4.23.2009

Susan Boyle: why she intriques us...........
In my humble opnion, Susan Boyle embodies exactly why these shows are seeking talent.....
To find the people whom have talent but have never had the time or encouragement to stand up on the big stage and do your thing............I think deep rooted in our souls we find that just because we are getting older doesn't mean you have to stop living.....in fact she serves as a model that anything is possible if you want it bad enough.........follow your dreams.......even if you fall flat on your face, keep on keeping on and never give up.......you can't win the game unless you play it

great job Susan Boyle..........
http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/04/22/bregman.boyle/index.html

michael b

1.05.2009

wow
2008 was a trippy year
I wonder what lies in store for 2009
just had a killer b-day....went to supercross and surfed all day afterwards
hung out with Jed, Carter and BK for a few
played guitar hero with neon, lisa and myself...LOL....three piece band!!!
killer game.....love it...we rock!!!!!!

7.19.2007

wassup.........................

6.14.2007

!!!!!!!!Way to go Dad!!!!!!!!!
Water out of Thin Air
very interesting

5.02.2007

Worlds Fastest Production Car - Bugatti

Bugatti Veyron at top speed
Uploaded by Flabber

3.22.2007

Check this out
Thanks Tony

3.19.2007

I think in the near future artists will be able to paint directly onto a screen with simulated artist tools and the artist will never be exposed to any chemicals

the image created on the screen will instantly be available to share or view digitally and easily sent to a printer for production

Very exciting,
in this day and age
you must become part of the collective computer revolution or loose a competitive edge
"resistance is futile" to quote a Star Trek movie

http://multi-touchscreen.com/perceptive-pixel-jeff-han.html


Thanks Anthony

2.28.2007

Thanks neon
awesome!!!
weird bass guitars

2.14.2007

Extraordinary Wave Ride of this Century

2.05.2007

True Surf Rats

1.15.2007

New Star Trek possibility "The Academy"

thanks sis

http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/index.php?id=39438

1.12.2007

Check it out a free bass concert of some the countrys best bassists

http://nammbassbash.com/

Peace Out......see you there

1.03.2007

History of the Calendar

The purpose of the calendar is to reckon past or future time, to show how many days until a certain event takes place—the harvest or a religious festival—or how long since something important happened. The earliest calendars must have been strongly influenced by the geographical location of the people who made them. In colder countries, the concept of the year was determined by the seasons, specifically by the end of winter. But in warmer countries, where the seasons are less pronounced, the Moon became the basic unit for time reckoning; an old Jewish book says that “the Moon was created for the counting of the days.”

Most of the oldest calendars were lunar calendars, based on the time interval from one new moon to the next—a so-called lunation. But even in a warm climate there are annual events that pay no attention to the phases of the Moon. In some areas it was a rainy season; in Egypt it was the annual flooding of the Nile River. The calendar had to account for these yearly events as well.

The Egyptian Calendar

The ancient Egyptians used a calendar with 12 months of 30 days each, for a total of 360 days per year. About 4000 B.C. they added five extra days at the end of every year to bring it more into line with the solar year.1 These five days became a festival because it was thought to be unlucky to work during that time.

The Egyptians had calculated that the solar year was actually closer to 3651/4 days, but instead of having a single leap day every four years to account for the fractional day (the way we do now), they let the one-quarter day accumulate. After 1,460 solar years, or four periods of 365 years, 1,461 Egyptian years had passed. This means that as the years passed, the Egyptian months fell out of sync with the seasons, so that the summer months eventually fell during winter. Only once every 1,460 years did their calendar year coincide precisely with the solar year.

In addition to the civic calendar, the Egyptians also had a religious calendar that was based on the 291/2-day lunar cycle and was more closely linked with agricultural cycles and the movements of the stars.

Lunar Calendars

During antiquity the lunar calendar that best approximated a solar-year calendar was based on a 19-year period, with 7 of these 19 years having 13 months. In all, the period contained 235 months. Still using the lunation value of 291/2 days, this made a total of 6,9321/2 days, while 19 solar years added up to 6,939.7 days, a difference of just one week per period and about five weeks per century.

Even the 19-year period required adjustment, but it became the basis of the calendars of the ancient Chinese, Babylonians, Greeks, and Jews. This same calendar was also used by the Arabs, but Muhammad later forbade shifting from 12 months to 13 months, so that the Islamic calendar now has a lunar year of about 354 days. As a result, the months of the Islamic calendar, as well as the Islamic religious festivals, migrate through all the seasons of the year.

