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RAnDOOm

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Everything posted by RAnDOOm

  1. Welcome to another Forgotten Hope 2 Campaign! This campaign, 'None but the Brave', will take you to the wet and hot jungle and volcanic islands in the Pacific. Fight in the notorious battles of Philippines, Sittang Bridge, Tarawa, Guam, Peleliu, Iwo Jima and other well designed maps. Experience brutal battles, total carnage, outstanding gameplay and the best Forgotten Hope 2 Teamwork there is. Get your gaming gear ready and join this amazing campaign! In This FH2 Campaign You Will Experience: 10 battles, on both new and totally renewed maps, with custom vehicles and weapons. Train and prepare yourself for every battle with your regiment on our training server. Fight battles with up to 100 players. Earn promotions and medals for your achievements. Communicate directly to your squad using Teamspeak and apply well planned strategy and tactics not seen on any public servers. Form new friendships with like-minded people from all over the world. Gameplay is completely free and everybody is welcome! Click on the image below to join the Campaign
  2. Congratulations @atElmo
  3. Resistance is futile ? Researchers have succeeded in hooking together the brains of three people to create a shared network. Known as BrainNet, the remarkable achievement was made possible using a combination of electroencephalograms (EEGs), which record the electrical impulses from brain activity, and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), which stimulate neurons using magnetic fields. In a recent experiment, two 'senders' had their brains connected up to the network and were asked to control a Tetris-style game by way of staring at one of two different flashing LEDs. A third connected individual - the 'receiver' - was able to pick up the control commands from the other two and use them to rotate the blocks in the game. Across five different groups of participants, an accuracy level of over 80% was achieved. "We present BrainNet which, to our knowledge, is the first multi-person non-invasive direct brain-to-brain interface for collaborative problem solving," the researchers wrote. "The interface allows three human subjects to collaborate and solve a task using direct brain-to-brain communication." In the future, the scientists hope to connect much larger groups of people together in a similar way. Eventually, the technology could result in interconnected brain networks much like that of the Borg - the fictional cybernetic antagonists of the Star Trek franchise. "Our results raise the possibility of future brain-to-brain interfaces that enable cooperative problem solving by humans using a 'social network' of connected brains," the researchers wrote. Source: Science Alert
  4. Could the Large Hadron Collider destroy our planet ? Astronomer Royal Martin Rees has warned that a failed particle accelerator experiment could prove disastrous. Doomsday predictions are certainly nothing new, but ever since the Large Hadron Collider - Cern's record-breaking atom smasher - first started operations, there have been concerns over what would happen if the particle accelerator managed to inadvertently create a black hole here on Earth. In his latest book On The Future: Prospects for Humanity, Lord Rees has outlined several existential threats to our planet ranging from an asteroid strike to a super-advanced artificial intelligence. In one chapter, he describes several doomsday scenarios involving the Large Hadron Collider. "Maybe a black hole could form, and then suck in everything around it," he wrote. "The second scary possibility is that the quarks would reassemble themselves into compressed objects called strangelets." "That in itself would be harmless. However under some hypotheses a strangelet could, by contagion, convert anything else it encounters into a new form of matter, transforming the entire earth in a hyperdense sphere about one hundred meters across." As if this wasn't bad enough, the atom smasher might even be capable of destroying space itself. "Some have speculated that the concentrated energy created when particles crash together could trigger a 'phase transition' that would rip the fabric of space," Rees wrote. "This would be a cosmic calamity not just a terrestrial one." The likelihood of these scenarios coming to pass however is thankfully extremely small. Source: Yahoo! News
