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Post by imSINGLEruRICH on Sept 1, 2009 9:20:44 GMT -5
Hi Sniffer.... D ick Tracey has nothing on you..... !! Great detective work ... ya done good!! Thanks for all your time, effort & hard work by bringing your findings & information here to PB29. We do appreciate you !! A big hug coming your way..... Single
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 1, 2009 15:49:15 GMT -5
Thanks single, but not really true...........................thingy Tracy had that cool yellow coat and the talking watch.................................But I will take that hug...yes err ree...
So let me dedicate this next piece to Urban, family and friends~
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Post by imSINGLEruRICH on Sept 2, 2009 8:43:53 GMT -5
[glow=red,2,300] It only takes a minute !![/glow] By: gotoil1870 01 Sep 2009, 04:54 PM EDT Rating: Msg. 864028 of 864221 (Reply to 863509 by gotoil1870) SHAREHOLDERS SEND "THE STAND" TO ALL THESE EMAIL ADDRESS.. AND ANY YOU HAVE IN YOUR ADDRESS BOOK... cgurien@dtcc.com, rbgordon@dtcc.com, MathewLewis@dtcc.com, hakalal@sec.gov, SchapiroM@sec.gov, cpoisella@dtcc.com, cbrosnahan@dtcc.com, rwalowitz@dtcc.com, cstark@dtcc.com, jtaylor@dtcc.com, nwood@dtcc.com, bmoskovic@dtcc.com, lmacumber@dtcc.com, snugent@dtcc.com, jsmith@dtcc.com, jtaylor@dtcc.com, hakalal@sec.gov, kotzd@sec.gov, abryan@dtcc.com, sthomas@dtcc.com, lschmitt@dtcc.com, khuzamir@sec.gov, whitem@sec.gov, cchilds@dtcc.com, NSCCAA@DTCC.com, feedback@foxbusiness.com, gettingreal@cnbc.com, investforsuccess@cnbc.com, headhoncho@cnbc.com, moneymakingmonday@cnbc.com, sectorwatch@cnbc.com, stockstowatch@cnbc.com, newinvestor@cnbc.com, behindthewheel@cnbc.com, wakeupcall@cnbc.com, squawk@cnbc.com, morningcall@cnbc.com, powerlunch@cnbc.com, powerguest@cnbc.com, streetsigns@cnbc.com, closingbell@cnbc.com, kudlow@cnbc.com, madmoney@cnbc.com, dennismillershow@nbc.com, donny@cnbc.com, maria@wsjreport.com, afterhours@cnbc.com,Questions@cftc.gov, enforcement@cftc.gov, oig@cftc.gov
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 2, 2009 9:17:52 GMT -5
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 2, 2009 9:18:20 GMT -5
35,021Friday, August 28th 2009 1951 hrs *********************stars4 day's later, 35 thousand plus hit's............But there is a difference this time and that is exposure and clarity...
Back when this incident happened with the Task Force, it was not announced to the shareholders until after 10 day's of observation by the Task force........................................This time we all witnessed the event and reported it and in doing so, everyone gets the report...
So to the fine Men and Women Of Sandia National Laboratories, we say Hi...~
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 2, 2009 10:06:19 GMT -5
I believe we all have gone through the thought of, "we are making this larger than it really is"...We all have gone to bed questioning ourselves through out the years our sanity in all of this.......................................................I received so much relief when Christopher Story wrote that, "WantaGate" was now called, "Son Of WantaGate" ...right after Bob passed...
But that was a personnel acknowledgment and can do nothing for all of the shareholders as far as believing in how large it truly is..............Below is what I posted in the Grapevine this morningFor all that have at one time or another questioned their sanity in this CMKX asylum.............................Never forget just what transpired this past week with the posting of "The Stand"~Over 28,000 hits in one day.......................Contemplate exactly how the order was given to have thousands of individuals log on to the 29 site and view "The Stand"...................Also take into that these individuals giving orders are not stupid and would know that the incident would be tracked, hence it was a premeditative event for a pupose...
If they wanted to view the details of Roberts post that could of easily been done without going into the site...
