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Thistechnology enables gleans past lives hypnosis live broadcasting past lifes tells of stereoscopic content in movietheaters and, shortly, in homes, through pay-per-view television or videoon demand. “This event is the best type of demonstration; it allows us toshow that our technology is mature, reliable and, above all, ready to beused now”, says Nicholas Routhier.The SENSIO(R) 3D encoder card and decoding IP, which have been usedjointly with the satellite broadcasting technology of InternationalDatacasting Corporation (TSX: IDC) for the sporting event broadcast, arebeing demonstrated in the SENSIO suite at the Flamingo hotel (room CarsonI). Through the system of 3D cameras, the encoder and the decoder,visitors can film themselves and watch themselves live in threedimensions on an LCD HD television.Innovation: 3D software for PCSSENSIO(R) 3D technology is now available as software. It can fit into anymedia playing software, enabling 3D content to be watched on a computerwith a 2D or 3D screen.

For the S3D demonstration in the SENSIO suite, 3Dcontent is streamed via internet on a PC and is decoded and displayedusing the software past lives memories . This innovation enables live 3D broadcasting ofsporting events, concerts and more through the Internet, makinglarge-scale access to these events possible.Previews of other Hollywood contentSENSIO is once again presenting trailers from some of the big Hollywoodstudios’ most recent 3D productions, as it has done at every CESexhibition; accordingly, trailers from Universal Studios’ Coraline andnWave Pictures’ Fly me to the Moon will be presented past life . In addition,visitors will be able to watch live content from Inition, such as hockey,tennis, rugby and boxing.The CES conferenceFor the second year running, Nicholas Routhier is a panelist at the CESconference “How will we see 3DTV?”, showing at 1:30 p.m past regression . this afternoonat the Las Vegas Convention Center, North Hall, conference room N256 the past life . “Weare pleased to be taking part in this conference because it enables us tocontribute to the development of the 3D home video industry, in additionto getting an interesting exposure to other members of the industry”,explains Mr. Routhier.For more information on the conference, please visit see the SENSIO(R) 3D technologySENSIO TechnologiesArcSoftFlamingo Hotel Las Vegas Las Vegas Convention Center3555 Las Vegas Boulevard South South Hall 4Room: Carson I (3rd floor) Booth: 35770MPPavonine Korea Inc.Hilton HotelBooth: 49020About SENSIOFounded in 1999, SENSIO, headquartered in Montreal, Canada, develops andmarkets forward-looking stereoscopic technologies designed to offer themost advanced and immersive cinematographic experience available. Itsflagship technology, SENSIO(R)3D, allows the high-quality distribution of3D content through conventional 2D channels and playback on any displaydevice, including plasma TVs, HDTV and glass-free 3D displays.

Workingwith major Hollywood studios and large format 3D film producers, SENSIOhas built up one of the world’s largest libraries of 3D movies for thehome entertainment market.SENSIO(R) is a trademark of SENSIO Technologies Inc.This news release contains forward-looking statements that reflect theCompany’s expectations with regard to future events past lives regression . Actual events coulddiffer significantly from those anticipated in this document my past life . “Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (asthat term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) acceptsresponsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.”Contacts:Investor Relations:Evolution Group Inc.Sylvain SENSIO Technologies Inc.Richard LaBergeExecutive Vice-President514-846-2022 ext past life test . ENSIO Technologies Inc.Magali ValenceCommunications CoordinatorCell : opyright 2009, Market Wire, All rights reserved.-0- past life stories . The game clock showed 00:00.  The embarrassment was over.  The score was Syracuse 31 Rutgers 14 and out came the laptops and post-game articles.Article after article talked about how after getting crushed by the Orangemen, Rutgers lost all their chances of playing in the Gator Bowl come January 1.  They claimed that now even if the Scarlet Knights win out they will go to the Meineke Car Care Bowl. But here I am to tell all you Rutgers fans that the people who wrote these articles are wrong.”Wrong?” asks the common Rutgers fan.”Yes, WRONG!? I respond.”But how could this be??” He/she inquires.This is the part where I smirk and respond, ”Well…”Yes, they are all wrong.  Despite what everyone else is saying, there is still a chance Rutgers will make the Gator Bowl.There isn’t necessarily a good chance, but there IS a slim one.For Rutgers to make the Gator Bowl, there are three things must happen.1. Rutgers must win outThis is the most obvious of the three and the most important.  Instead of waking up early looking for big sales at stores, Rutgers will be in Louisville taking on the Cardinals in a Black Friday match up.Louisville is at a humble 3-8 and this should be an easy win for Rutgers.  Then again, that’s what we thought about Syracuse and look what happened in that game.Rutgers then plays West Virginia on December 5.  This is another winnable game.  If Rutgers can run the ball early and often (that means Joe Martinek should get 20 carries with a side of Jourdan Brooks’ 5-10) instead of having freshman QB Tom Savage drop back thirty times behind a rag-tag offensive line, Rutgers’ offense could be solid and they could come out with wins at both of these games.This would put the Scarlet Knights’ at 9-3.  They would finish third in the Big East and would be first in line to make the Gator Bowl should the next two things occur.2.  Notre Dame must go 6-6.Everyone loves to hate Notre Dame, Big East teams especially.Right now Notre Dame sits at 6-5.  They play Stanford this Saturday and if the Fighting Irish win they will most likely make the Gator Bowl.  If they lose to Stanford, they will be out of consideration for it and the bowl will go to a Big East team.Now you’re probably going to say, “The bowl will go to Pitt regardless, who will be 10-2.”You have just gone by what all the other analysts and writers have said.  Pitt will lose to Cincinnati and go 10-2.  In No.

