These photos were taken by the GOES 8 satellite of an unknown object claimed to be a shadow of the moon. However, the so-called shadow isn’t being cast on anything, so it is hard to conclude that it is anything but an object. The photos were analyzed by Ross Hunt Productions, a prominent video image analysis and production company in business for over 40 years. The object reveals a slight triangular shape behind it that some have thought might indicate that it is a crude digital hoax. However, analysis indicates that this material cannot easily be explained.

The photos were taken in November of 1999.

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The Global Situation Report – In November of 1996 controversy erupted around incoming comet Hale-Bopp when an amateur astronomer claimed that it had a companion and a noted remote viewer said that the companion was an incoming starship. The previous April, the Japanese National Observatory had posted a photograph of the comet on its website showing the object, and initial reports from some other observatories seemed to confirm it. But nothing ever indicated that the object, if present, was a spacecraft.
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Filer’s Files – A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration GOES satellite has photographed a large object orbiting the earth. The photograph was made by the automatic satellite from geosyncrhonous (stationary) orbit. The incident took place at 2:45PM on November 21, 1999. NOAA explained the object away as a “moon shadow,” but if so, it isn’t clear why such shadows cannot be found on other GOES photographs. Thanks to George Filer and Filer’s Files. The image can be see at www.filersfiles.com/noaaimages.htm.

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A single strand of DNA contains more potential computing power than a thousand supercomputers. If DNA segments are used as data bits, trillions of molecular chains can be chemically combined. The result is that computations can be carried out in seconds that would take a supercomputer centuries.

A team led by Chemistry professor Michael C. Pirrung of Duke University has now devised a method of printing DNA on glass chips. This makes using it for computational purposes much easier, and suggests yet another major breakthrough in the journey toward really effective computers.
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