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MethrenRaf

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txvu Where Are The Workers
« le: Décembre 10, 2024, 10:51:52 am »
Fsmq Why Hexagons Are The Best Building Block For Bees and Their Hives
  AP  LOS ANGELES - A Southern California filmmaker linked to an anti-Islamic movie inflaming protests across the Middle East was interviewed Sa stanley usa turday by federal probation officers at a Los Angeles sheriff s station, authorities said.Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, was interviewed for about half an hour at the station shortly after 12 a.m. in his hometown of Cerritos, Calif., said Steve Whitmore, spokesman for the Los Angeles County sheriff s department.After that, deputies dropped Nakoula off at an undisclosed location. He is gone. We don t know where he went,  Whitmore said.  He said he is not going back to stanley cup  his home. Feds question possible anti-Muslim filmmakerDozens protest at U.S. Embassy in ParisAl Qaeda calls for more attacks on embassies        Federal officials are investigating whether Nakoula, who has been stanley cup  convicted of financial crimes, has violated the terms of his five-year probation. If so, a judge could send him back to prison.Nakoula went voluntarily to the station, wearing a coat, hat, scarf and glasses that concealed his appearance. His home has been besieged by media for several days.Whitmore said Nakoula was not handcuffed and the heavy apparel was his idea.The probation department is reviewing the case of Nakoula, who pleaded no contest to bank fraud charges in 2010 and was banned from using computers or the Internet or using false identities as part of his sentence. Whitmore did not disclose other details about the interview.            Federal authorities h Zyaf Happy Sunday! Here   s A Creepy-Faced Sun.
 During the 1970s, while bell-bottoms roamed the earth and The Dark Side of the Moon played on records, scientists were communicating images direct stanley cups ly to the brains of bli stanley cup nd people.  What   more stanley mug , they were intelligible images.     Recently therehave been astonishing advances in neurotechnology.  They are accomplishments in their own right, but they didn ;t come out of the blue.  There   a long history of scientists making physical connections between machines and the brain.  All the way back in the 1970s, they used machines to make blind people see. A computer that can read letters directly from your brain  We take in light with our eyes but we  8220 ee with our brain.  Our brains are what tell us a conglomeration of shapes is a flower, or that a group of features is our mother   face and not the face of a stranger.  Our brain can also make us see things that aren ;t there.  Parallel lines seem to converge.  Static images seem to move. Lights that don ;t exist outside our minds glow. The generalized term for light we see, but which never enters our eye, is phosphene.  Phosphenes can be as simple as seeing stars when you sneeze, or when you gently press on your eyelids.  Those are usually the result of pressure on the retina.  Scientists eventually decided to go to the source.  In 1968, they jammed electrodes directly into a man   visual cortex.  The visual cortex is the part of the brain right at the back of the skull as far away