abonnement Unibet Coolblue Bitvavo
  dinsdag 6 januari 2015 @ 22:33:01 #126
241970 R0N1N
Live free or die trying
pi_148408463
The truth may be out there, but the lies are in your head.
pi_148408476
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 6 januari 2015 17:57 schreef Probably_on_pcp het volgende:

[..]

Van mijn website:

Dit onderdeel van de site is puur bedoeld om interessante filmpjes te delen. Ik zelf doe geen uitspraken over het echt of nep zijn van de filmpjes. Het is interessant om over te speculeren en daarom wil ik ze graag delen.

En:

De volgende video's zijn hier neergezet, gewoon omdat ze interessant zijn. Ik doe zelf geen uitspraken over het wel of niet echt zijn van deze video's en ik heb zelf geen idee hoe serieus je dit alles kunt nemen.

Need I say more?
Hm. Je gaat stukken van je eigen website quoten.. mkay, logisch vervolg natuurlijk

quote:
Je gaat weer de mist in met nuance beste Beathoven. Omdat ik bepaalde foto's en video's interessant vind, betekent dat niet dat ze voor mij bijdragen aan een serieuze bewijslast.
het is meer een soort ufo porno dus.
pi_148416372
quote:
0s.gif Op dinsdag 6 januari 2015 15:39 schreef Probably_on_pcp het volgende:

[..]


What Was This Strange Object Over California?

January 6, 2015 | by Lisa Winter



On Monday, YouTube user Ken Roberts uploaded a video titled “UFO Crashing Releases Orb Over Southern California. Anyone Else See It?” He claims that he was driving home from work when he saw this mysterious light in the sky, and pulled over to the side of the road to film it. A few seconds into the video a bright chunk appears to jettison off of the main body and blaze away in the opposite direction. He claims it then went up into the sky and completely disappeared, though that part wasn’t captured on film. He reports that he didn’t hear any explosions associated with the event.

Check out the video here (the video stops 40 seconds in, so there’s no need to keep watching after the picture goes black):


After this video was released, there were a number of explanations postulated to explain this event. These included meteors associated with the Quadrantids meteor shower, a fallen satellite, or experimental government hardware.

However, the fireball shown in the video doesn’t behave in a manner to be expected from any of those things. Meteors typically move much more quickly than this object. While it is common for meteors to fall apart as they burn in the atmosphere, it would be extremely odd for a single piece to break off and then completely change direction like that. Even if this was a satellite or something that exploded in the atmosphere, you wouldn’t see one single piece acting in that manner.

In my opinion, the best explanation is that the video was faked. (Someone lying on the internet? No way!)

To answer the question in Mr. Roberts’ video title, the answer is: no. It doesn’t appear that anyone else saw it. There aren’t any pending reports of fireball sightings with the American Meteor Society, and no other eyewitnesses. With 22 million people living in SoCal, it seems odd that not a single one of them also noticed such a spectacle.

Additionally, he didn’t actually supply any relevant information. “Southern California” is a fairly big place, and this doesn’t give more detail about where he was, what direction he was facing, the date, or time of day this was filmed.

The YouTube account was also created on the same day the video was uploaded. However, the UFO video wasn’t uploaded until after he posted a video of seagulls from a trip to New York and watched a bunch of sports videos, which seems like an extremely odd choice of priorities.

It also seems extremely odd that comments are turned off on the video. If you truly believed you saw a UFO crashing to Earth and a mysterious object flying back out to space, wouldn’t you want to hear from others who might have also witnessed it and could have additional information?

Open Minds, a website for UFO enthusiasts, is also skeptical of the video’s claims. They report that after the video was uploaded, someone commented on the video and made Mr. Roberts an offer for use of the video. A short time later, the description on the video changed and stated that exclusive rights to the video belonged to the user who sent the offer. Between the time of their reporting and now, the description of the video has been changed again. There is now no mention of anyone else’s ownership, but it does come with a warning not to re-upload without permission, and the comments are now disabled

http://www.iflscience.com(...)-southern-california
Death Makes Angels of us all
And gives us wings where we had shoulders
Smooth as raven' s claws...
  woensdag 7 januari 2015 @ 12:15:33 #129
279682 theguyver
Sidekick van A tuin-hek!
pi_148421791
quote:
0s.gif Op woensdag 7 januari 2015 08:35 schreef ExperimentalFrentalMental het volgende:

[..]

What Was This Strange Object Over California?

