Anonymous ID: b4e6bf Dec. 29, 2020, 12:09 a.m. No.12220042   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0069 >>0175

>>12219986

 

Depends.Bought this heavy metal keyboard. Built like a tank with cherry switches keys 6 years ago and I've put it through hell and back again and it's still going strong. What I'm typing on now in fact.

Anonymous ID: b4e6bf Dec. 29, 2020, 12:49 a.m. No.12220332   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0349

>>12220302

 

The only downside to that is the swamp media will be able to stay just a little above solvent. If he's out, they die. They'll have nothing to write or click bait about.

Anonymous ID: b4e6bf Dec. 29, 2020, 1:06 a.m. No.12220417   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0423 >>0426 >>0525

>>12220404

 

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

 

Grand Jury Charges Ed Buck with Four Additional Felonies, Including that He Enticed Victims to Travel Interstate to Engage in Prostitution

 

LOS ANGELES – A federal grand jury today returned a superseding indictment charging Edward Buck with four additional felonies, including that he allegedly enticed victims – including a man who died at his West Hollywood apartment after he administered drugs to him – to travel interstate to engage in prostitution.

 

Buck, 65, was arrested in September 2019 after being charged in United States District Court with providing methamphetamine to a man who died after receiving the drug intravenously. Since that time, federal authorities have continued to investigate Buck for additional crimes.

 

The four additional counts charged today – bringing the total number of charges in this case to nine counts – include one count alleging that Buck knowingly enticed 26-year-old Gemmel Moore to travel to the Los Angeles area to engage in prostitution. Buck allegedly provided methamphetamine to Moore, who overdosed on the drug and died on July 27, 2017.

 

Buck also is charged with another count of enticing another man to travel with the intent of engaging in prostitution.

 

The superseding indictment also charges Buck with one count of knowingly and intentionally distributing methamphetamine, and one count of using his residence for the purpose of distributing narcotics such as methamphetamine, and the sedatives gamma hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) and clonazepam.

 

https://www.justice.gov/usao-cdca/pr/grand-jury-charges-ed-buck-four-additional-felonies-including-he-enticed-victims-travel

Anonymous ID: b4e6bf Dec. 29, 2020, 1:13 a.m. No.12220464   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0467 >>0498 >>0527 >>0575

>>12220408

>>12220410

>>12220422

>>12220427

 

I was curious about this so I did a quick look. This was the first thing that returned

 

High-Intensity Lasers Throw Scientists a Curve

Researchers defy the laws of physics by making a laser beam bend

 

Ultra-intense lasers hold much promise for improving scientific tools such as laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS), and deepening researchers' understanding of atomic, molecular, optical and plasma physics. The enormous intensity of these lasers (attributed to the brief but powerful pulses of energy they emit), however, makes it difficult for scientists to fully characterize and understand them.

 

Researchers at the University of Arizona in Tucson (U.A.) and the University of Central Florida in Orlando (U.C.F.) report in Science this week that they have found a way to bend a high-intensity pulsed laser beam, a breakthrough they are hoping will help them better understand how ultra-intense laser pulses travel through the air and find potential new uses for the technology.

 

"People expect lasers to do certain things, like propagate in a straight line," says lead researcher Pavel Polynkin, an associate research professor at U.A.'s College of Optical Sciences. "The fact that a laser beam actually curves is quite unusual."

 

Polynkin and his colleagues were the first to report bending the beam of a pulsed laser. But a U.C.F. team of scientists (including current study co-authors Demetri Christodoulides and Georgios Siviloglou) in November 2007 demonstrated a continuous wave (or steady stream) laser that curved slightly, turning on its ear the assumption that lasers can travel only in straight lines.

 

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/high-intensity-lasers-curve/