This event was a warn arm on a cold day~After 911, I came up with a saying..."Never Forget The Lady Falling"And now a new one.... "Never Forget The Stand"~
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Post by JoeRockss on Sept 2, 2009 18:38:59 GMT -5
I believe we all have gone through the thought of, "we are making this larger than it really is"...We all have gone to bed questioning ourselves through out the years our sanity in all of this.......................................................I received so much relief when Christopher Story wrote that, "WantaGate" was now called, "Son Of WantaGate" ...right after Bob passed...
But that was a personnel acknowledgment and can do nothing for all of the shareholders as far as believing in how large it truly is..............Below is what I posted in the Grapevine this morningFor all that have at one time or another question their sanity in this CMKX asylum.............................Never forget just what transpired this past week with the posting of "The Stand"~Over 28,000 hits in one day.......................Contemplate exactly how the order was given to have thousands of individuals log on to the 29 site and view "The Stand"...................Also take into that these individuals giving orders are not stupid and would know that the incident would be tracked, hence it was a premeditative event for a pupose...
If they wanted to view the details of Roberts post that could of easily been done without going into the site...
This event was a warn arm on a cold day~After 911, I came up with a saying..."Never Forget The Lady Falling"And now a new one.... "Never Forget The Stand"~
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 7, 2009 8:40:45 GMT -5
Very interesting and if it comes to fruition, the usage in uranium under control would go through the roof roof roof~“Nuke-Star” FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 25, 2009Sandia team developing right-sized reactor ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A smaller scale, economically efficient nuclear reactor that could be mass-assembled in factories and supply power for a medium-size city or military base has been designed by Sandia National Laboratories. The exportable, proliferation-resistant “right-sized reactor” was conceived by a Sandia research team led by Tom Sanders. Sanders has been collaborating with numerous Sandians on advancing the small reactor concept to an integrated design that incorporates intrinsic safeguards, security and safety. This opens the way for possible exportation of the reactor to developing countries that do not have the infrastructure to support large power sources. The smaller reactor design decreases the potential need for countries to develop an advanced nuclear regulatory framework. Incorporated into the design, said team member Gary Rochau, is what is referred to as “nuke-star,” an integrated monitoring system that provides the exporters of such technologies a means of assuring the safe, secure, and legitimate use of nuclear technology. “This small reactor would produce somewhere in the range of 100 to 300 megawatts of thermal power and could supply energy to remote areas and developing countries at lower costs and with a manufacturing turnaround period of two years as opposed to seven for its larger relatives,” Sanders said. “It could also be a more practical means to implement nuclear base load capacity comparable to natural gas-fired generating stations and with more manageable financial demands than a conventional power plant.” About the size of half a fairly large office building, a right-sized reactor facility will be considerably smaller than conventional nuclear power plants in the U.S. that typically produce 3,000 megawatts of power. With approximately 85 percent of the design efforts completed for the reactor core, Sanders and his team are seeking an industry partner through a cooperative research and development agreement (CRADA). The CRADA team will be able to complete the reactor design and enhance the plant side, which is responsible for turning the steam into electricity. Team member Steve Wright is doing research using internal Sandia Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) program funding. The right-sized reactor is expected to operate at efficiencies greater than any current designs, ultimately giving the reactor the greatest return on investment. “In the past, concerns over nuclear proliferation and waste stymied and eventually brought to a halt nuclear energy R&D in the United States and caused constraints on U.S. supply industries that eventually forced them offshore,” Sanders said. “Today the prospects of nuclear proliferation, terrorism, global warming and environmental degradation have resulted in growing recognition that a U.S.-led nuclear power enterprise can prevent proliferation while providing a green source of energy to a developing country.” Sanders said developing countries around the world have notified the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) of their intent to enter the nuclear playing field. This technology will provide a large, ready market for properly scaled, affordable power systems. The right-sized nuclear power system is poised to have the right combination of features to meet export requirements, cost considerations and waste concerns. The reactor system is built around a small uranium core, submerged in a tank of liquid sodium. The liquid sodium is piped through the core to carry the heat away to a heat exchanger also submerged in the tank of sodium. In the Sandia system, the reactor heat is transferred to a very efficient supercritical CO2 turbine to produce electricity. These smaller reactors would