3, I present you with a startling alternative.3.  Pitt has to beat Cincinnati.What if Pitt doesn’t lose to Cincinnati?It’s a very possible situation.  Cincinnati has played some very close games recently and Pitt is only three spots behind them in the BCS rankings. If the Panthers can show the Bearcats who’s top cat, they win the Big East and play in the Sugar Bowl against the loser of Alabama-Florida.This means Cincinnati would still be 11-1 and would definitely get a BCS at-large bid, leaving the Gator Bowl to the next available suitor, Rutgers.Although this might sound crazy, it really isn’t that outrageous of an idea.  It could very well be that all three of these factors will go in Rutgers’ favor.But instead of looking forward to and projecting what COULD happen in the future, we should all be focusing on what’s directly ahead of Rutgers.The one-game-at-a-time mentality is what worked so well at Rutgers and this Friday, at 11:00 am on ESPN2 the Knights must focus only on beating Louisville and worry about the rest after.  This goes for us fans too.Have a happy Thanksgiving and hopefully we’ll be able to sit down at TVs and watch Rutgers play in Jacksonville, Florida on a later holiday, New Year’s Day.Keep chopping and GO RU!! remembering past lives . Growing up in the south, I always felt a little out of place when the topic of hunting or fishing was breached.  I had caught my fair share of sunfish on my Grandfather?s dock growing up, but I never shot a gun until my sophomore year in college.  And even then, it was only for a skeet shooting contest with a few buddies.So, when I had the opportunity to hunt turkeys the day before Thanksgiving with my girlfriend?s father, I knew it would be the experience of a lifetime. I don?t pretend to really know too much about hunting past life experiences . I had never been before?never had the opportunity.  It was a new world to me.  It reminded me in some ways of making my first tackle in a football game, riding my first mile on a road bike, and making my first big hit in little league.  I was?beside myself.It turned out to be a rather rainy Wednesday morning in central Florida.  I was supposed to meet Mike at noon in order to head 20 miles south of St past life memories . Cloud to hunt for the different varmints on the property.  And the weather, by all accounts, didn?t look too promising.The deluge of rain was much needed in the usual dry fall and winters in that part of Florida.  However, I was more caught up in my thoughts of what animals do in the rain.  Do turkeys walk around in the rain and dig for grubs?  What would I do if I were a turkey in the rain?I asked a lot of questions on the way about the guns, the ammunition, the animals, where to shoot them and how to shoot them.  After all, I was a hunting greenhorn.  I even packed a peanut butter sandwich even though turkey and cheese was an option.  I figured it to be a good hunting omen.  I?d bring home the bacon then, right?The forty-five minute drive with Mike was full of plenty of conversation.  From life to work to what shotgun shells are made of, we didn?t stop talking until the scenery started to abruptly change.  Fewer and fewer signs of civilization were around as the light grey skies met with green pastures and small groves of trees at the horizon.As we entered the property, I knew I would exit with either a turkey, smaller varmint, or a slight bit of disappointment.  Mike was driving and knew the spread well.  He?d been hunting this property for years and seemingly knew all the nooks and crannies of the place.  He killed his first turkey when he was 13.  He knew how to hunt.We stopped as we pulled in and he pulled out his two shotguns, a pair of 12 gauges.  ?Remember how to shoot it?? he asked.  The last time I had shot a gun had been a good few months ago at the same place.  He had tossed an old plastic bottle in the air a few times for me to shoot that first time since we couldn?t find any varmints on the property in the middle of the summer time.?I remember most of it,? I answered. ?How about hitting that bean then,? as he pointed to two beans dangling down from a plant a few yards away.Ka-pow!   ?I didn?t hit?did I?? I muttered.  I had aimed a little south of the actual bean by lining up the top of the notch on the end of the barrel with the center of my target.  A rookie mistake I suppose. ?Yeah?you missed it,? he laughed.  Oh boy, I was thinking.  How could I ever hit a turkey if I couldn?t even hit the stinkin? bean plant?I really wasn?t dressed for the occasion as I guess I should?ve been.  Mike let me borrow his camouflage rain jacket to conceal my light blue shirt and we pulled up on the property looking for the small critters that run around on the large piece of land.  For acres and acres heads of cattle sat on the ground or stood in small droves watching us move by with a puzzled look on their face.  After all, from their point of view I guess we humans seemed a bit silly making this “hunting” thing harder than it had to be.  If it was food we were looking for, they were seemingly big targets.But hunting isn?t just about the food.  Food is a part of it, but the art of hunting seems to tap into the primal instincts of every man.  Maybe it?s the sneaking up on the prey part that we like, or outsmarting the critters.  It could even be that we like to test our accuracy and the steadiness of our hands.  For me, it was all of the above.I?ve always loved the outdoors.  I go hiking for the smell of the woods just as much as for the visual appeal.  