Sunday, July 12, 2009

Understanding - Magnetism

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NFO:
Without magnetism, we would not have music as we know and experience it today; we would not have computers, motor vehicles, compasses, or MRI scans. Magnetism literally shapes our modern-day world. Learn how magnetic forces were first discovered and how magnetism affects both humans and other animals. Explore the role of magnetism in computers, audio recording, medicine, travel and its importance in your daily life.

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Technical Specs

Video Codec: DivX
Video Bitrate: 1963 Kbps
Video Resolution: 656x480
Video Aspect Ratio: 1.34 / ~4:3
Video Framerate: 29.97
Quality Factor: 0.21 b/px
Audio1: English (subs included separately)
Audio1 Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio1 Bitrate: 384 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio1 Channels: 2
Audio2: Mandarin Chinese
Audio2 Codec: Lame MP3
Audio2 Bitrate: 128 kb/s @ 48KHz CBR
Audio2 Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 50 minutes
Number of Parts: 1
Part Size: 896 MB (1/5 DVDR)
Ripped by: PolarBear
ENGLISH SUBTITLES:

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RS:
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Understanding - Bacteria

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The experts say this is the beginning of the golden age of microbiology. Industry, medicine, the definition of life itself, are all being changed by single-celled creatures you and I can't even see. But the news is not all good. Many people are spooked by the diseases caused by bacteria: Pneumonia, Salmonella, meningitis... all caused by bacteria and passed among us every day. Infectious diseases are the greatest cause of illness and death in human history. Bacteria can make us deathly sick and often kill us. And just when we develop medicines to kill the germs, they do what they do best... mutate, find ways to resist our medicines. Now we are bombarded with products that promise to kill these germs. The number of new antibacterial products has tripled. But does the use of these products just make the germs even more resistant?

At the same time, the search for new microbial life has taken researchers from the lab to the ocean floor and to the heavens. A meteorite from Mars has fossilized structures on it that look suspiciously like small bacteria. Scientists are coming to the conclusion that life may be far more common in the universe than we had supposed. Anywhere that there is liquid water, there is a possibility of life, and, in fact, anywhere on Earth where there is liquid water, you find there is life. And so on worlds such as Mars or Europa where there may be hydrothermal features under the ice, the prospect of finding microbial life is very exciting.

Produced and written by Marijo Dowd
Narrated by Jane Curtin
Edited by Robert Zakin
51 minutes, English and Mandarin Chinese dual audio, 1997

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Technical Specs

Video Codec: DivX
Video Bitrate: 1936 Kbps
Video Resolution: 656x480
Video Aspect Ratio: 1.36 / ~4:3
Video Framerate: 29.97
Quality Factor: 0.21 b/px
Audio1: English (subs included separately)
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Audio1 Channels: 2
Audio2: Mandarin Chinese
Audio2 Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio2 Bitrate: 256 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio2 Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 51 minutes
Number of Parts: 1
Part Size: 896 MB (1/5 DVDR)
Ripped by: PolarBear

*Eng subtitles included in main Rar files

RS:

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Human Body: The Ultimate

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NFO:
It is riddled with holes, yet contains 15 gallons of water and a pint of hydrochloric acid. It has more protein than 70 pounds of peanuts. It has enough carbon to fill a thousand pencils, and enough phosphorous for 3,000 match heads. What sounds like a collection of chemicals in a leaky bag is the most complex structure on our planet, and 400,000 of them are born every day. The one thing we all have in common is the amazing machine we all inhabit... the human body. In the course of its life, it will breathe ten million balloons worth of air. It will process 30 tons of food. And it will secrete 17 gallons of tears. But humans rarely stop to think about the amazing technology behind even the most mundane action, the technology we will explore in this episode of The Ultimate Guide.

Produced and Directed by Luke Campbell
Narrated by Will Lyman
Edited by Gwyn Jones
Music by Daniel Pemberton
50 minutes, English and Mandarin Chinese dual audio

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Technical Specs
Video Codec: DivX
Video Bitrate: 1525 Kbps
Video Resolution: 640x368
Video Aspect Ratio: 1.74 / 40:23
Video Framerate: 29.97
Quality Factor: 0.22 b/px
Audio1: English (subs included separately)
Audio1 Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio1 Bitrate: 256 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio1 Channels: 2
Audio2: Mandarin Chinese
Audio2 Codec: Lame MP3
Audio2 Bitrate: 160 kb/s @ 48KHz CBR
Audio2 Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 50 minutes
Number of Parts: 1
Part Size: 746 MB (1/6 DVDR)
Ripped by: PolarBear
ENGLISH SUBTITLES

http://rapidshare.com/files/92585521/Discovery.The.Ultimate.Guide.Human.Body.Subs.EN.rar

RS:
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The Original Vampire

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NFO:
It annoys us, it attacks us and it makes us itch. But, more than that, of all the great hunters and predators that stalk the planet, it is the one that has taken more human lives than any other: the mosquito. But it is an unwitting killer. Each year, all around the world, 700 Million people are infected with mosquito-borne illnesses... 3 million of them die. And the numbers are rising, the diseases are adapting and evolving. We are caught in a battle against the mosquito, a race against time to learn more about this formidable foe, this enemy with a thirst for blood.

