Dokaz da je drug, sveti Mihajlo u pravu:

http://news.cnet.com/8301-19514_3-10289551-239.html?tag=contentMain;contentBody

--- In sorabia@yahoogroups.com, "Milan Kasic" <mka...@...> wrote:
>
> Svi su snimci pravljeni u gudurama Kolorada.
> Astronauti si u visili na jakim sailama koje su bile prikacene za visoke 
> dizalice sa oprusnim  mehanizmom da isgleda kao da su na vrlo slabom 
> gravitacionom prostoru meseca.
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: Michael Goran 
>   To: sorabia@yahoogroups.com 
>   Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2009 7:44 PM
>   Subject: [sorabia] pa posle kazu ciga lud...
> 
> 
>     I polsednji "dokaz" da su bili na mesecu otsho :-) jedva cekam da se 
> kinezi 
>   popnu gore I utvrde da
>   americka djubrad nikad nisu ni bili tamo...
> 
>   goran kosovski-australijski
> 
>   Original moon-landing footage 'taped over'
>   Friday, July 17, 200912 hours 41 minutes ago
>   Jul 17, 2009
>   NASA says it may have taped over the only high-resolution video of the 
>   Apollo 11 mission but the moon landing has never looked better â€" thanks 
> to 
>   digitally refurbished footage unveiled overnight.
> 
>   Although the original live video was ghostlike and grainy, NASA and a 
>   Hollywood film restoration company took television video copies of what 
>   Apollo 11 beamed to Earth on July 20, 1969, and made the pictures look 
>   sharper.
> 
>   The pictures themselves are not new, but some details are.
> 
>   Originally, Armstrong's face visor was too fuzzy to be seen â€" the 
>   refurbished video shows his visor and a reflection in it.
> 
>   The 50-second clip shows the famous moment the astronaut walks down the 
>   steps and mouths the words: "It's one small step for man … one giant leap 
>   for mankind."
> 
>   But the new footage also reveals a brief earlier discussion between 
>   Armstrong and Mission Control about the distance to the moon's surface.
> 
>   Armstrong says he needs to take a "little jump" but describes the drop as 
>   "adequate".
> 
>   "Okay Neil, we can see you coming down the ladder now," says a voice from 
>   Mission Control.
> 
>   But as NASA proudly released the new enhanced footage, it admitted it had 
>   probably erased the original high-quality version of the moon landing 
>   sometime during the 1970s and 1980s.
> 
>   The original videos beamed to earth were stored on giant reels of tapes 
> that 
>   contained 15 minutes of video along with 13 other channels of live data 
> from 
>   the moon.
> 
>   NASA later had a shortage of the tapes and erased about 200,000 of those 
>   tapes and reused them.
> 
>   The space agency said it was likely the footage was taped over with 
>   electronic data from a satellite or a later moon mission.
> 
>   "I don't think anyone in the NASA organisation did anything wrong," 
>   Apollo-era video engineer Dick Nafzger told The Guardian.
> 
>   "It slipped through the cracks â€" and nobody's happy about it."
> 
> 
> 
>   
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


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