Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Xeno is a 1986 video game for the ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64 in which players take turns attempting to knock a ball between two goal posts. References
Once the entire substance flows through, which is estimated to take about 100 years, a key will be revealed to unlock the time capsule. Inside, items such as letters to future generations, books, a smartphone, a bottle of crude oil, and everyday objects—such as a pen, a fountain pen, a credit card, lipstick, a cable tie, and more—have been ...
Time Capsule I weighs about 800 pounds (360 kg), while Time Capsule II weighs about 400 pounds (180 kg). [5] Time Capsule I was made of a non-ferrous alloy called Cupaloy, created especially for this project. [6] Designed to resist corrosion for 5,000 years, the alloy was made of 99.4% copper, 0.5% chromium, and 0.1% silver. [7]
A new portable test that detects coronavirus infection within a four-minute window has been developed by scientists in Shanghai. The test is reportedly as accurate as a polymerase chain reaction ...
The Yahoo!Time Capsule, a brainchild of Jonathan Harris, is a time capsule project by Yahoo! Inc. where users could contribute to a digital legacy of how life was in 2006. . The Time Capsule was originally intended to be beamed with a laser into space from a Mexican pyramid in an attempt to communicate with extraterrestrial life
Inside the centennial time capsule, officials found 15 artifacts dating back to 1924 and earlier, including a film of the 1921 groundbreaking for the memorial, the 1917 Declaration of War and a ...
In Poland a time capsule dating to 1726 has been found. [4] Around 1761, some dated artifacts were placed inside the hollow copper grasshopper weathervane, itself dating from 1742, atop historic Faneuil Hall in Boston. [5] A time capsule dating to 1777 was discovered within a religious statue in Sotillo de la Ribera. [6]
Anxiety about COVID-19 makes people more willing to "try anything" that might give them a sense of control of the situation, making them easy targets for scams. [5] Many false claims about measures against COVID-19 have circulated widely on social media, but some have been circulated by text, on YouTube, and even in some mainstream media ...