(Blind Allies)



#interview with the vampire#iwtv#the vampire armand#assad zaman


seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Japan
seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from Pakistan
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Kosovo
seen from Philippines
seen from United States
seen from Colombia
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
(Blind Allies)
10 track album
OUT NOW! Grab your copy! Fantastic album!
Krypton 81 - SIGINT [Bass Agenda Recordings]
SIGINT takes you on a journey, suspending your physical being in stasis as it draws your other being in through the input port of a highly developed AI. Once inside, electronic pulses and barely visible wires cradle you and transport you from module to module; taking in dark warnings of a future gone wrong, punchy beats and true Electro dynamics; occasionally bathing you in its blue light before returning you to your earthly form. But are you still you now? Or did part of the code embed in you whilst you were being processed? Video mash-up by me. http://bassagendarecordings.bandcamp.com/album/krypton-81-sigint
Available to pre-order now. Krypton 81 - SIGINT....limited CD.Bass Agenda Recordings welcomes Danish duo Krypton 81 to the family with their full length album SIGINT; 9 tracks of classy, dsytopian, sci-fi fueled authentic Electro.SIGINT takes you on a journey, suspending your physical being in stasis as it draws your other being in through the input port of a highly developed AI. Once inside, electronic pulses and barely visible wires cradle you and transport you from module to module; taking in dark warnings of a future gone wrong, each message laced with punchy beats and true Electro dynamics; occasionally bathing you in its blue light before returning you to your earthly form.But are you still you now? Or did part of the code embed in you whilst you were being processed?
How Old Is Water? Krypton Analysis Helps Scientists Unravel H20′s Life Story
By Matthew Van Dusen
How old is the water in your drinking glass? What about the ice cubes floating in it? Any answer is bound to make reference to the water cycle (evaporate, rain, repeat). Still, for most practical purposes, water is both eternal and constantly replenished.
But when water flows underground or freezes into glacial ice, a clock starts ticking from the moment it loses contact with the air. In order to read the time, scientists must trap and count almost infinitesimally small quantities of the radioactive isotope krypton 81. Physicist Zheng-Tian Lu and his team at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory outside of Chicago have honed the technique, called Atom Trap Trace Analysis (ATTA), over more than a decade and successfully used it to map the flow of water in the Nubian Aquifer, two miles beneath the Sahara Desert.
The Nubian Aquifer and ages of water. Courtesy Argonne National Laboratory
If scientists can determine how long water has been in an underground aquifer, they’ll know how fast it travels and how fast it can be replenished in certain areas – critical information in desert climates where the population depends on groundwater. Krypton 81 can help tell water’s story. Dating glacial ice, a new frontier for the technology, can tell scientists about the atmosphere hundreds of thousands of years ago.
As the technology improves, radio-krypton dating is set to become part of the scientist’s toolkit, going far beyond the range of carbon 14 dating to pinpoint the age of samples 150,000 – 1.5 million years old. But the journey to this discovery has been slow.