The Roman Calendar

When Rome emerged as a world power, the difficulties of making a calendar were well known, but the Romans complicated their lives because of their superstition that even numbers were unlucky. Hence their months were 29 or 31 days long, with the exception of February, which had 28 days. However, four months of 31 days, seven months of 29 days, and one month of 28 days added up to only 355 days. Therefore the Romans invented an extra month called Mercedonius of 22 or 23 days. It was added every second year.

Even with Mercedonius, the Roman calendar eventually became so far off that Julius Caesar, advised by the astronomer Sosigenes, ordered a sweeping reform. 46 B.C. was made 445 days long by imperial decree, bringing the calendar back in step with the seasons. Then the solar year (with the value of 365 days and 6 hours) was made the basis of the calendar. The months were 30 or 31 days in length, and to take care of the 6 hours, every fourth year was made a 366-day year. Moreover, Caesar decreed the year began with the first of January, not with the vernal equinox in late March.

This calendar was named the Julian calendar, after Julius Caesar, and it continues to be used by Eastern Orthodox churches for holiday calculations to this day. However, despite the correction, the Julian calendar is still 111/2 minutes longer than the actual solar year, and after a number of centuries, even 111/2 minutes adds up.

The Gregorian Reform

By the 15th century the Julian calendar had drifted behind the solar calendar by about a week, so that the vernal equinox was falling around March 12 instead of around March 20. Pope Sixtus IV (who reigned from 1471 to 1484) decided that another reform was needed and called the German astronomer Regiomontanus to Rome to advise him. Regiomontanus arrived in 1475, but unfortunately he died shortly afterward, and the pope's plans for reform died with him.

Then in 1545, the Council of Trent authorized Pope Paul III to reform the calendar once more. Most of the mathematical and astronomical work was done by Father Christopher Clavius, S.J. The immediate correction, advised by Father Clavius and ordered by Pope Gregory XIII, was that Thursday, Oct. 4, 1582, was to be the last day of the Julian calendar. The next day would be Friday, Oct. 15. For long-range accuracy, a formula suggested by the Vatican librarian Aloysius Giglio was adopted: every fourth year is a leap year unless it is a century year like 1700 or 1800. Century years can be leap years only when they are divisible by 400 (e.g., 1600 and 2000). This rule eliminates three leap years in four centuries, making the calendar sufficiently accurate.

In spite of the revised leap year rule, an average calendar year is still about 26 seconds longer than the Earth's orbital period. But this discrepancy will need 3,323 years to build up to a single day.

Reform Adopted Gradually

The Gregorian reform was not adopted throughout the West immediately. Most Catholic countries quickly changed to the pope's new calendar in 1582. But Europe's Protestant princes chose to ignore the papal bull and continued with the Julian calendar. It was not until 1700 that the Protestant rulers of Germany and the Netherlands changed to the new calendar. In Great Britain (and its colonies) the shift did not take place until 1752, and in Russia a revolution was needed to introduce the Gregorian calendar in 1918. In Turkey, the Islamic calendar was used until 1926.

Adoption of the Gregorian Calendar

Year Country
1582 Catholic states of Italy, Portugal, Spain, Belgium, Holland, and Poland
1584 German and Swiss Catholic states
1587 Hungary
1700 German, Swiss, and Dutch Protestant States, Denmark, and Norway
1752Great Britain and its possessions (including the American colonies)
1873 Japan
1875 Egypt
1918 Russia
1924Greece
1926 Turkey
1949China

A Better Calendar?

Despite its widespread use, the Gregorian calendar has a number of weaknesses. It cannot be divided into equal halves or quarters; the number of days per month is haphazard; and months and years may begin on any day of the week. Holidays pegged to specific dates may also fall on any day of the week, and few Americans can predict when Thanksgiving will occur next year. Since Gregory XIII, many other proposals for calendar reform have been made, but none has been permanently adopted. In the meantime, the Gregorian calendar keeps the calendar dates in reasonable unison with astronomical events.

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11.08.2006

Fake Rock.........classic
Article on Fake Rock

Example of Game

(0) comments

11.01.2006

The Internet Reaches a Milestone Today

• The Web now has 100 million sites
• There were 18,000 Web sites in August of 1995
• Web sites have become a way to bond and belong

Click Here for Story

(1) comments

9.20.2006

Where do you stand politically?
a quick test..... I am a 22

(0) comments

8.14.2006



With a year to go before it even touches the water, the Navy's amphibious assault ship USS New York has already made history. It was built with 24 tons of scrap steel from the World Trade Center.

USS New York is about 45 percent complete and should be ready for launch in mid-2007. Katrina disrupted construction when it pounded the Gulf Coast last summer, but the 684-foot vessel escaped serious damage, and workers were back at the yard near New Orleans two weeks after the storm.