Produced by Larry Engel and Mary Olive Smith
Written by Rob Goldberg
Directed by Larry Engel
Narrated by Mary Olive Smith
Edited by Steve Olswang
48 minutes, English and Mandarin Chinese dual audio

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Technical Specs
Video Codec: DivX
Video Bitrate: 1699 Kbps
Video Resolution: 624x464
Video Aspect Ratio: 1.34 / ~4:3
Video Framerate: 29.97
Quality Factor: 0.20 b/px
Audio1: English (subs included separately)
Audio1 Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio1 Bitrate: 384 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio1 Channels: 2
Audio2: Mandarin Chinese
Audio2 Codec: Lame MP3
Audio2 Bitrate: 96 kb/s @ 32KHz CBR
Audio2 Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 48 minutes
Number of Parts: 1
Part Size: 746 MB (1/6 DVDR)
Ripped by: PolarBear
ENGLISH SUBTITLES:

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RS:
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Understanding: Time

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NFO:
Time - what is it? St. Augustine wrote, "What, then, is time? If no one asks me, I know. But if I want to explain it to someone, I do not know." Perhaps we should ask: Did time have a beginning? A very old question, indeed. But how can we imagine a world before time began? If we count backwards beyond the clock, beyond the calendar, three and a half billion years, we arrive at our own beginning - the dawn of life on earth. Science has a word for it: biogenesis. The birth of life. With life, nature created a new kind of time; more advanced, more evolved from the time of the physical world. Memory and expectation provided us with a competitive advantage. Memory and expectation gave birth to the concept of a past and a future. Now flash forward three and a half billion years. Humanity rules the earth. Humanity is wrapped tight in ticking time. But time ticks on towards the unknown. In physics, space is represented as three dimensions. Time is represented as the fourth dimension. To describe time, we are often asked to think of objects in motion. For instance, time has been compared to the cable that drives the quaint cable cars of San Francisco. The cable car attaches itself to something that's hidden, something that's to an extent, mysterious. It is moved by a mechanism you don't know and cannot see. It just moves you along - takes you on a ride. At birth, we are clamped to a buried cable, time. And at death, cast loose from its passage. Or are we? The answer lies somewhere in time, yet an understanding of time remains as elusive and mysterious as life itself.

Produced and written by Ned Judge
Narrated by Jane Curtin
Edited by Kathleen Kane
Music by Chris Purrington
53 minutes, English and Mandarin Chinese dual audio, 1996

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Technical Specs

Video Codec: DivX
Video Bitrate: 1920 Kbps
Video Resolution: 640x480
Video Aspect Ratio: 1.33 / 4:3
Video Framerate: 29.97
Quality Factor: 0.21 b/px
Audio1: English (subs included separately)
Audio1 Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio1 Bitrate: 256 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio1 Channels: 2
Audio2: Mandarin Chinese
Audio2 Codec: Lame MP3
Audio2 Bitrate: 192 kb/s @ 48KHz CBR
Audio2 Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 53 minutes
Number of Parts: 1
Part Size: 896 MB (1/5 DVDR)
Ripped by: PolarBear

*English subtitles included in main Rar files

RS:

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Man Made Marvels: HII-A Space Rocket

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NFO:
The Japanese space industry is about to reach another milestone. From its base on Tanegashima Island, the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is counting down to the latest launch of the HII-A - JAXA's engineering marvel. Though this isn't its first launch, every launch might be stymied by a myriad of possible problems, and sometimes the consequences are heart-breaking, expensive or even deadly. This time, as the HII-A attempts to carry its heaviest payload to date into space and join the big league of commercial satellite launchers, the stakes are as high as they've ever been for Japan's space program.

Directed by Glenn Krawczyk
Narrated by David Kersten
Music by Don Richmond
Edited by Stuart Waterhouse
Photography by Paul Henry
48 minutes, English audio, 2007

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Technical Specs

Video Codec: DivX
Video Bitrate: 1776 Kbps
Video Resolution: 704x394
Video Aspect Ratio: 1.79 / ~16:9
Video Framerate: 29.97
Quality Factor: 0.21 b/px
Audio1: English (subs included separately)
Audio Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio Bitrate: 384 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 48 minutes
Number of Parts: 1
Part Size: 746 MB (1/6 DVDR)
Ripped by: PolarBear

*English and Chinese subtitles included in main Rar files

RS:

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Apollo 11 - The Untold Story

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NFO:
When Neil Armstrong first set foot on the moon in July 1969, Apollo 11 was hailed as the supreme triumph of American technology. But behind the flag waving lies a very different story: the untold account of how close the mission came to disaster. Now, nearly forty years later, men on that mission reveal what really happened on the first voyage to the moon, and unpublished NASA documents are made public for the first time. It's a tale of how primitive computer technology coupled with human errors and mechanical failures nearly caused the tragic loss of the crew.

