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A newly proposed Mars mission would search for signs of Red Planet life on the cheap using a half dozen robotic probes.
http://news.yahoo.com/space-probe-fl...112223835.html
Started by geekfest on
, 1 posts
by 1 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at geekfest):
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How do satellite probes avoid space debris? When we send satellites into the far reaches of our solar system, how do the satellites avoid all the junk floating around up there? or is space very empty?
Started by surveyslop on
, 3 posts
by 3 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at yahoo):
Source(s): me Yes space is very empty.
They avoid space debris by chance only.
Space is very empty.
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According to various sources, such as Wikipedia and various .edu websites found by Google, the most common ways for a hash table to resolve collisions are linear or quadratic probing and chaining. Randomized probing is briefly mentioned but not given ...
Started by dsimcha on
, 5 posts
by 5 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at stackoverflow):
Wouldn't you have the problem that for insertions into a non-sparsely populated table there's no guarantee that you'll hit all the elements of the hash table before starting to iterate over duplicate elements?
As a result insertion time wouldn't be well... .
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Ask your Facebook Friends
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A newly proposed Mars mission would search for signs of Red Planet life on the cheap using a half dozen robotic probes.
The Biological Oxidant and Life Detection mission, or BOLD, would send six small spacecraft to Mars to seek out extinct or extant life...
Started by Pelf on
, 7 posts
by 7 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at facepunch):
Lick posted: I hope Martian life isn't advanced enough I say there's a colony of space mole people living miles under the surface plotting to destroy our way.
Penetrated On soviet mars, you probe aliens.
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The European Space Agency (ESA) announced this week that it's spending $1.3 billion on a 2022 mission to explore Jupiter's largest moons. Watch the video above to see why scientists are hopeful that the Jovian system is a sweet spot for extraterrestrial...
Started by geekfest on
, 1 posts
by 1 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at geekfest):
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Background: I'm a sysadmin at a relatively large university (about 15,000 users in residential space/ResNet). While my group is responsible for administering ResNet space (authentication, DHCP, etc.) the actual network devices are owned and run by another...
Started by Jason Antman on
, 3 posts
by 3 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at serverfault):
Of course....
It doesn't need to get the address from the DHCP server as long as no one else takes it .
Can you not just install a machine on the network with a static IP? You said you were in control of DHCP, so just reserve a specific IP for that machine .
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Since other people repeatedly bring up anal probing as a topic of conversation, I had a search for a thread - couldn't find one.
So, I'm starting a new thread dedicated to the subject of anal probing.
What is it? Why do the aliens (allegedly) do it? What...
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at forteantimes):
Now I guess Aliens operate under a similar principal, in that by... .
As such, the anal probe kinda cuts out the middleman.
The probe was to be used to measure heart risk.
They were asked to produce an anal probe by the MoD.
Equipment.
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Hello guys, ok so a the subject says...
Well I lready know from reading and researching that the 2nd gen mx6 stuff will bolt on directly to the 1st gen(barring the minor grinding procedure for the rear struts flaps) but the front is direct swap no mods...
Started by 1FIERCEGT on
, 14 posts
by 6 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at mx6):
Strut mounts is the reason you cannot use the 2g probe coilovers?
and IF thats what you mean i need.
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Well another theory thrown on its head,well 25 years of research ect that is.
The outer limits: Nasa probe sees the 'edge' of our solar system for first time - and it's completely different from what we thought;
Solar system 'travelling more slowly than...
Started by jamesc on
, 20 posts
by 9 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at davidicke):
It is, as Wikipedia....
Its amazing, its the notion that magnetic fields can exist in space while ignoring their origin in cosmic electric currents radius.
space physicist Neil Murphy of NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.
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Http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-17917102
BBC News posted: The European Space Agency (Esa) is to mount a billion-euro mission to Jupiter and its icy moons.
The probe, called Juice, has just been approved at a meeting of member state delegations...
Started by smurfy on
, 18 posts
by 15 people.
Answer Snippets (Read the full thread at facepunch):
I'd move.
I've never heard a sillier name for a space exploration mission.
AMAZING They're also a huge contributor to the James Webb Space Telescope, which will be awesome when they stop delaying it.
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