It is the fifth in a new class of warship - designed for missions that include special operations against terrorists. It will carry a crew of 360 sailors and 700 combat-ready Marines to be delivered ashore by helicopters and assault craft.

"It would be fitting if the first mission this ship would go on is to make sure that bin Laden is taken out, his terrorist organization is taken out," said Glenn Clement, a paint foreman. "He came in through the back door and knocked our towers down and (the New York is coming right through the front door, and we want them to know that."

Steel from the World Trade Center was melted down in a foundry in Amite, La., to cast the ship's bow section. When it was poured into the molds on Sept. 9, 2003, "those big rough steelworkers treated it with total reverence," recalled Navy Capt. Kevin Wensing, who was there. "It was a spiritual moment for everybody there." Junior Chavers, foundry operations manager, said that when the tradecenter steel first arrived, he touched it with his hand and the "hair on my neck stood up." "It had a big meaning to it for all of us," he said. "They knocked us down. They can't keep us down. We're going to be back."

The ship's motto? - 'Never Forget'

(2) comments

8.04.2006

NeoNz video is world most popular

#38 - Recently Featured - Travel & Places
#2 - Most Viewed (All Time) - Travel & Places
#13 - Top Favorites (All Time) - Travel & Places

See it here and make it more popular

(0) comments

7.20.2006

Evidence of Global Warming!!!!!

(1) comments

7.19.2006



LOS ANGELES - As many as 1.5 million people are sickened by bacterial pollution on Southern California beaches each year, resulting in millions of dollars in public health care costs, a new study has found.
ADVERTISEMENT

The study prepared by researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles and Stanford University is believed to be the first to examine illnesses at a large swath of the nation's most popular beaches. Previous studies have linked health problems to contamination at individual beaches.

Among other findings:

• Beaches at Doheny, Malibu, Marina del Rey, Cabrillo and Las Tunas had the worst water quality, while Newport, Hermosa, Abalone Cove, Manhattan, Torrance and Bolsa Chica had the best.

• The three beaches with the lowest incidence of gastrointestinal illness were San Clemente's city beach, Nichols Canyon and Las Tunas, largely due to a smaller number of visitors.

• Cleaning up storm water runoff, the chief cause of dirty ocean water in Southern California, would prevent 394,000 to 804,000 gastrointestinal cases and save $13 million to $28 million in annual health costs in Los Angeles County.

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LOS ANGELES - As many as 1.5 million people are sickened by bacterial pollution on Southern California beaches each year, resulting in millions of dollars in public health care costs, a new study has found.
ADVERTISEMENT

The study prepared by researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles and Stanford University is believed to be the first to examine illnesses at a large swath of the nation's most popular beaches. Previous studies have linked health problems to contamination at individual beaches.

Among other findings:

• Beaches at Doheny, Malibu, Marina del Rey, Cabrillo and Las Tunas had the worst water quality, while Newport, Hermosa, Abalone Cove, Manhattan, Torrance and Bolsa Chica had the best.

• The three beaches with the lowest incidence of gastrointestinal illness were San Clemente's city beach, Nichols Canyon and Las Tunas, largely due to a smaller number of visitors.

• Cleaning up storm water runoff, the chief cause of dirty ocean water in Southern California, would prevent 394,000 to 804,000 gastrointestinal cases and save $13 million to $28 million in annual health costs in Los Angeles County.

(0) comments


LOS ANGELES - As many as 1.5 million people are sickened by bacterial pollution on Southern California beaches each year, resulting in millions of dollars in public health care costs, a new study has found.
ADVERTISEMENT

The study prepared by researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles and Stanford University is believed to be the first to examine illnesses at a large swath of the nation's most popular beaches. Previous studies have linked health problems to contamination at individual beaches.

Among other findings:

• Beaches at Doheny, Malibu, Marina del Rey, Cabrillo and Las Tunas had the worst water quality, while Newport, Hermosa, Abalone Cove, Manhattan, Torrance and Bolsa Chica had the best.

• The three beaches with the lowest incidence of gastrointestinal illness were San Clemente's city beach, Nichols Canyon and Las Tunas, largely due to a smaller number of visitors.

• Cleaning up storm water runoff, the chief cause of dirty ocean water in Southern California, would prevent 394,000 to 804,000 gastrointestinal cases and save $13 million to $28 million in annual health costs in Los Angeles County.

(1) comments

6.29.2006


wow............what a great time..........thank you guys for your support and willingness to contribute to my hang over this morning

(2) comments

6.14.2006

Talk about Product Placement!!!!!!!!


(0) comments

5.31.2006

Hilton - South Coast Plaza
April 14th, 2006

A little snippet













(0) comments

4.26.2006

Power of Sex on men in power.........
this is nothing new but now it is scientifically proven
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,193090,00.html

(0) comments

4.20.2006

how fun is this?

