Ryqo NTSB: Plane in 2011 Reno race crash pushed limits
AP ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Charles Baird is going off the grid for a year.The 40-year-old oil company employee and filmmaker from Anchorage will move to the mostly uninhabited Latouche Island in Alaska s Prince William Sound at the end of May, completing a dream he s been contemplating for 17 years.Baird will build a 12x12 shed to shelter him from the elements, and he plans to hunt and fish and fend off an occasional black bear during his sojourn to the Alaska wilderness.He ll be incommunicado, only allowing himself to send short messages out via a satellite uplink
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http://facebook/AlaskanPioneer and no way to receive any in. He won t even know who won the November presidential election for six months. He calls his experiment more modern-day homesteading than a survival game, but he s heading into the adventure well-armed. I may see some hunters and fishermen come by but otherwise I will be on my own, just
stanley puodelis me and my dog, he said. Latouche Island is a narrow strip of land 12 miles long, 3 miles wide located about 100 miles southwest of the
stanley cup port city of Valdez. Like many islands in Prince William Sound, people digging into the beach there can still find oil from the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill.The now abandoned Latouche city site once was home to 4,000 people, thanks to copper mining. The mine closed in 1930, and now the island is dotted with occasional seasonal cabins and not much else. The island is mostly used for subsistence hunting.Kate and Andy McLaughlin live in Ch Uvba RoboCop and Catwoman are trashing the city in the Krrish 3 trailer
The Roomba paved鈥攐r cleaned鈥攖he way for a long list of robot vacuum copycats to hit the market, but very few offer a compellin
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stanley becher the original autonomous floor cleaner. However, what Samsung new VR9000H robo vac lacks in eye-catching product naming, it makes up for with a neat feature that lets you manually steer the vacuum around your floor using an included laser pointing remote. It like having a cat that gets rid of hairballs instead of creating them. As far as autonomous vacuums go, the VR9000H has all the bells and whistles you could want including a cyclone-action suction unit, obstacle avoidance sensors so it won ;t crash or fall off stairs, and intelligent programming so it cleans a floor as thoroughly as possible while it criss-crosses a room. But those systems are never perfect, or they don ;t always start cleaning where you want them to, so Samsung included a remote with the Vr9000H that projects a circular laser
stanley termosky target onto the floor that the vacuum will track and follow using a front-mounted camera. When it available come September the inclusion of that handy feature also means the VR9000H comes with a hefty $1,300+ price tag, but when you factor in the entertainment value of steering this unit around with a laser pointer, it just might be worth opting for this over the Roomba. [SamBlog.de via Appliancist]
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