Auteur Sujet: qnmm They Call Him Jack The Snipper  (Lu 10 fois)

MethrenRaf

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qnmm They Call Him Jack The Snipper
« le: Décembre 17, 2024, 02:39:03 pm »
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 Pictures of Osama bin Laden and videotapes about martyrs were found in the car and apartment of a college student from Jordan who knew two hijackers of the airliner that hit the Pentagon, prosecutors said in an indictment Thursday.The indictment against Osama Awadallah, 21, was handed up in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, where two perjury counts were brought against Awadallah last month.According to the indictment, a search of Awadallah s car after he was taken into custody in September produced videotapes titled  Martyrs of Bosnia,   Bosnia 1993  and  The Koran v. the Bible, Which is God s Word  A search of Awadallah s apartment yielded computer-generated photographs of bin Laden, the indictment said.Awadallah, 21, is a student at Grossmont College in La Mesa, Calif., near San Diego.        The indictment, returned late Wednesday and made public Thursday, charges Awadallah with two counts of perjury for  stanley flasche allegedly lying about his association with hijackers Nawaf Al-Hazmi and Khalid Al-Mihdhar. The two have been identified by federal authorities as the hijackers of the airliner that hit the Pentagon on Sept. 11.The indictment said a search of a car registered to Al-Hazmi produced a piece of paper on which was wr stanley cup itten  OSAMA  and a seven-digit phone number.Pros stanley cup usa ecutors said the investigation into the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that destroyed the World Trade Center and damaged the Pentagon, killing thousands of people, revealed that the seven-digit number, combined with the 61 Kqwk 11 Amazing Historical Snapshots From One of the World   s Best Archives
 This tiny piece of glass may not look like much, but in fact its surface is cleverly etched to capture light, and it contains a small chip to process the incident light. Yep, it   a tiny camera that could provide any object鈥攈owever small鈥攚ith the means of capturing images.     The idea behind the new sensor, developed by Rambu stanley mug s, is simple: shrinking a real lens only works up to a certain point; when it gets too small, grinding the precise curvature of a lens becomes practically impossible. Instead, this sensor  stanley cup quencher detects light passing through an etched surface and then uses some computing to reconstruct an image. The action takes place on a spiral-etched grating on the surface of the glass, which measures just 200 microns in diameter鈥攁b stanley thermos mug out the same size as a pencil point. The results aren ;t perfect, but they ;re great given how small the sensor is. Technology Review   Rachel Metz explains: Patrick Gill [from Rambus] is excited to show me a small, fuzzy-looking picture of the Mona Lisa, printed in black and white on a piece of paper. It   not much to look at, literally, but it   unmistakably her, with long dark hair and that mysterious smile. So, a little fuzzy, maybe, but good enough for some applications鈥攁nd it   the applications that are exciting.  Our aim is to add eyes to any digital device, no matter how small, Gill explained to Technology Review. Imagine, basically, adding a camera to any old object鈥攎edical devices, to