze razem wezcie sie za napisanie aplikacji eliminujacej
"expertow" z normalnych list. Jako expert i programista chyba nie bedziesz
mial z tym problemow ? :-)
W razie czego sluze miejscem na serwerach, a takze gotow jestem
zarejestrowac Ci domene/domeny
bzdety.com , bzedety.com.pl lub inna wlasciwa. Stworz sobie na tej bazie
super-portal !
(w praktyce to masz go prawie gotowy - zacytuj posty jakie wyslales !)
Zareczam Ci ze odwiedzalnosc bedzie on mial olbrzymia !
Pewnie przebijesz nawet Bigbrother'a :-)

Pozostalych grupowiczow pozdrawiam

Andrzej

Użytkownik "Dariusz" <dariusj_at_poczta.onet.pl> napisał w wiadomości
news:3AC64BB6.E51F7D71_at_poczta.onet.pl...
> Pisalem ze warunki atmosferyczne moga wplynac na jakosc transmisji
> i uzywajac transmisji one-way, bez korekcji bledow
> jakosc transmisji moze uniemozlic klasyfikowany transfer danych.
>
> Tutaj informacja o burzach slonecznych
>
> Friday night, the light from solar flares was reported
> near cities including Palm
> Springs and Sacramento, California; Flagstaff,
> Arizona; and Albuquerque and
> Carlsbad, New Mexico.
>
> Solar storms could affect telecommunications
>
> March 31, 2001
> Web posted at: 10:31 a.m. EST (1531 GMT)
>
> BOULDER, Colorado (AP) -- Intense
> storms raging on the sun made Friday
> night's sky shimmer red and green as far
> south as Palm Springs, California, and
> southern New Mexico, and scientists say
> the storms could briefly disrupt
> telecommunications as they continue
> through the weekend.
>
> The biggest sunspot cluster seen in at
> least 10 years has developed on the upper
> right quarter of the side of the sun visible
> from Earth, according to satellite readings.
>
> Friday night, the light from solar flares was reported
> near cities including Palm
> Springs and Sacramento, California; Flagstaff,
> Arizona; and Albuquerque and
> Carlsbad, New Mexico.
>
> "It has totally lit up the sky. We've had dozens and
> dozens of calls. People want to know what it is,"
> said Bill Seigel, a producer at radio station KESQ in
> Palm Desert, 115 miles east of Los Angeles. "Some
> people thought it was UFOs."
>
> Just north of Albuquerque, David MacKel was
> making the rounds at his security job when he saw
> the lights. He noted it on his report at 11:23 p.m.
>
> "It was blood red. That's all I can say. It was kind
> of opaque and you could see the stars through it,"
> MacKel said. He said he had seen the Northern
> Lights while in Alaska, but "the Northern Light
> move, this was more gaseous. It kind of got me
> freaked out."
>
> Deputy Danny Gonzales of Eddy County, New
> Mexico, described it as a purple haze. "It was very
> distinct in color," he said. "I have never seen
> anything like it."
>
> Anthony Watts, a
> meteorologist in Chico,
> California, about 170
> miles north of San
> Francisco, said the glow
> from the coronal
> mass ejection was
> interesting, but posed
> no threat.
>
> "There's no danger,
> however there is the
> likelihood that we'll
> have radio or
> television
> interruptions," Watts said.
>
> The sunspot, which is a
> cooler, darker
> region on the sun's
> surface, is caused by
> a concentration of
> temporarily distorted
> magnetic fields. It
> spawns tremendous
> eruptions, or flares,
> into the sun's
> atmosphere, hurling
> clouds of electrified
> gas toward Earth.
>
> The solar activity can
> produce an aurora
> in the night sky,
> typically over northern
> latitudes. The colorful,
> shimmering glow
> occurs when the energetic
> particles strike
> the Earth's upper
> atmosphere.
>
> NASA scientists said a powerful flare that erupted
> Thursday rated a class X, the
> most potent category.
>
> The eruptions triggered a powerful, but brief,
> blackout Friday on some
> high-frequency radio channels and low-frequency
> navigational signals, scientists
> said. They forecast at least a 30 percent chance of
> continuing disruptions through
> Sunday.



To archiwum zostało wygenerowane przez hypermail 2.1.7 : Wed 19 May 2004 - 16:46:42 MET DST