Aliens: Are they visiting Earth?


Are aliens visiting Earth  

132 members have voted

  1. 1. Are aliens visiting Earth

    • Yes, and they continue to visit regularly
      34
    • Yes, but only occasionally
      44
    • No, but they used to
      10
    • No, and they never have
      44


Recommended Posts

No but to move those huge block which scientist say were constructed then moved would have been impossible. Also the carving of the tunnels for the tombs were nuts. They never could have done that. Atleast this is what I heard on a Discovery Channel special.

No because that type of construction would comprise the integrity of the architure and one false move would cause it to collapse. You never see any ruined pyramids and don't tell me they would not make mistakes. And finally if they did make a mistake they would have had no way of fixing it.

Building pyramids we're done from the day he was phararoah to the day he died(maybe before).

So they have a lot of years to make a pyramid in.

Also they had better technology than you might suggest they had. They had already made a kind of electricity to light up some lightbulbs they had made.

The only thing that's weird is the shape of the pyramids. Cause it is near perfect.

c'mon the pyramids wern't built by aliens, they took years to build, hard work and brave slavery

yet the idea of Jesus being an alien, maybe is quite believable by myself anyway, as the mysterious conception of Mary, the walking on water, and some of the other strange acts he has done could well be explained by this.

No offense intended

Please Note: The People who built the pyramids were not Slaves they were "Volunteers". They were fed adequately and not mis-treated.

No because that type of construction would comprise the integrity of the architure and one false move would cause it to collapse. You never see any ruined pyramids and don't tell me they would not make mistakes. And finally if they did make a mistake they would have had no way of fixing it.

Actually quite a few of them were stuffed up. One Pharaoh or what ever they are called, had three Pyramids built for him because they buggered up the first two. On average a Pyramid took about 25 years to build.

first off, enough about the damn pyrimids, second no way in hell are we the only living things in this universe i mean come on, to belive were the only things is just absurd, theres def life out their , even if its a plant on some other planet id be happy to know that cause we arent alone

I'd say they've never visited.

If they're anything like humans and they had the technology to visit they wouldn't sneak around about it.

After making sure the earth is safe for them they would be knocking on the president/someones door.

The pyramids. We couldn't even make them today nevermind back then. Could aliens have helped? :s

The way I see it the pyramids had nothing to do with aliens.

For one, where are the aliens now? Why would they help a civilization back then and just go away?

Secondly, why would they help build structures/tombs for pharoahs? There'd be no benefit in it.

Allz i knowz is that aliens and whatever else scare the living hell out of me.. like that saying

"eveyone has their monster"

aliens are definatley mine..

:scared:

not sure if ied be scared or not... well a lot of it would depend on how they act and the current situation etc. etc.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • To be fair, it wasn't going anywhere. Even when Windows Phone could run Android APKs, Google didn't want any of it so it'd never work and the same thing happened with Windows. It was never about the store or it's users, it was always the developers and who they aligned to.
    • Wake me up when this comes to PC. Until then... zzzzzzzz....
    • I was expecting the end of the world to happen before this game or elder scroll 6 to come out.
    • OpenAI and Broadcom unveil Jalapeño, a new AI chip built for LLM inference by Pradeep Viswanathan Image by OpenAI Thanks to the exponential growth of ChatGPT and other LLM-based applications, NVIDIA has grown from a $200 billion company into the first public company to reach a $5 trillion market cap. Even though hyperscalers such as Google and Amazon have their own mature AI accelerators, NVIDIA still dominates the AI infrastructure market with multiple generations of GPUs. Microsoft, OpenAI, and Meta remain among NVIDIA’s largest customers, while Google and Amazon continue to be significant NVIDIA customers as they serve AI workloads for customers on their cloud platforms. Today, OpenAI and Broadcom announced Jalapeño, OpenAI’s first custom “Intelligence Processor” designed specifically for large language model inference. The new chip is the first product from a multi-generation compute platform being developed by OpenAI. OpenAI highlighted that Jalapeño was built from the ground up for current and future LLM workloads, rather than being a general-purpose accelerator adapted for AI. Despite heavy competition from Gemini, Claude, Copilot, and others, ChatGPT remains the most used AI platform in the world. OpenAI mentioned that it leveraged its knowledge of how its models and products run at scale, including ChatGPT, Codex, the API, and future agentic AI systems, to design this new chipset. Its chip architecture reduces data movement while balancing compute, memory, and networking resources. Jalapeño will be deployed in production systems starting in late 2026; however, engineering samples are already running machine learning workloads in OpenAI’s labs at production target frequency and power. According to its internal testing, OpenAI claims this chip can deliver “substantially better” performance per watt, and a detailed technical report is expected in the coming months. While OpenAI designed the chip, Broadcom handled silicon implementation and networking technologies, including Tomahawk networking silicon, and Celestica is assisting with board, rack, and system-level integration. OpenAI pointed out that Jalapeño went from initial design to manufacturing tape-out in just nine months, which it claims is the fastest ASIC development cycle achieved for a high-performance advanced semiconductor. The company attributed the speed of development to its own LLMs, which were used during the chip design and optimization process. Broadcom CEO Hock Tan stated that the company's plan is to deploy the Jalapeño platform at a gigawatt scale with Microsoft and other partners starting in 2026. With Jalapeño, OpenAI joins Google, Microsoft, and Amazon to become a full-stack AI player. The company already develops models and products, and is now moving deeper into infrastructure, including chips, kernels, networking, scheduling, and deployment systems.
    • I'm aware. That information should have been included in the article, making it more complete and information.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      D0nn13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Rookie
      +ChiefOfNeo went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      448
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      176
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      123
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      81
    5. 5
      Xenon
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!