E28 – January 1, 2013 – complexity, derivatives, little bloop vs. big bang
Clif_High_Wujo_E28_Januari_1_2013.torrent
Clif High on Time Monk Radio Network 12-21-2012
A new two hour interview by Time Monk Radio Network:
Clif_High_TMRN_December_21_2012.torrent
Join us as we discuss: New Release, not a Shape report. “End of the Baktun” to be released on Dec 31st (or thereabouts, you know Clif so expect it early maybe?)
Temporal Markers, Economic Collapse, Currencies, Precious Metals, Mortgage foreclosures (new info that Clif hasn’t previously released), Breakaway Civilization, Global Coastal Event, Clif trying to alter events (personal to his world), Israeli Mistake, plenty more.
Clif High / Web Bots: http://www.halfpasthuman.com
Time Mink Radio Network: http://timemonkradio.com/
SkyStudioPro version 1.1.0.24 – updated
There is a new version of SkyStudioPro available: 1.1.0.24
– a bug fix for the motion detection system, did not work properly in version 1.1.0.23
– you can now add “elapsed time” to the watermark/time stamp
You can download the new version of SkyStudioPro here.
About SkyStudioPro
SkyStudioPro is a freeware time-lapse and motion detection application for the Windows® platform. You can use it to capture time-lapse movies using almost any capture device or web cam. It also features motion detection, you can set it to record movie clips when motion is detected. You can also use SkyStudioPro to make stop-motion movies, by taking manual snapshots of a scene. Use the brand new SkyStudioPro VideoCompiler to make a compressed movie from your saved images.
Epigenetics – we can reprogram the DNA we give to our children
I watched a nice episode of dr. Oz today. In the past he had sometimes surprised me with statements and health info that you normally only find in alternative media. Since dr. Oz is on main stream media big time, I commend his courage in these cases. For instance by stating “cell phone radiation causes cancer”, while every other main stream medium still refuses to accept that.
Anyway, this episode was about “Pregnancy Myths Exposed”, and started off with “epigenetics”. And to my surprise I heard something that until recently I only had heard from Bruce Lipton, in his documentary “Biology of Perception”: we do alter or reprogram our DNA as we pass it along to our children. Here’s a summary from dr. Oz’s website:
“Myth #1: You CAN’T Control Genes
What we know While some features such as eye color and receding hairlines are immutable results of your DNA, experts are discovering that other traits, like waist size or intelligence, are not. A new field of science called epigenetics is finding that what happens in the womb can influence which genes are turned on and off.
As DNA, the blueprint of your body, is rolled out during development, it gets copied. And while that copying occurs, the things you are experiencing – what you eat, the toxins you are exposed to – can stop that copy machine from working properly. This basic principal of epigenetics means that, while we can’t control what genes we pass on to our children, we may be able to control which genes get turned on or turned off.” source
Up til now, main stream science would have us believe that DNA is the Single Factor, the Lord of the Things, an unalterable written blueprint that can’t be messed with.
If your ancestors have cancer, you will probably get it, too. If your ancestors are fat, you will be too. Epigenetics now tell us that DNA is used for building the fetus, but there is no “as is” copying – genes are switched off and on depending on the cirumstances.
Bruce Lipton (C.V.) states:
“The difference between these two is significant because this fundamental belief called genetic determinism literally means that our lives, which are defined as our physical, physiological and emotional behavioral traits, are controlled by the genetic code. This kind of belief system provides a visual picture of people being victims: If the genes control our life function then our lives are being controlled by things outside of our ability to change them. This leads to victimization that the illnesses and diseases that run in families are propagated through the passing of genes associated with those attributes. Laboratory evidence shows this is not true.
When we buy into being a victim, we automatically buy into needing a rescuer, meaning we accept that somebody else is going to save us from ourselves. This is the unfortunate situation where the medical community has inserted itself.
