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Today is
Start to hear the earth sing :D
Here are my thoughts on the previous article that I posted ;D
Tuesday, August 18, 2009 @ 6:27 PM

As a child, I have always believed that there was always life outside earth and the solar system. When I was about five, I came across This book ‘ Life Outside Earth’.
I Believed This Concept:
Stars= More possibility that it is not a solitary star
More possibility that it is not a solitary star= Solar systems.Solar systems= planetsPlanets= Hope for life on other planetsLots of stars= Lots of solar systemsLots of solar systems=Lot of planets.Lots of planets= Lots of hope for life on other planets.That is why there is no life on other planets

What if they come to earth…
If they ever come to earth, could they be different from us?
Here are some hilarious things that may occur (I think)
The ‘alien’s will walking on their hands.
Besides, to them that is normal and we are aliens =0

I feel that they would take a very long time before they would come to earth and requires major technology =0

Article Review =)
@ 6:24 PM

Here is the Article:
Source:http://www.straitstimes.com/World/Story/STIStory_418425.html


Man may have been born in outer space
Basic life ingredient found in comet's dust; early life forms could have been delivered to Earth: Scientists
LOS ANGELES: Strengthening the argument that life in the universe might be more common than previously thought, scientists have found traces of a key building block of biology in dust snatched from the tail of a comet.
Scientists at Goddard Space Flight Centre in Greenbelt, Maryland, have uncovered glycine, the simplest amino acid and a vital compound necessary for life, in a sample from the comet Wild 2, named for astronomer Paul Wild (pronounced Vild).
The sample was captured by National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Stardust spacecraft, which dropped it into the Utah desert in 2006.
Dr Jason Dworkin, a co-author of a paper outlining the discovery in the journal Meteoritics and Planetary Science, said glycine was first detected a few months after the sample landed. The next two years, he said, were spent verifying the result.
Said Dr Jamie Elsila, a research scientist at Goddard and co-author of the research paper: 'By detecting glycine, we now know that comets could have delivered amino acids to the early Earth, contributing to the ingredients that life originated from.'
The idea that the ingredients for life were delivered to Earth from the nursery of space, rather than developing out of the Earth's original chemical soup, has been around for years. Amino acids previously have been discovered in meteorites. But this is the first time an amino acid has turned up in comet material.
'This is yet another piece of evidence that the ingredients for life are ubiquitous. These building blocks of life are everywhere,' said Dr Carl Pilcher, director of Nasa's Astrobiology Institute, which helped fund the research.
The Stardust spacecraft, managed jointly by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver, was launched in 1999 on a 4.6-billion-km journey that made two loops around the Sun before meeting up five years later with Wild 2, which orbits between Mars and Jupiter.
Flying as close as 237km to the hamburger-shaped comet, Stardust passed through its tail of dust and gas.
At its closest approach, the craft deployed a tennis racket-shaped collector packed with a substance called aerogel, which harvested comet particles. The spacecraft then returned to Earth's orbit and jettisoned a capsule containing the sample. The capsule landed in Utah on Jan 15, 2006.
Professor Don Brownlee, a University of Washington astronomer who served as chief scientist on the Stardust mission, called the work 'a real tour de force technologically to make these measurements in such small samples'.
He said the result is exciting because it represents a second, very large source of life-giving material. He estimated that there are as many as a trillion comets in and around the solar system, many of them located in the chilly Kuiper Belt beyond Pluto, or in the Oort Cloud even farther out.
'There has been a huge question of where the pre-biotic compounds came from on Earth,' he added. 'Did they come from space? Or were they made here? Or maybe they came from both places.'
Just having the right materials is no guarantee that life will begin, of course, any more than leaving a hammer, nails and planks lying around will cause a barn to rise. Prof Brownlee pointed out that many of the 30,000 or so meteorites found on Earth bear traces of organic compounds, and there is also evidence that they were once warm and wet, all necessary conditions for life. Yet none of the meteorites has shown any evidence of life forms.
'They are all failed places where life could have arisen,' Prof Brownlee said.
LOS ANGELES TIMES, REUTERS

My Favourite Food
@ 6:04 PM

I love many types of food.
They include:
Tanglin Halt Western Food
Fortunate Restaurant
KFC
Pizza Hut
Macs

And Many More...
A Survey In Yahoo Concluded That Many people love lagsana, beef steak, etc..

But The food I like the most is Chicken Rice

Hainanese chicken rice is a dish of Chinese origin most commonly associated with Malaysian cuisine or Singaporean cuisine, although it is also commonly sold in neighboring Thailand, and found in Hainan, China itself.

Why Do I Like it so Much

Firstly, it is delicious and taste nice. Secondly, it is a traditional dish. Thirdly and most importantly, it is light, unlike many heavy dishes like Western food and Chinese food. It is simple, cheap and a easy take-away.
I Therefore use my five senses to determine why I like it =)
Sight, as you can see, a place of chicken rice looks very inviting and it is very presentable. In my opinion, other dishes like say, nasi lemak (my opinion, no offence) looks not as inviting as chicken rice.
Taste: It is extremely flavorful and just goes in your mouth and is very light.
Touch: The texture is very smooth and the chicken comes in bit size pieces while the rice is soft and good. =)
Smell: The chicken smells nice an adds to the flavor of it.