  5. Happy Birthday @Smashmachine!
  6. Is this what a future colony on Mars will be like ? The ever-ambitious entrepreneur is aiming to construct a human colony on the Red Planet by as early as 2028. Despite the fact that SpaceX hasn't even built its next-generation rocket yet, CEO Elon Musk is already making plans for settling future explorers on another world. In a recent Tweet, Musk posted up an intriguing concept image of what he refers to as 'Mars Base Alpha' - a fully-manned Martian colony complete with roads, buildings and rocket launch pads. If the image looks like something out of a science-fiction movie then that it is because, for the moment at least, it might as well be. It also seems as though the 2028 estimate is a little overly ambitious. That said however, it is not difficult to imagine that a future Mars colony could look a lot like this. "I think fundamentally the future is vastly more exciting and interesting if we're a spacefaring civilization and a multiplanet species than if we're or not," Musk said previously. "You want to be inspired by things. You want to wake up in the morning and think the future is going to be great. And that's what being a spacefaring civilization is all about." Full article here: https://bgr.com/2018/09/24/moon-base-alpha-spacex-elon-musk/
  7. This spectacular photo shows the view from asteroid Ryugu from the Minerva-II1A rover during a hop after it successfully landed on Sept. 21, 2018. The probe is one of two that landed on Ryugu from the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency's Hayabusa2 spacecraft. It's the first time two mobile rovers landed on an asteroid. Credit: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency The suspense is over: Two tiny hopping robots have successfully landed on an asteroid called Ryugu — and they've even sent back some wild postcards from their new home. The tiny rovers are part of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Hayabusa2 asteroid sample-return mission. Engineers with the agency deployed the robots early Friday (Sept. 21), but JAXA waited until today (Sept. 22) to confirm the operation was successful and both rovers made the landing safely. The rovers are part of the MINERVA-II1 program, and are designed to hop along the asteroid's surface, taking photographs and gathering data. In fact, one of the initial images sent home by the hoppers is awfully blurry, since the robot snapped it while still on the go. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Minerva-II1 rover captured this view of asteroid Ryugu (bottom) and the Hayabusa2 spacecraft (at top right) just after the rover separated from the spacecraft on Sept. 21, 2018. Credit: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency In order to complete the deployment, the main spacecraft of the Hayabusa2 mission lowered itself carefully down toward the surface until it was just 180 feet (55 meters) up. After the rovers were on their way, the spacecraft raised itself back up to its typical altitude of about 12.5 miles above the asteroid's surface (20 kilometers). The MINERVA-II1B rover captured this view of asteroid Ryugu on Sept. 21, 2018 shortly after separating from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Hayabusa2 spacecraft. The asteroid appears at lower right. The agency still has two more deployments yet to accomplish before it can rest easy: Hayabusa2 is scheduled to deploy a larger rover called MASCOT in October and another tiny hopper next year. And of course, the main spacecraft has a host of other tasks to accomplish during its stay at Ryugu — most notably, to collect a sample of the primitive world to bring home to Earth for laboratory analysis. Full article here: https://www.space.com/41912-japanese-hopping-rovers-land-on-asteroid.html
  8. https://www.facebook.com/cmpgaming/ Like and share our Facebook page. The more people we have engaged on it the more players will register in the community and play in the battles https://www.facebook.com/cmpgaming/
  9. Great video @Spieler4 Posted in our Facebook page:
  10. ROUND 2 Tuesday 2 October 17:55 Juventus vs Young Boys 4-0 17:55 TSG 1899 Hoffenheim vs Manchester City 1-3 20:00 AEK Athens vs Benfica 0-0 20:00 CSKA Moscow vs Real Madrid 0-3 20:00 FC Bayern München vs Ajax 3-1 20:00 Lyon vs Shakhtar Donetsk 2-1 20:00 Manchester United vs Valencia CF 2-2 20:00 Roma vs Viktoria Plzen 3-0 Wednesday 3 October 17:55 Lokomotiv Moscow vs FC Schalke 04 0-2 17:55 Paris Saint-Germain vs Crvena Zvezda 4-0 20:00 Atlético de Madrid vs Club Brugge 3-0 20:00 Borussia Dortmund vs Monaco 2-2 20:00 FC Porto vs Galatasaray 3-1 20:00 Napoli vs Liverpool 2-3 20:00 PSV vs Internazionale 1-3 20:00 Tottenham Hotspur vs Barcelona 3-3
  11. Thanks mate. Gonna try and do some medals for all the participants. Something similar to these:
  12. First matches start this Tuesday. Dont forget to bet. Medals will be awarded at the end of the season.
  13. Brand New Typewriter Hello and welcome back to another Forgotten Hope 2 update. Today we have a small announcement to make that covers a small but significant change in our upcoming 2.54 update. As many of you will have noticed, the original fonts from Battlefield 2 do not scale well to widescreen resolutions. They are also limited in the number of special characters that are used by other languages. Thanks to the work of radiosmersh, we now have fonts fit for the modern age. Eagle eyed viewers amongst you might have spotted that aserafimov has added singleplayer to his map Lenino. That's all for this week, but be sure to come back next time for another update. Until then, feel free to visit our Discord, our public forums, and/or our Twitter and Facebook pages to discuss this update and other news. Original post here - http://forgottenhope.warumdarum.de/news.php?id_news=519
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