SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Microcap & Penny Stocks : TGL WHAAAAAAAT! Alerts, thoughts, discussion. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: M0NEYMADE who wrote (112022)1/13/2003 5:13:37 PM
From: Buckey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
FAOO I got the low at 25 and closed at 51 full 100% Buckey Bottom bouncer a classic BBB



To: M0NEYMADE who wrote (112022)1/13/2003 7:50:41 PM
From: Dwayne Hines  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
EDIS - upcoming special on Discovery Channel on Jan. 20th, should give this stock a good push:
Earth Search's Hyperspectral Technology to be Featured On Discovery Channel On January 20
Tuesday January 7, 9:00 am ET
TV Show Demonstrates Technology's Effectiveness in Preventing Deaths From Volcanic Eruptions

KALISPELL, Mont.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 7, 2003-- Earth Search Sciences, Inc. (OTCBB:EDIS - News), announced that on January 20, the Discovery Channel, during primetime, will air a one hour documentary on volcanoes featuring the aerial mapping of an active, live Ecuadorian volcano using Earth Search Sciences' hyperspectral remote sensing technology.

Earth Search Sciences chairman Larry Vance said a world-renowned team of volcanologists flew over an active volcano in Ecuador, demonstrating that analysis of Earth Search Sciences' hyperspectral imaging data could help prevent deaths when volcanoes erupt.

The show will air on January 20th. The precise time and channel will be available in local TV guides. The documentary will be aired many times after the 20th around the world. The Discovery Channel has launched a major promotional campaign for the special volcano segment.

The show was prepared from a study conducted in November, when an Earth Search crew and a team of scientists headed by State University of New York at Buffalo Professor Michael Sheridan flew the company's Probe-1 sensor over Ecuador's towering 15,000-feet-high Tungurahua volcano. Using the hyperspectral data combined with a 3-D visualization system developed by Professor Sheridan, Earth Search and State University at Buffalo scientists were able to produce maps, which predict the likely paths of destruction from an eruption.

Vance said that civil authorities around the world could use this new system to map areas around active and potentially active volcanoes to determine how lava flows and mud flows from the volcano will affect residents, and to determine the safest route out of the region should evacuation become necessary.

Professor Sheridan is working on this project with Earth Search and volcanologists Menard Hall and Patty Mothes of the Geophysical Institute of the National Polytechnic School in Quito, Ecuador.

"This is the first time that people will be able to see on television the effectiveness of using hyperspectral information for any crisis," said Vance. "Thanks to our hyperspectral capability, the world can receive timely information on the path of lava flows, the likely places other than the crater where an eruption may occur, the possible distribution of harmful ash and the potential for mudslides from melting snow and ice. This may be able to help save people's lives."

The Earth Search Sciences sensor Probe-1 gathers detailed data about solar energy absorption and reflectance on a volcano's surface. From that information, the scientists can identify the mineral composition of analyzed areas, revealing, for example, if certain spots are altered or composed of fresh rock. Areas of altered rock are weaker and have potential for collapsing and generating destructive, high-speed debris flows. The system to be used in this study allows for the simultaneous visualization and integration of data, which can be overlaid on digital topographic models, then rotated and analyzed.

Earth Search Sciences plans to offer its hyperspectral imaging capability as a cutting edge tool in mapping hazardous volcanic zones on an ongoing basis around the world.

About Earth Search Sciences, Inc.

Kalispell, Montana-based Earth Search Sciences is a leading commercial provider of the revolutionary hyperspectral surveying technology. While existing satellite and remote sensing technology provides the ability to identify objects primarily by shape or broad-band spectral response, revolutionary hyperspectral imaging, by measuring the degree of spectral reflectance of solar energy across the spectrum, permits the identification of materials by their diagnostic reflectance patterns, providing more accurate and detailed information than ever before available. Earth Search Sciences hyperspectral information products can be used for a variety of resource, environmental, and security applications. Earth Search Sciences, Inc. wants to acknowledge all of the support given by Eagle Creek Aviation Services, Inc. located in Indianapolis, IN to make this project a success.



To: M0NEYMADE who wrote (112022)1/14/2003 11:48:50 AM
From: M0NEYMADE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
AMA (American Music Awards)--The show, broadcast on ABC, was hosted by the frequently foul-mouthed Ozzy Osbourne and his family — wife, Sharon, and children Kelly and Jack — who gave network censors a workout.

The family's four-letter words were bleeped throughout the show, so much so during their opening introduction that it was hard for television viewers to follow what they were saying. Sharon Osbourne in particular kept up a running banter of outrageous comments.

At the beginning of the show she teased former pop sweethearts Britney Spears (news) and Justin Timberlake (news) about their breakup, telling Spears, "I'm going to have to take him, Britney."

Later, she got Timberlake to kiss her dog when the two presented an award together, and she joked about adjusting her wig, an apparent reference to the side-effects of her recent colon cancer treatment.

When she let the F-word slip out at one point, her husband laughed and shouted, "You can't take the (bleeping) lady anywhere anymore!"

Aimee Osbourne, the rarely seen daughter who doesn't take part in her family's reality TV show, "The Osbournes," had been scheduled to make the award presentation with Timberlake. She backed out over the weekend, show publicist Paul Shefrin said.

Other award-winners included Sheryl Crow (news) who accepted her favorite female pop-rock artist award with a plea for peace, arriving on stage in a T-shirt that read, "War is not the answer."



The singer of "Soak Up the Sun" said afterward she had the shirt made as her statement against a possible war with Iraq.

Later, introducing a duet by Toby Keith (news) and Willie Nelson (news), she told the audience: "Hey everybody, I know this is an award show but I just want to encourage everybody to get involved in some kind of movement for peace."

Alabama, which took home the Award of Merit, had one of its biggest fans for a presenter — former President George Bush, who made a taped announcement.

"I'm very proud to be part of tonight's tribute honoring one of the most highly successful bands country music has ever known," Bush said. "Their name tells you a lot about them: their birthplace, their close family ties, their respect for traditional artists and music, their courage to bring new ideas to country music, and most of all, their lifelong love of home, state and country."

Other performers included Mariah Carey, whose emotional breakdown was recounted in images of news reports flashed across a screen before she came on stage to perform her perseverance ballad, "Through the Rain." One newspaper headline read, "When you fall down, you get back up."

Another performer was Christina Aguilera (news), modestly dressed compared with some of the flesh-baring outfits she's been wearing as she has promoted her album "Stripped."

Comedian David Spade (news) introduced her by saying, "Here she is for the first time in public with her clothes on, Christina Aguilera!"