January 6, 2015 | by Lisa Winter

[ afbeelding ]

On Monday, YouTube user Ken Roberts uploaded a video titled “UFO Crashing Releases Orb Over Southern California. Anyone Else See It?” He claims that he was driving home from work when he saw this mysterious light in the sky, and pulled over to the side of the road to film it. A few seconds into the video a bright chunk appears to jettison off of the main body and blaze away in the opposite direction. He claims it then went up into the sky and completely disappeared, though that part wasn’t captured on film. He reports that he didn’t hear any explosions associated with the event.

Check out the video here (the video stops 40 seconds in, so there’s no need to keep watching after the picture goes black):


After this video was released, there were a number of explanations postulated to explain this event. These included meteors associated with the Quadrantids meteor shower, a fallen satellite, or experimental government hardware.

However, the fireball shown in the video doesn’t behave in a manner to be expected from any of those things. Meteors typically move much more quickly than this object. While it is common for meteors to fall apart as they burn in the atmosphere, it would be extremely odd for a single piece to break off and then completely change direction like that. Even if this was a satellite or something that exploded in the atmosphere, you wouldn’t see one single piece acting in that manner.

In my opinion, the best explanation is that the video was faked. (Someone lying on the internet? No way!)

To answer the question in Mr. Roberts’ video title, the answer is: no. It doesn’t appear that anyone else saw it. There aren’t any pending reports of fireball sightings with the American Meteor Society, and no other eyewitnesses. With 22 million people living in SoCal, it seems odd that not a single one of them also noticed such a spectacle.

Additionally, he didn’t actually supply any relevant information. “Southern California” is a fairly big place, and this doesn’t give more detail about where he was, what direction he was facing, the date, or time of day this was filmed.

The YouTube account was also created on the same day the video was uploaded. However, the UFO video wasn’t uploaded until after he posted a video of seagulls from a trip to New York and watched a bunch of sports videos, which seems like an extremely odd choice of priorities.

It also seems extremely odd that comments are turned off on the video. If you truly believed you saw a UFO crashing to Earth and a mysterious object flying back out to space, wouldn’t you want to hear from others who might have also witnessed it and could have additional information?

Open Minds, a website for UFO enthusiasts, is also skeptical of the video’s claims. They report that after the video was uploaded, someone commented on the video and made Mr. Roberts an offer for use of the video. A short time later, the description on the video changed and stated that exclusive rights to the video belonged to the user who sent the offer. Between the time of their reporting and now, the description of the video has been changed again. There is now no mention of anyone else’s ownership, but it does come with a warning not to re-upload without permission, and the comments are now disabled

http://www.iflscience.com(...)-southern-california
oke vage bedoeling, is het fenomeen niet door anderen gefilmd?
Zoals de man in filmpje al zegt..
Ik hoop dat iemand beter shots kan maken van het object.
Er staat nog een vraag voor u open!!
pi_148422110
Mystery of the glowing orb: Bizarre fireball that splits in two could be a meteorite burning up in Earth's atmosphere.

:)

Niet dat we nou zo veel wijzer worden van dit artikel. Speculeren kan iedereen, en zo te zien doet ook iedereen dat.
Niet meer aanwezig in dit forum.
  woensdag 7 januari 2015 @ 14:18:47 #131
241970 R0N1N
Live free or die trying
pi_148426866
Leesvoer: http://achterdesamenlevin(...)/#.VK0oNJjrRWk.nujij

Aliens hebben een poll geopend met de vraag of ze zich moeten laten zien.
Je hoeft alleen maar Ja of Nee te denken...
The truth may be out there, but the lies are in your head.
pi_148428911
quote:
0s.gif Op woensdag 7 januari 2015 12:15 schreef theguyver het volgende:

[..]

oke vage bedoeling, is het fenomeen niet door anderen gefilmd?
Zoals de man in filmpje al zegt..
Ik hoop dat iemand beter shots kan maken van het object.
To answer the question in Mr. Roberts’ video title, the answer is: no. It doesn’t appear that anyone else saw it. There aren’t any pending reports of fireball sightings with the American Meteor Society, and no other eyewitnesses. With 22 million people living in SoCal, it seems odd that not a single one of them also noticed such a spectacle.

:)
Death Makes Angels of us all
And gives us wings where we had shoulders
Smooth as raven' s claws...
abonnement Unibet Coolblue Bitvavo
Forum Opties
Forumhop:
Hop naar:
(afkorting, bv 'KLB')