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Originally posted by Leto
Originally posted by Stormdancer777
Originally posted by Mousey
From listening to the podcast on wbbm780.com it sounds very much like the cassini probe around saturn.
Here's a clip with something that sounds very similar.
Cassini probe signal
Regards Mousey
WOW it does sound similar, doesn't it?
Extremely similar.
Originally posted by redrezo
assuming you don't discount numerous ufo evidence and sightings by credible witnesses, why would the aliens travel all the way out to the edge of the solar system re-program the satellite, when they are already here visiting with UFO's?
Originally posted by MAC269
reply to post by Stormdancer777
Dear Stormdancer777
Sorry it is already in file here www.abovetopsecret.com...
Originally posted by axiomuser
There are two conclusions that can be made...
1) A thirty year old space craft that is 8 billion miles away that has a computer weaker than my cell phone has had serious technical issues in the high radiation environment vacuum of space and is busted... or
2) Aliens have found this little speck of space junk and instead of just coming here in their super advanced interstellar space ships they are using this antiquated device to communicate using unintelligible code.
I pick door number one... Sorry.
Originally posted by redrezo
assuming you don't discount numerous ufo evidence and sightings by credible witnesses, why would the aliens travel all the way out to the edge of the solar system re-program the satellite, when they are already here visiting with UFO's?
Originally posted by Xelif
Originally posted by redrezo
assuming you don't discount numerous ufo evidence and sightings by credible witnesses, why would the aliens travel all the way out to the edge of the solar system re-program the satellite, when they are already here visiting with UFO's?
Wouldn't be able to speculate on the full "why", but part of a reason would be that if you want to send somebody a message it's a good idea to do it somewhere where they're already listening.
NASA engineers have fully revived the far-flung Voyager 2 probe on the edge of the solar system after fixing a computer glitch that scrambled its messages home for nearly three weeks.
A single bit flip in one location in the 33-year-old probe's memory storage caused the problem, and was remotely reset Sunday by engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. After a computer reset, the Voyager 2 is back on track, they said.
The malfunction began April 22 while Voyager 2 was flying 8.6 billion miles (13.8 billion km) from Earth in the heliosphere, the magnetic bubble that surrounds our solar system. Mission scientists could not decipher the probe's science data messages and put the spacecraft in an engineering mode to just send health updates to Earth.
The actual cause of the computer glitch is still unknown, NASA's Voyager 2 project manager Ed Massey told SPACE.com.