be factory built and mass-assembled, with potential production of 50 a year. They all would have the exact same design, allowing for quick licensing and deployment. Mass production will keep the costs down, possibly to as low as $250 million per unit. Just as Henry Ford revolutionized the automobile industry with mass production of automobiles via an assembly line, the team’s concept would revolutionize the current nuclear industry, Sanders said. Because the right-sized reactors are breeder reactors — meaning they generate their own fuel as they operate — they are designed to have an extended operational life and only need to be refueled once every couple of decades, which helps alleviate proliferation concerns. The reactor core is replaced as a unit and “in effect is a cartridge core for which any intrusion attempt is easily monitored and detected,” Sanders said. The reactor system has no need for fuel handling. Conventional nuclear power plants in the U.S. have their reactors refueled once every 18 months. Sanders said much of the reactor technology needed for the smaller fission machines has been demonstrated through 50 years of operating experimental breeder reactors in Idaho. In addition, he said, Sandia is one of a handful of research facilities that has the capability to put together a project of this magnitude. The project would tap into the Labs’ expertise in complex systems engineering involving high performance computing systems for advanced modeling and simulation, advanced manufacturing, robotics and sensors as well as its experience in moving from research to development to deployment. “Sandia operates one of three nuclear reactors and the only fuel-critical test facility remaining in the DOE complex,” Sanders said. “It is the nation’s lead laboratory for the development of all radiation-hardened semiconductor components as well as the lead lab for testing these components in extreme radiation environments.” The goal of the right-sized reactors is to produce electricity at less than five cents per kilowatt hour, making them economically comparable to gas turbine systems. Sanders said the smaller reactors will probably be built initially to provide power to military bases, both in the U.S. and outside the country. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sandia National Laboratories is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, an autonomous Lockheed Martin company, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration. With main facilities in Albuquerque, N.M., and Livermore, Calif., Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy and environmental technologies, and economic competitiveness. Sandia news media contact: Chris Burroughs, coburro@sandia.gov (505) 844-0948 www.sandia.gov/news/resources/releases/2009/powerplant.html
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Post by hundredtoone on Sept 7, 2009 9:29:13 GMT -5
New Fusion Method Offers Hope of New Energy Source By KENNETH CHANG Published: Tuesday, April 8, 2003 PHILADELPHIA, April 7 ? With a blast of X-rays compressing a capsule of hydrogen to conditions approaching those at the center of the Sun, scientists from Sandia National Laboratories reported today that they had achieved thermonuclear fusion, in essence detonating a tiny hydrogen bomb. Such controlled explosions would not be large enough to be dangerous and might offer an alternative way of generating electricity by harnessing fusion, the process that powers the Sun. Fusion combines hydrogen atoms into helium, producing bountiful energy as a byproduct. "It's the first observation of fusion for a pulsed power source," said Dr. Ramon J. Leeper, manager of the target physics department at Sandia, in Albuquerque, who presented the findings at a meeting of the American Physical Society here. Fusion power would be safer than fission, the current method used in nuclear power plants, because fusion does not produce long-lived radioactive waste. Most fusion efforts have tried to use magnetic fields to compress hydrogen to temperatures hot enough for fusion to occur continuously, as it does in the Sun. But sustaining a dense hot cloud of hydrogen gas has proved trickier than scientists thought when they started fusion experiments 50 years ago. Even proponents say decades of research and expensive reactors are needed before a commercial power plant is possible. Dr. Jeff Quintenz, director of the Pulsed Power Sciences Center at Sandia, likened the approach to burning coal in a furnace. The Sandia experiments, by comparison, could lead to something more like an internal combustion engine, in which power is generated through a series of explosions. "Squirt in a little bit of fuel, explode it," Dr. Quintenz said. "Squirt in a little bit of fuel, explode it." That approach is potentially simpler, eliminating the need to confine hot hydrogen gas. But designing a machine that could detonate controlled thermonuclear explosions in quick succession ? and survive them ? is an engineering challenge that scientists have only begun to think about. Earlier, scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California set off fusion explosions by shining intense lasers on hydrogen capsules. Livermore plans to further that research in a new National Ignition Facility. Other scientists are looking to implode hydrogen with beams of heavy elements like xenon or cesium. The Sandia apparatus, the Z accelerator, was originally built to study nuclear weapons explosions without actual nuclear tests. In the mid-90's, the Z accelerator put out an impressive 20 trillion watts of X-rays. But that was far short of what is needed to induce fusion, and Sandia officials considered turning it off. Improvements