(1) comments

4.12.2006

http://duplication.discmakers.com/mcm/discmakers/index.jsp
PENNSAUKEN, N.J. - You might think a slump in compact disc industry would be bad news for a CD manufacturer. But no one is complaining at Disc Makers.

Sales of CDs have declined four out of the last five years and fewer sold last year than in 1995. Still, business is thriving at Disc Makers, a Pennsauken company that made more than 30 million audio CDS last year, up 11 percent from 2004.

The company, celebrating its 60th anniversary this year, began loosening its ties with the mainstream recording industry nearly 20 years ago. Until then, Disc Makers' main business was wooing big contracts to manufacture records for the big record labels.

Now, Disc Makers does not seek any of those contracts.

Instead, it sends catalogs and attends trade shows in an effort to win the business of musicians one by one, helping do-it-yourselfers do it themselves. With its DVD service, it does the same thing for aspiring filmmakers.

Disc Makers is not a record label, so it does not choose which CDs to make. And while it offers help — displays for selling CDs, for example, and coupons for hosting services for musicians' Web sites — it does not promote the recordings it replicates.

It is also not a recording studio. Artists record their music elsewhere — anywhere from a pricey studio in Sweden to a home computer in their basement — and send it to Disc Makers.

In its factory outside Philadelphia, the company manufactures CDs and prints the labels for them in batches as small as 300. The price for 300 discs starts at $300. The company has engineers who tweak the recordings to make them sound cleaner and graphic designers who assemble the packaging.

Without distribution deals, Disc Makers' customers sell their music on their own at concerts, independent record stores and through online outlets such as CD Baby. Ben Kihnel, customer service person for the online store, said far more of its products were manufactured by Disc Makers than by any other company.

That's why some musicians — even those well-known enough to record for labels — admire Disc Makers as an alternative to a mainstream recording industry that is hardly loved by musicians.

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4.06.2006



AA Convention
Friday April 14th 2006 - 8- 11pm
"Hospitality Room"
Costa Mesa Hilton

(0) comments

2.22.2006

Congrats NeoN..........

fi·an·cé ( P ) Pronunciation Key (fän-s, f-äns)
n.

A man to whom a woman is engaged to be married.


[French, from past participle of fiancer, to betroth, from Old French fiancier, from fiance, trust, from fier, to trust, from Vulgar Latin *fdre, from Latin fdere. See bheidh- in Indo-European Roots.]

fi·an·cée ( P ) Pronunciation Key (fän-s, f-äns)
n.

A woman to whom a man is engaged to be married.


[French, feminine of fiancé, fiancé. See fiancé.]

(0) comments
Congrats NeoN..........

fi·an·cé ( P ) Pronunciation Key (fän-s, f-äns)
n.

A man to whom a woman is engaged to be married.


[French, from past participle of fiancer, to betroth, from Old French fiancier, from fiance, trust, from fier, to trust, from Vulgar Latin *fdre, from Latin fdere. See bheidh- in Indo-European Roots.]

fi·an·cée ( P ) Pronunciation Key (fän-s, f-äns)
n.

A woman to whom a man is engaged to be married.


[French, feminine of fiancé, fiancé. See fiancé.]

(0) comments

2.03.2006

11 string bass?......oh man
check these out.......thanks NeoN for the video and Robyn for the website
http://www.jeanbaudin.com/

(1) comments
11 string bass?......oh man
check these out.......thanks NeoN for the video and Robyn for the website
http://www.jeanbaudin.com/

(0) comments
11 string bass?......oh man
check these out.......thanks NeoN for the video and Robyn for the website
http://www.jeanbaudin.com/

(0) comments

1.29.2006

with world famous ryno today

(0) comments
with world famous ryno today

(0) comments

1.10.2006

Looks like the music industry is shutting down all free guitar and bass tablature sites very soon.........
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4508158.stm

I am very pissed off........why?

I like a particular song and take the time to write my own musical interpretation of that song and seek to share it with some friends......Music industry says no and seek jail time for offenders.......

It is all getting so insane and greedy........why? the music companies want you to buy their sheet music......pure and simple

Public schools no longer offer physical education, art classes and close down their music programs.......because it isn't as important as mathematics and history.......it is the hall monitors of life that have grown up telling us not play in the open fields of thought and dream of a better life without guns and pollution......You don't need that field lets put a toll road there.....you don't need that estuary with an ocean view, lets put houses there......you don't need music or art....lets feed you crap from fast food places so you get fat and stupid and can hurry up and drive in traffic and to pay your bills to the hall monitors of life.

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