Apollo 11: The Untold Story reveals how, in deep space, the lunar module lost all contact with earth, coming within seconds of crashing. By running off course, the lunar module became critically low on fuel over inhospitable boulder-strewn lunar terrain. Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin recalls how the astronauts believed they saw a UFO some 200,000 miles from earth, an event covered up at NASA's insistence for over thirty years.

We discover how Mission Control's total computing power was the equivalent of one of today's laptops while the power of the lunar module was equal to a modern digital watch. Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin reveals how a ballpoint pen saved him and Neil Armstrong from a lonely death stranded on the moon; and we discover how behind the scenes, so great were the fears that the crew wouldn't return that during the mission White House officials prepared a secret memorial speech for President Nixon to deliver to the world in the event of tragedy.

Everybody thinks they know about Apollo 11: Neil Armstrong's "one small step for man", the stars and stripes planted firmly in the moon rock, the triumphant return to earth. This film, drawing on first hand testimonies from Buzz Aldrin, Apollo 11 flight director Gene Kranz and key personnel from the mission, reveals just how complicated that mission really was. For a group of pioneering men armed with experimental 1960s technology, Apollo 11 was a triumph against the odds that came close to ending in disaster.

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Technical Specs

Video Codec: XviD MPEG-4 codec
Video Bitrate: 1870 KB/s
Video Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Video Resolution: 688 x 384
Audio Codec: MPEG-1 Layer 3 (MP3)
Audio BitRate: 128 KB/s (CBR)
Audio Channels: 2 Ch
RunTime: 00:52
Framerate: 25 FPS
Number Of Parts: 1
Part Size: 744 MB
Encoded by: gavin63
Subtitles: No TV Cap
Source: DVB

RS:

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Napoleon's Obsession: The Quest for Egypt

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NFO:
"Napoleon's Obsession: The Quest for Egypt" details the real facts behind a little-known account in Napoleon's illustrious military career. Those who do know of the French leader's invasion of Egypt, and the so-called Battle of the Pyramids, may have fallen victim to one of the best public relations campaigns in history. As we learn in this documentary, hosted by renown Egyptologist Bob Brier, Bonaparte's attempt to conquer Eqypt was nothing short of an exercise in vanity. By 1798, General Bonaparte was looking for new military challenges after conquering Europe. He turned his sights on the historical and symbolic wealth of Egypt and The East. Economical with everything except the lives of his men, Bonaparte was ill prepared for this invasion and marched his troops from Alexandria through 130-degree desert heat in woolen uniforms and with very little water. Napoleon had a few victories, including a melee against the defending Mamelukes of Cairo, which became know as the Battle of the Pyramids (in reality, it was fought in a melon patch, miles from the city). On the whole, the campaign was disastrous; the French Fleet had a nasty encounter with Admiral Nelson, and the troops were stranded in Egypt without reinforcements or supplies. Napoleon's reaction? He commissioned paintings of victories and wrote glowing letters. He even returned to France a hero after sneaking out of Egypt in the middle of the night, leaving his men behind, and not even informing his second in command. Thankfully, Brier reminds us several times throughout the production of the practical contributions Napoleon made from this ill-conceived campaign. To Egypt he brought several artists, scholars and scientists and established the Institut de l'Egypte. Their work and the soldiers' looting led to the discovery of the Rosetta stone and the birth of modern Egyptology. But while these contributions are impressive, Bonaparte's campaign in Egypt included horrible atrocities against Turkish civilians. Still, Brier's enthusiasm brings to life the many illustrations, some by Institut de l'Egypte's own Vivant Denon, which are combined with stunning footage of Egypt and the landscapes and sites along the French army's campaign road. In addition, crisp editing by James Marshall and concise direction by Peter Spry-Leverton make for an informative and handsomely packed hour of entertainment.

Directed and produced by Peter Spry-Leverton
Narrated by Bob Brier
Music by Toby Langton-Gilks
Edited by James Marshall
50 minutes, English and Mandarin Chinese dual audio, 1999

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Technical Specs

Video Codec: DivX
Video Bitrate: 1557 Kbps
Video Resolution: 640x382
Video Aspect Ratio: 1.68 / ~5:3
Video Framerate: 29.97
Quality Factor: 0.21 b/px
Audio1: English (subs included separately)
Audio1 Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio1 Bitrate: 256 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio1 Channels: 2
Audio2: Mandarin Chinese
Audio2 Codec: Dolby AC3
Audio2 Bitrate: 256 kb/s @ 48KHz
Audio2 Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 50 minutes
Number of Parts: 1
Part Size: 746 MB (1/6 DVDR)
Ripped by: PolarBear

*English and Chinese subtitles included in main Rar files

RS:

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