have raised the peak X-ray power by a factor of 10, to more than 200 trillion watts. It has been considered a dark-horse candidate for practical fusion. "We are solidly in the fusion regime," Dr. Quintenz said. "We're in the game." For a few billionths of a second, the power of the X-rays crashing into the hydrogen capsule far exceeds the output of all the world's power plants. Most of the 104-foot-wide machine, which resembles a large wagon wheel, stores a large amount of electrical energy, enough to power 100 houses for two minutes, and unleashing it quickly, which sets off a Rube Goldberg chain of events that leads to fusion. At the center of the machine are 360 vertical tungsten wires that form a cylindrical cage one and a half inches across. Inside the cage is a plastic foam cylinder. Encased in the foam is a BB-size plastic capsule that holds deuterium, a heavy form of hydrogen. The burst of 20 million amperes of current vaporizes the tungsten wires and generates a magnetic field that accelerates the tungsten vapor toward the center of the cylinder. The vapor slams into the plastic foam, creating a supersonic shock wave. The shock wave generates X-rays that heat the deuterium to more than 20 million degrees Fahrenheit and squeeze it tightly. In experiments last year, the Sandia researchers first detected telltale neutrons produced by the fusion reactions. They confirmed their findings last month. At present, the thermonuclear explosions are minuscule pops, enough to power a 40-watt light bulb for a mere one ten-thousandth of a second. "This is a first step on a long road," Dr. Leeper said. A $60 million upgrade to the Z accelerator planned for 2005 will increase the maximum current by a third. Sandia scientists hope for a larger, more powerful machine later. "The physics looks encouraging," said Dr. Dale M. Meade of the Princeton University Plasma Physics Laboratory. Eventually, to generate electricity, the Sandia scientists envision surrounding the fusion chamber with a liquid that heats up by absorbing the neutrons generated by the fusion reaction. The hot liquid would boil water to turn a turbine. The Z machine can fire one shot a day. A power plant using the technology would have to include a robotic system that could replace the burned-out tungsten wires, foam and hydrogen capsule every few seconds. Dr. Quintenz said the future plant might be able to produce pulses of energy one trillion times as large as that coming from the Z machine. Each approach has advantages and disadvantages. Lasers, which can be precisely focused, win the most attention. The $4 billion National Ignition Facility will fire 192 lasers at one target. Lasers, however, are relatively inefficient. Scientists looking to use heavy elements hope to take advantage of existing technology from particle physics accelerators, using magnets to guide charged particles. The Z machine is relatively energy-efficient and straightforward. "It's a simple technology, really, and it's robust," Dr. Leeper said. Traditional magnetic-confinement fusion is also moving forward. An international group may build a $5 billion experimental reactor. "It's premature to judge which is the winner," said Dr. Stewart C. Prager, a fusion scientist at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. "We definitely need more physics." www.nytimes.com/2003/04/08/science/physical/08FUSI.htmlSPAWAR Experiments and the Recurring Resurrections of “Cold Fusion” June 22nd, 2009 - "Cold fusion is the scientific heresy that just won’t go away. In fact, it made quite a splash recently on CBS’ “60 Minutes.” The experiments in question were carried out by Frank Gordon and his colleagues at SPAWAR. I have heard both Frank and his colleague, Larry Forsley describe their experiments. ... They both seem to be very down to earth guys who are convinced they are seeing something unusual in their experiments. ...There are many government agencies, including the Military that would seem to have at least some interest in promoting research in this area, with DOE in the forefront. Unfortunately, the appointment of Steve Koonin as the new Under Secretary for Science does not bode well for the new technology. Steve is a brilliant, conscientious scientist, and would seem to be the ideal man for the job. However, he was also a prime mover in the scientific community’s initial rejection of cold fusion following its ill-conceived debut back in 1989. He is unlikely to be enthusiastic about eating crow, as it were, 20 years later. Be that as it may, DOE just stood up ARPA-E, and handed them $400M to fund just such high risk, high payoff work as this. It seems eminently reasonable to me that, given the organization’s stated mission, some fraction of this largesse should be devoted to cold fusion research.". world.std.com/~mica/cft.htmlwww.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/10/041025132204.htmHere is the REAL future of NUCLEAR POWER IMO...hopefully all that URANIUM in Canada will stay where it belongs IN THE GROUND...with POLE SHIFT looming ...POSSIBLY...this is no time to build new NUKES...we need to DISMANTLE all the ones we have NOW IMO...corporate GREED is all that holds back MANY good clean technologies IMO...Flying Moose(cmkxunofficial)
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 9, 2009 17:32:15 GMT -5
I think everyone has seen this at one time or another.....Most likely a small section of the film from Sandia.............................................This one ripped by vampiresofmlm has some Kool music added for definition~
Sandia National Laboratories F4 crash
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 10, 2009 17:10:01 GMT -5
Ines..................... I love when you say POOP...
