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Hey javagreen where'd you get those icons from?

Oh, and where can I get a PNG of an iPod so I can use it for AveDesk?

What about now?

There mines (click on thumb to go see it in big) :

desklh-cc-1-thumb.jpg

Visual Style: LongHorn Slate by -KoL

Wallpaper: Dannii Minogue (come from www.skins.be if I have a good memory)

Icons: Icons as be D/L at Wincostomize... don't remember were...

But it said huajun like author in the IPack menu.

Programs: Lclock

Trasparent Windows Manager

Madotate

FreeShade

Y'z Shadow

Style XP

SmartBar XP

mak20.jpg

Visual Style: Aluminum Alloy By -KoL (not so visible...)

Wallpaper: Gabrielle Richens

<< www.desktopgirls.com and www.skins.be >>

Icons: XP in XP :p

Programs: Serious Samurize

Objectdock

objectbar

madotate

Trasparent windows manager

For any question just lookup at my mail...

Wallpaper: Don't remember but I know I got it from Pixelgirlpresents.com

VS: Ibar graphite

Icons: Equal and some other assorted OSX icons

Avedesk with Equal PNG's and the Longhorn Recycle Bin

Itunes with the always on top plug-in

Y'z Toolbar with the Milk theme (and the winflag in the corner of the Scrubs

explorer window shouldn't be there but sometimes Y'z doesn't get rid of it)

CleanDeskThumb.jpg

Clean Desktop 1600 x 1200

DirtyDeskThumb.jpg

Dirty Desktop 1600 x 1200

Well this is the setup I'm gonna be rollin with for a while, at least for the rest of the month.

VS: Tiger

Wallpaper: Not sure...

Icons (in AveDesk): Aquasilver

Winamp Skin: Tiger :ninja:

My Desktop..

Can you link the Aquasilver icons please? I can't find them for Windows... :(

Specs? And links if possible?

Mainly, wallpaper and that song playing thing in the grass down there.

Wall: http://uploaded.fastuploads.com/dunno.jpg

The player is winamp and I have uploaded the skin here:

http://www.geocities.com/freakme15/

File name: 1400_gr.zip

The VS is just hacked classic.

:)

WIP, recolor of Royale...yep another one :p actually i made this to mach the wallpaper im using :) (dont know if im gonna release it when it's done..)

http://members.home.nl/agonite/Royale_Light_small1.png

I don't know why, but I really like that WIP.

Hmmm, the colours are soothing.

Radish?

WIP, recolor of Royale...yep another one :p actually i made this to mach the wallpaper im using :) (dont know if im gonna release it when it's done..)

http://members.home.nl/agonite/Royale_Light_small1.png

If you could make that blue a light-blue like Tiger's...

a Tiger coloured Royale would be great :cool:

hm, as i stated before, this recolour wasnt intended to be released when i started it, i just was bored, and wanted a skin to match my wallpaper... :) IF this one is being released, it'll only be this colour scheme..

and hey, if i can recolour Royale, any idiot should be able to ;)

Thx for the replies btw :)

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Because Mars moves around the Sun in a non-circular path (an eccentric orbit, meaning its distance from the Sun changes over time instead of staying fixed) and is affected by gravity from other bodies, the daily difference can vary by as much as 226 microseconds over a Martian year. The study also identifies smaller repeating changes of about 40 microseconds per day linked to synodic cycles (repeating periods that describe how planets line up with each other as they orbit the Sun from different positions). These longer patterns affect how time differences slowly rise and fall. To make these estimates, researchers compared Mars with Earth and the Moon. The work looks at relativistic proper time (the time actually measured by a clock depending on its speed and the strength of gravity where it is located, as described in Einstein’s relativity). This shows that each world has its own slightly different “rate” of time. This becomes more important as space missions expand into cislunar space (the region between Earth and the Moon) and toward Mars. On Earth, time systems rely on atomic clocks and satellites, which stay closely synchronized for navigation and communication. The study is based on Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity, which shows that time is affected by gravity and motion. Stronger gravity makes clocks run slower, while weaker gravity makes them run faster. “The time is just right for the Moon and Mars,” said NIST physicist Bijunath Patla. “This is the closest we have been to realizing the science fiction vision of expanding across the solar system.” A day on Mars is about 40 minutes longer than on Earth, and a Martian year lasts 687 Earth days. But the main question is not just about days and years, but how fast time itself passes. An atomic clock placed on Mars would function normally, but compared with one on Earth, the two would slowly drift apart due to differences in gravity and motion. This requires careful calculation of what is similar to a time-zone difference across planets. Researchers modeled Mars using a reference surface and included gravitational effects from the Sun, Earth, the Moon, and other planets. This includes a multi-body gravitational system (often described as a three-body or four-body problem, where predicting motion becomes difficult because multiple large objects all pull on each other at the same time through gravity). Mars also follows a Keplerian orbit (an idealized elliptical orbit based on simple gravitational laws that assume smooth motion, before adding real-world disturbances from other bodies). In addition, the researchers accounted for solar tides (small changes in gravitational force caused by the Sun that slightly distort planetary motion and timing, especially in systems involving Earth and the Moon). These combined effects are described as relativistic proper-time offsets (small but measurable differences in elapsed time between locations caused by gravity and motion), which must be included when comparing clocks across planets. “But for Mars, that’s not the case. Its distance from the Sun and its eccentric orbit make the variations in time larger. A three-body problem is extremely complicated. Now we’re dealing with four: the Sun, Earth, the Moon and Mars,” Patla explained. “The heavy lifting was more challenging than I initially thought.” Although the differences are extremely small, they matter for navigation and communication systems that depend on precise timing. Even modern networks on Earth, such as mobile systems, rely on timing accuracy at very small fractions of a second. Communication between Earth and Mars currently takes about four to 24 minutes or more depending on planetary positions, meaning signals are not real-time. A shared and accurate time system could help future missions reduce confusion in navigation and data exchange. “If you get synchronization, it will be almost like real-time communication without any loss of information. You don’t have to wait to see what happens,” Patla said. Researchers note that fully developed interplanetary communication networks are still far in the future. 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Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
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