Art For A Fun Run Here Towards A Healthy Heart Weekend.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Six Inch Dwarf .

Six inch space race dwarfism isn’t uncommon among species as a new documentary film Sirius has revealed that the mummified remains of a six-inch supposed 'space alien' are in fact human. 
Scientists say DNA tests have revealed the usual remains to be human rather than alien It was hailed as proof of alien life, a mummified visitor from another planet. 
Ten years after the remains of a six-inch ‘space alien’ were first discovered, they have been confirmed as ‘human’ by Stanford scientists in a new documentary film Sirius.Since the remains of the small humanoid - known as the 'Atacama Humanoid' and nicknamed Ata - were discovered in Chile's Atacama Desert 10 years ago there has been much speculation about its origins. 
Theories have included that the bones were those of an aborted fetus, or a monkey, or even an alien that had crash-landed on earth.   A comparison of foetus x-rays show a remarkable difference between human fetus skeletal development and the x-rays of the Atacama humanoid, the researchers claim in a report published today.
Dr Steven Greer, who led the project and documentary, has hit back at critics who claim the body is a hoax.'The CAT scan clearly shows internal chest organs -lungs and what  appears to be the remains of a heart structure,' 
he said.'There is absolutely no doubt that the specimen is an actual organism and that it is not a hoax of any kind. 'This fact has been confirmed by Dr. Nolan and Dr. Lachman at Stanford.'In the weeks leading up to Monday’s premier of Sirius, UFO enthusiasts had grown increasingly excited that the film could announce a major breakthrough in the search for extra-terrestrial life forms.
Experts say the small skeleton certainly bears many of the hallmarks of what we have come to believe aliens look like, in particular a large head overshadowing a small body.According to Chilean local newspaper, a man called Oscar Munoz found the remain on Oct. 19, 2003 when he was looking for objects of historical value in La Noria, a ghost town in the Atacama Desert.  Near an abandoned church, Munoz found a white cloth containing, according to the newspaper, ‘a strange skeleton no bigger than 15cm [the size of a pen]. It was a creature with hard teeth, a bulging head with an additional odd bulge on top. 
Its body was scaly and of dark color. Unlike humans, it had nine ribs. A DNA sample from bone marrow extracted from the specimen, was analyzed by scientists at a prestigious American university. 
Scientists believe the unusual skeleton is human, yet it has nine ribs' After six months of research by leading scientists at Stanford University, the Atacama  Humanoid remains a profound mystery,' said physician and Disclosure Project founder Dr. Steven Greer.'We traveled to Barcelona Spain in late September 2012 to obtain detailed X Rays, CAT scans and take genetic samples for testing at Stanford University.
 'We obtained excellent DNA material by surgically dissecting the distal ends of two right anterior ribs on the humanoid. 'These clearly contained bone marrow material, as was seen on the dissecting microscope that was brought in for the procedure,' Sirius premiered in Los Angeles on Earth Day and will be released online and in select theaters worldwide, starting April 22. The humanoid was first discovered in 2003 in the remote Atacama desert region of Chile. In the new documentary, a DNA sample from bone marrow extracted from the specimen, was analyzed by scientists at a prestigious American university. 
They concluded that it was an 'interesting mutation' of a male human that had survived post-birth for between six and eight years. ‘I can say with absolute certainty that it is not a monkey.
 'It is human - closer to human than chimpanzees. It lived to the age of six to eight,’ said Garry Nolan, director of stem cell biology at Stanford University's School of Medicine in California. 'Obviously, it was breathing, it was eating, it was metabolizing. 'It calls into question how big the thing might have been when it was born.'The small skeleton bears many of the hallmarks of what we have come to believe ETs look like, in particular a large head overshadowing a small body‘The DNA tells the story and we have the computational techniques that allows us to determine, in very short order, whether, in fact, this is human,’ Nolan, who performed the DNA tests, explains in the film.
In addition to studying the origins of Ata, Sirius explores the subject of UFO and ET visitation, the disclosure of secret UFO files, and the investigation of advanced energy and propulsion technologies extra-terrestrial civilizations are using to travel to Earth. Based on evidence gathered over the past 20 years by physician and Disclosure Project founder Dr. Steven Greer, Sirius reveals how and why these energy technologies are being suppressed in favor of maintaining the current petrochemical system. premiered in Los Angeles on Earth Day and will be released online and in select theaters worldwide, starting April 22 2013.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Interactive Telepathy.

As Art view investigates telepathy this is the first example of a 'brain-to-brain interfacing', raising the prospect that one day animals - and humans - could be able to learn and communicate into each other's minds.
Although interactive games like soccer that uses the speed of the mind instead of sticks are only been indicated researchers electronically tied the brains of two rats, one in the U.S (right) and another in Brazil (left), allowing them to solve problems together. The rats were connected to each other via a special interface which plugged directly into their brain The team from Duke University in North Carolina said: 'as far as we can tell, these findings demonstrate for the first time that a direct channel for behavioural information exchange can be established between two animals' brains without the use of the animal's regular forms of communication telepathy it will probably be more frequent among opposite sexes to stimulate ques efficiently.
' As lead researcher, Miguel Nicolelis, a pioneer of research into brain-computer interfaces, said the study was the first step towards the linking of multiple minds to form an 'organic computer' or 'brain-net' that would allow sharing of information among groups of animals. ‘We cannot even predict what kinds of emergent properties would appear when animals begin interacting as part of a brain-net,' he said. Microscopic electrodes implanted into the rats' brains enabled one animal to pass on instructions to the other, even though it was in a separate cages.

Here with art view is the first rat, known as the 'encoder', was taught to find water in its cage by responding to a light and pressing a particular lever.