On a serious note, how many times have we gone with rumors and nothing to substantiate it, then out of the blue....BAM...we're hit dead center with a justification of the dream...
The company was going down after the Halloween party and then...BAM...Robert Maheu joins our party...
Then again it looked like the company was going down and would be finished after the Kangaroo................October 05 looked as though the end was coming and all would go on their way, then...BAM...We is gonna do a Cert Pull...
There are numerous other events I could display here, but I want to bring it right up to the NOW...
28,000 hits from government agency's in one day on the 29 board, the first pro-board for CMKX I might add, is a event that falls in the history of this play..........................What ever it might mean, the mear fact that it did happen on August 24th, 2009 at 4:00 in the afternoon, is testament to the dream and as I said and will say all the time....................... NEVER FORGET THE STAND...
Back in 2007 I came across something I found unusual and out of place and that had to do with Robert Maheu and who he gave a political contribution to during the Presidential race.................................It was unusual because Bob was a life long Republican and He gave the maximum allowed by law, $2300.00, to Bill Richardson, Democratic Governor of New Mexico running for President Of The United States...Richardson has spent the most time in Nevada of any candidate. His four trips to the state during the second fundraising quarter alone included multiple fundraisers.
The result was a second-quarter haul of $118,000 for Richardson, a big jump from the $33,000 he raised in Nevada in the first quarter.
Richardson's new donors include businesspeople Phil and Maureen Peckman, former Howard Hughes aide Robert Maheu, Las Vegas Sun publisher Brian Greenspun, developer Irwin Molasky, University Chancellor Jim Rogers and wife Beverly, University Regent Steve Sisolak and Las Vegas City Councilwoman Lois Tarkanian.There is allot of Due Diligence here......................Just put Bill Richardson+Sandia National Laboratories in a google thingy...
And that's the real POOP~
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Post by imSINGLEruRICH on Sept 10, 2009 18:36:51 GMT -5
wow... d ick (tracy)...errr I mean sniffer. Your not kidding .... quite a bit of DD you've done there. Sure is very very interesting. Mahue, Richardson, New Albuquerque NM, Sandia... besides other things....... No wonder you were so adamant that Sandia was involved with the happenings, here on PB29. Especially after Joe posted that some of the IP's were actually coming from New Albuquerque. Ha..... Sandia working with 9 million $$$$$$ supercomputers... supercomputers probably capable of almost anything, even generating 10's of thousands of reads, all the while not affecting the tally count of our members or visitors. Well you sure are super at connecting the dots..... so how about connecting some dots to our payout? Not much to ask... right?? ... tee hee Yep..... Bob's excellent post "THE STAND".... sure caused thousand & thousands of "Men behind the curtans" to wiggle in their computer chairs. Bob & Sniffer.... Keep up the good work. We do appreciate you here on PB29 !! Single
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Post by snifferpup on Sept 11, 2009 7:58:22 GMT -5
As acca, he of the forked tongue, was wont to say, "I never wavered and I am vindicated." I believed urban was a crook from the moment we were left high and dry, and there was absolutely no evidence presented to the contrary...ever. And that's a fact! Pursuing the old-team scambags in court remains our only viable option. I continue to anticipate something back in return for my investment, but doubt I shall ever see anything approaching the $20,000 I sunk into this RAT-hole. ...Bo What ya know bo.......................... These two blonds are running along the railroad tracks when all of a sudden and without any announcement, both of them run into a building right next to where the railroad tracks split for an east west passage from the North south corridor ............................................Some might just look at this event as nothing and continue on with their day, but the fine men and women at Sandia National Laboratories would be the first to stand up and say, "Cheeeeze, you would of thought they would have seen it"
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Post by Tommycmkx on Sept 20, 2009 11:26:01 GMT -5
GO CMKX!!!
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Post by troutbum on Sept 24, 2009 10:44:26 GMT -5
thank you bob & sniffer.
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