Epigenetic control reveals that environmental information alters the read-out of the genes without changing the underlying DNA sequenced code.” source
Another great, empowering idea. Think about it for a minute. And then go watch this good old “Biology of Perception”:
Linux: howto avoid video devices getting mixed up after reboot, using udev rules
This is part of my tutorial “How to stream analog tv to mobile android devices with Ubuntu, MythTV, xmltv and MythFrontEnd“.
In Linux video devices can be accessed through “/dev/video0”, “/dev/video1” and so on. The problem is that the device designations can change after a reboot, but there is a way to “fix” your video devices. You can do this by making “symbolic links” to your devices, based on device name, driver or any other unique identifier. You can then use this symbolic link instead of “/dev/video0” and your device order will hold up after every reboot. Since I also install ZoneMinder with 3 webcams, this step is a must for me.
This is a synopsis from the MythTV guide I followed:
– make sure your devices are connected and can be accessed as “/dev/video0“, “/dev/video1” and so on.
– in a terminal, type:
udevadm info -a -p $(udevadm info -q path -n /dev/video0)
– copy/paste the output to a text editor and save it
– now for device #2, #3 type:
udevadm info -a -p $(udevadm info -q path -n /dev/video1)
,
udevadm info -a -p $(udevadm info -q path -n /dev/video2)
and so on.
– copy/paste each output to a text editor and save it for later. Repeat this step for all your video devices.
The output will look something like this:
looking at device '/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.7/usb1/1-3/1-3:1.0/video4linux/video0':
KERNEL=="video0"
SUBSYSTEM=="video4linux"
DRIVER==""
ATTR{name}=="Vimicro USB 2.0 PC Camera (Venu"
ATTR{index}=="0"
looking at parent device '/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.7/usb1/1-3/1-3:1.0':
...
Now look for something that you can use to uniquely identify your video device.
In my case I used:
for “/dev/video0”: ATTR{name}=="Vimicro USB 2.0 PC Camera (Venu"
,
for “/dev/video1”: ATTR{name}=="UVC Camera (046d:0805)"
,
for “/dev/video2”: ATTR{name}=="DC10plus[0]"
and
for “/dev/video3”: ATTR{name}=="ivtv0 encoder MPG"
,
because they contain the names of the devices and they are unique.
Ok, now we have our unique identifying attributes, now it’s time to make symbolic links using “udev“:
– in a terminal type:
sudo gedit /etc/udev/rules.d/99-server.rules
This will create a new file where we will define our rules.
Use a high number (99 in this case) to start the filename with, this will make sure udev overrides automatic settings. You can choose your own filename, just make it start with a high number.
– Now we define one rule per video device. On each boot udev will read these rules, and create a symbolic link for the device found based on this identifier.
– Here’s the contents of my /etc/udev/rules.d/99-server.rules:
KERNEL=="video[0-9]*", DRIVERS=="zr36067", SYMLINK+="video-DC10"
KERNEL=="video[0-9]*", ATTR{name}=="ivtv0 encoder MPG", SYMLINK+="video-PVR-150"
KERNEL=="video[0-9]*", ATTR{name}=="UVC Camera (046d:0805)", SYMLINK+="video-Logitech300"
KERNEL=="video[0-9]*", ATTR{name}=="Vimicro USB 2.0 PC Camera*", SYMLINK+="video-Vimicro"
Make sure you have 1 rule per line, and no empty lines. It could look different in the browser, but there’s 1 rule per line.
What these rules tell udev:
look for any video device between 0 and 9 that matches DRIVERS==”zr36067″, and create a link called “video-DC10“.
look for any video device between 0 and 9 that matches ATTR{name}==”ivtv0 encoder MPG”, and create a link called “video-PVR-150” and so on.
Reboot the system to see if the links are there. The easy way to check is to open the Thunar file manager, and browse to “/dev”:
From now on you can use these fixed links and your video devices will no longer be mixed up!