Hope to have Collections of...
DOLLs(exquisite ones)/ Figurines/ Some beautifully drawn Manga/ elegant clothes?/ stamps(had a lot already)/ coins from diff. countries/ [stickers was in the past]/ tiny bits of this & that for Art & Craft (maybe they're RUBBISH...)/...
To whoever completely read this whole column: congrats!; its damn long- a chunk of insights to WATASHIWA no SEIKAI...
Exits
♪3/3 '08 CLASS BLOG!♫
Cindy
Hiang Ngee
Hui Min
Kathy
Ming Liang
Mu Xin
Nicol
Sin Joo
Sin Woon
Tiew Tian
Veronica
Vincent
Wei Xuan
Yu Ting
Ice Angel
Xia Xue
Sassy Jan
Blinky Mummy
Dawn Yang
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Your TV-B-Gone® universal remote control resembles other TV remote controls, but is different in two important ways. First, it only has a power button that allows you to switch a TV on or off. You control when you see, rather than what you see. Second, the device is so small that it easily fits in your pocket, so that you have it handy whenever you need it wherever you go: airports, bars, restaurants, laundromats, etc. |
“You can use TV-B-Gone® to control access to television for philosophical or practical reasons, or simply to have fun!“ —Mitch Altman, Inventor of TV-B-Gone® |
TV-B-Gone® now features the Instant Reactivation Feature which allows you to turn TVs on or off quickly and easily. TV-B-Gone® is a type of Universal Remote Control which works by shining pulses of invisible light that tells most any TV to turn off or on. THIS IS SO COOL, FUN & INTERESTING! |
"Celestis' first general public lunar mission could occur as early as 2010 and reservations are now being taken," said Charles M. Chafer, Celestis founder and president, in an email to AFP.
"We can send up to 5000 individual capsules to the lunar surface," he said.
The company hopes to install a cemetery on the lunar surface to hold cremated remains of the dead, or a smaller symbolic portion of them, which one day could be visited by relatives of the deceased, said Chafer.
For transportation, Celestis has made deals with two other US private space companies, Odyssey Moon and Astrobotic Technology, which are currently working on making commercial flights to the moon.
For sending a tiny, one gram portion of cremated remains to the moon, the company charges 9,995 dollars, according to Celestis' website.
Other funeral services besides the full lunar trip include sending ash into Earth's orbit -- the cheapest option, starting at 700 dollars -- and all the way up to launching remains far, far away into deep space, for which the company charges more than 37,000 dollars.
The latter option is expected to be available from 2011, after the development of a special capsule to hold the remains, the company said.
Ten years ago NASA paid tribute to top US astronomer Eugene Shoemaker by carrying into space a portion of his cremated remains.
After a year in lunar orbit Shoemaker's remains were intentionally planted on the moon's south pole, the first time human remains have been landed on the lunar surface -- but maybe not the last time.