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Unmoderated Tag: Celebrities Rating: Good Hits: 148 Comments: 0 I Knew You Were Trouble I Knew You Were Trouble WOTE's new EP R.E.V.O. available here: http://smarturl.it/revo-ep WOTE merch available here: http://bit.ly/xZolh7 Walk off the Earth hooked up with KRNFX for this 'a cappella - Beatbox' version of Taylor Swift's hit "I Knew You Were Trouble". Every sound in this video is made by a human mouth! WOTE TOUR DATES AND TICKET LINKS: January 17 -- Detroit, MI http://goo.gl/ScL4J March 20 -- Vienna, AT http://goo.gl/27MCd March 21 -- Budapest, HU http://goo.gl/GyitO March 22 -- Munich, DE http://goo.gl/2dL0T March 23 -- Zurich, CH http://goo.gl/W8AYf March 24 -- Saarbrucken, DE http://goo.gl/AZSzs March 26 -- Hamburg, DE http://goo.gl/70ioj March 27 -- Muenster, DE http://goo.gl/hOYgb March 28 -- Leipzig, DE http://goo.gl/I8xwO March 29 -- Berlin, DE http://goo.gl/5ABP5 March 30 -- Amsterdam, NL http://goo.gl/ev8Dq March 31 -- Antwerp, BE http://goo.gl/fxWjX April 2 -- Paris, FR http://goo.gl/1gVWN April 3 -- Nottingham, GB http://goo.gl/jioxW April 4 -- Newcastle, GB http://goo.gl/VU8ck April 5 -- Dublin, IE http://goo.gl/SBxhR April 6 -- London, GB http://goo.gl/ZBaFd April 7 -- Cologne, DE http://goo.gl/j0QrY Check out KRNFX Add us on FaceBook: WOTE - http://www.facebook.com/walkofftheearth KRNFX - http://www.facebook.com/krnfx Follow us on Twitter: WOTE - http://www.twitter.com/walkofftheearth KRNFX - http://www.twitter.com/krnfx Check out KRNFX on YouTube here: http://www.youtube.com/krnfxtv You won't be disappointed! WOTE User: lyzard Jan 7, 2013 12:15 PM




Permanent Tag: Humor Rating: Good Hits: 669 Comments: 0 Swimming Pool Swimming Pool Night lovestory of two outsiders, who meet in closed swimming pool in the middle of big city. 2010 FAMU Production animation, script,director: Alexandra Hetmerová, sound designer: Jan Sleska, film editor: Adam Patyk, production: Barbora Prikaska Awards: 2010 – Best animation – International Student Film Festival in Pisek - Czech republic 2010 – Special mention on Anim´est Romania 2010 – Award for academic films - Anifest Rozafa Albania 2010 - Special mention for animation FAMUFEST - Prague - Czech republic 2010 - Second award from audiences on Festival Anilogue - Budapest - Hungary 2010 - Special mention for student animation on festival Etiuda Anima - Krakow – Poland 2010 – 3rd price for student animation Xiamen International Animation Festival – China 2010 – Cinemaiubit International Student Film Festival – best animation award 2011 - ANIMA 2011 – Brussels – Belgium - Anima 2011 Award for Best Student Short Film 2011 –Monstra festival Lisboa – Portugal - Best Short - Audience Award 2011 – 2rd Stortford film festival – Rhodes – United Kingdom – Best animation 2011 – Supertoon – Bra? – Croatia – Special mention 2011 – Student award – Golden Dinosaur – CICDAF 2011 – CHINA 2011 – Honorable mention – Gradual films - Ottawa International Animation festival – Ottawa – Canada 2011 – Diploma in category Best student film - International Animation festival Tindirindis – Vilnius – Lithuania 2011 - Honorable mention - Student films - Animateka Ljubljana – Slovenia 2011 - Golden Goats for Best Animated Film for Young People - 29th IYAFF Ale Kino! – Pozna? - Poland User: kooolcat May 21, 2012 11:38 PM





Headline Tag: Television Rating: Good Hits: 2201 Comments: 3 The Missing Secrets of Nikola Tesla The Missing Secrets of Nikola Tesla Nikola Tesla (10 July 1856 - 7 January 1943) was an inventor and a mechanical and electrical engineer. He is frequently cited as one of the most important contributors to the birth of commercial electricity and is best known for his many revolutionary developments in the field of electromagnetism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Tesla’s patents and theoretical work formed the basis of modern alternating current (AC) electric power systems, including the polyphase system of electrical distribution and the AC motor, with which he helped usher in the Second Industrial Revolution. Alpha waves in the human brain are between 6 and 8 hertz. The wave frequency of the human cavity resonates between 6 and 8 hertz. All biological systems operate in the same frequency range. The human brain’s alpha waves function in this range and the electrical resonance of the earth is between 6 and 8 hertz. Thus, our entire biological system – the brain and the earth itself – work on the same frequencies. If we can control that resonate system electronically, we can directly control the entire mental system of humankind. Nikola Tesla was born on July 10, 1856 in Smiljan, Lika, which was then part of the Austo-Hungarian Empire, region of Croatia. His father, Milutin Tesla was a Serbian Orthodox Priest and his mother Djuka Mandic was an inventor in her own right of household appliances. Tesla studied at the Realschule, Karlstadt in 1873, the Polytechnic Institute in Graz, Austria and the University of Prague. At first, he intended to specialize in physics and mathematics, but soon he became fascinated with electricity. He began his career as an electrical engineer with a telephone company in Budapest in 1881. It was there, as Tesla was walking with a friend through the city park that the elusive solution to the rotating magnetic field flashed through his mind. With a stick, he drew a diagram in the sand explaining to his friend the principle of the induction motor. Before going to America, Tesla joined Continental Edison Company in Paris where he designed dynamos. While in Strassbourg in 1883, he privately built a prototype of the induction motor and ran it successfully. Unable to interest anyone in Europe in promoting this radical device, Tesla accepted an offer to work for Thomas Edison in New York. His childhood dream was to come to America to harness the power of Niagara Falls. Young Nikola Tesla came to the United States in 1884 with an introduction letter from Charles Batchelor to Thomas Edison: “I know two great men,” wrote Batchelor, “one is you and the other is this young man.” Tesla spent the next 59 years of his productive life living in New York. Tesla set about improving Edison’s line of dynamos while working in Edison’s lab in New Jersey. It was here that his divergence of opinion with Edison over direct current versus alternating current began. This disagreement climaxed in the war of the currents as Edison fought a losing battle to protect his investment in direct current equipment and facilities. User: spam_vigilante Dec 12, 2011 9:51 AM





 
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