Its brain was connected to a second animal, known as the 'decoder', which was not given the light signals. ‘In theory, you could imagine that a combination of brains could provide solutions that individual brains cannot achieve by themselves.' Scientists have developed a crude form of telepathy in animals by enabling a pair of rats to pass instructions using only their mind.
 Using microchips implanted in their brains to communicate, the rats were able to collaborate and solve simple puzzles, even though in one experiment they were thousands of miles apart. He said it could even lead to one animal incorporating anther sense of 'self', although there are fears it could result in the development of mind control.
In the experiments, published in the journal Scientific Reports, microscopic electrodes implanted into the rats' brains enabled one animal to pass on instructions to the other, even though it was in a separate cage. The first rat, known as the 'encoder', was taught to find water in its cage by responding to a light and pressing a particular lever. Its brain was connected to a second animal, known as the 'decoder', which was not given the light signals.
Instead, the second animal relied solely on the brain instructions, but when stimulated still pressed the right lever to receive a reward 70 per cent of the time - far more often than it would have by chance, demonstrating they had been guided by the other rat's mind. Instead, the second animal relied solely on the brain instructions, but when stimulated still pressed the right lever to receive a reward 70 per cent of the time - far more often than it would have by chance, demonstrating they had been guided by the other rat's mind. 'We detected cortical neurons that responded to both sets of whiskers.
'These experiments was repeated with another pair of rats, one in the US city of Durham, North Carolina, the other in Natal, Brazil. 
A still from a video released by Nicolelis Laboratory explaining the logistics of the experiment remarkably, the communication between the rats seemed to be two-way.
The encoder rat did not receive a full reward if the decoder made a wrong choice, and as a result, became more decisive and generated clearer brain signals. ‘They saw that when the decoder rat committed an error, the encoder basically changed both its brain function and behaviour to make it easier for its partner to get it right,' said Dr Nicolelis, who claimed this suggested a 'behavioural collaboration' between the pair of rats.
Duke University Medical Centre neurobiologist Miguel Nicolelis led the study, published in Scientific Reports a second test involved pairs of rats distinguishing between narrow and wide openings using their whiskers. Again, signals transmitted from one rat helped the other take the right action to obtain a reward.
Evidence from this study suggested that the decoder rat began to develop a double identity, by picking up sensations from two sets of whiskers - its own and those of its partner. ‘Our studies of the sensory cortex of the decoder rats in these experiments showed that the decoder's brain began to represent in its tactile cortex not only its own whiskers, but the encoder rat's whiskers, too,' said Dr Nicolelis. By recording brain signals from one rat and transmitting them over the Internet to the other, scientists were able to alter the second rodent's behaviour despite the vast distance.
British expert Professor Christopher James, from the University of Warwick, who has conducted similar research, said: 'We are far from a scenario of well-networked rats around the world uniting to take us over, the stimulation is crude and specific. 'As for the ethics, I struggle to think of any applications that would not have ethical issues.' Like speech to type with future technologies sleep dreams to adaptations make for very interesting interactions with in art world.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Fire Writer Printer.

An wall or ply board called the Arduino Uno, a small self-contained computer, was programmed with wiring and processing to integrate an ink jet printer, a Dremel torch and a calibration module with an optical sensor.
 A graphic designer has combined a printer with a blowtorch to make an incredible tool which burns images onto surfaces down to the tiniest detail. The 'Fire writer' was created by Lucien Langton to reproduce black and white images perfectly pixel for pixel on walls, wood, plastic and fabric. The blowtorch is mounted on rollers, and the user simply loads the image they want into a computer, the 'rolls' the contraption along a large sheet of wood. Lucien Langton built the Fire writer which burns images pixel for pixel onto surfaces without setting them on fire.
The Fire writer combines an ink jet printer with a blowtorch to burn images onto surfaces. Butane and propane are burned at 1,200C to create black and white images pixel for pixel. 
The tool, invented at ECAL, the University of Art and Design Lausanne, burns a mixture of butane and propane at 1,200C to create the images but does not set surfaces on fire.  A user holds the Fire writer up against the surface they want to print on, and then guides it horizontally along using calibrated wheels. Mr Langton said: 'Fire writer is a machine using contemporary rapid prototyping electronics combined with humanity’s first technology: fire,' he said. The machine was constructed by Lucien Langton at ECAL, the University of Art and Design Lausanne
Wheels enable the user to lower the printer one line at a time on the vertical axis using a support. Lucien Langton said he wanted to combine the oldest technology known to man with more modern technology.' The purpose is to propose a dialogue between image reproduction and its destruction.' 
The Fire writer works by feeding an image into the processing script, which writes a wiring code that can be compiled and sent onto the Arduino board. It has wheels that enable the user to lower the printer one line at a time on the vertical axis on a support.  The duration, strength and precision of the flame can be controlled in real-time manually with a pitch.  As this terrifying 'blowtorch printer' that uses FIRE to burn messages onto wood Fire writer burns black and white images onto surfaces. Contraption is rolled up a sheet of wood, scorching a pattern as it goes. Butane and propane burn at 1,200C without setting surfaces on fire.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

3 Dimensional Printing.

The Periodic Table of 3d printed materials or for to display material examples. 1 PA Polyamide 2 AL alumide 3 MC multicolor 4 RE high detail resin 5 RE paint able resin 6 RE transparent resin 7 AB Slabs 8 TI titanium Rank Symbol material 9ST stainless steel 10 AG silver 11 AU gold 12 PG prime gray 13 BS brass 14 BZ bronze 15 CE ceramics 16 HS high detailed stainless steel. Almost any super structure can be layered printed. easy to work materials like gypsum and ready to grow structures.
 Multilayer dimensional printing as there are a few designs as Art View will touch on. These are both between hydrogen and anti hydrogen atoms and onward into structures that are unique to mankind.