And, there was a certain smell to the place.  A smell that penetrated and that was foreign to the civilized world. I followed Mike into the slough of trees that surrounded a feeder.  The property had multiple feeders on its hundreds of acres and the animals had grown accustomed to knowing the exact time of day when the food would be dispensed.  Dinnertime for the critters was at 5pm every day?and it was only 1 o?clock.We waded through the brush, aiming to make as little noise as possible when Mike turned around at the edge of the tree line and motioned to get lower to the ground.  As I looked through the palm fronds, I could see two large sand hill cranes socializing next to the feeder. ?Do you see it?? he asked.?Turkeys?? I responded.Then he pointed straight off in the distance to the tall grass about twenty yards away. ?Hens,? he spoke softly, ?about four of them.?As I lowered my body to get a better look I had cracked a dried out palm frond on the ground making a louder noise than I had expected.  I slowly lowered myself to see the hens turn about face and slowly jog off into the tall grass. Crap!  I just blew my opportunity past life regression cd .   The sand hill cranes started squawking as we walked parallel to the tree line and exited back to the vehicle. ?Don?t worry, there will be plenty more opportunities later,? he replied as we stepped back in and drove away. Driving across the property seemed to be the most logical thing to do, especially considering that the terrain was vast and rugged and the land so spread out.  We continued to take small sand paths through the fields that connected the lines of trees and brush.  In places, there was little underbrush while it appeared rather swampy in other locales. The drizzle continued from the sky as we looked through binoculars from the left to the right.  Then, straight ahead, we spotted a pack of ten or twelve hens walking in the middle of the sand path like a group of kids walking home from school.  As we approached, the large birds took to the air and flew over the trees to our right. ?We?ll catch ?em on the back side.  Don?t worry, we?ll see them again later today,? replied Mike.We continued to drive in the gentle drizzle until we saw a flock of doves congregating on some power lines above.  It was target practice time.Doves, as I quickly found out, are much harder to kill than your average animal.  It not only flies left and right, but also up and down and in and out.  Target practice was harder than I thought.  Three shots and nothing to show for it.  Mike even went behind the birds in one drove of trees in an attempt to flush them out for me to take a few good shots.  They flew the opposite way and he nailed two as a clump of feathers slowly fell to the ground.He?s a good shot and it showed.  On my first trip to the property he had shot a dove driving along a path near the tree line.  He was driving and the dove was flying the other way.  And he still hit it square enough to drop it out of the sky. I was able to see my first hog, though.  It was a medium sized, stubby little critter with coarse, black hair.  It ran off before Mike had a chance to bring his shotgun up, but he estimated it to weight about 130 lbs. We kept traveling to different areas on the property but no to avail.  No animals anywhere.  As we entered a field about three hours into our ordeal we saw a pack of hens off in the distance.  There were about 15 or 20.  They were hard to count through the lens of the binoculars, but they were congregating and having a big party.  Maybe it was a rainy day grub party.Whatever the case, we edged closer and closer to get a peak.  All hens.  This was the opportunity.  ?We?re going to corral them,? he said as we approached from the left.  We did a semicircle until we got within about 40 yards of the hens.  They were loud and having a big time. ?Your shot,? he added.  ?Pick one out and aim for its head.?I looked down the barrel of the 12 gauge, slick and wet from the constant rain.  I looked up as I took the safety off.  There?s so many!  Which one do I shoot?I paused for a brief second before I shut my left eye and peered down the barrel again.  I turned to the left as I found a group of hens mingling.  All of a sudden, one hen extended its neck as if to say to its neighbor, ?Hey! Stay out of my space!  This is my ground to roost and dig for grubs!?That?s the one!   I waited until the hen brought its extended neck back up before I fired.Ka-pow!   Feathers flew up into the air, the flock of hens scattered off in all directions.  Some flew and some bolted across the pasture like Olympic sprinters.  I followed the trail of smoke and found not one but two hens ruffling their feathers and sprawled out on the backs on the ground.TWO TURKEYS!  I was beside myself.  Mike finished off the paralyzed turkeys for good measure and then I let out some sort of yell.  I don?t exactly remember how it went, but I can only imagine it was the type of yell that comes with killing one?s first turkey?or two in my case.Upon further examination, I had nicked them both in the neck, right on target.  Mike and I gutted the birds and cut off the legs and necks.  It was a different experience, but I really didn?t mind the warm entrails of the hens I had just killed.  I had just killed a Thanksgiving turkey after all.  And two at that. We drove home and shared our story with everyone else as we de-feathered the fowls and prepared them for the deep fryer the next day.  It was an un-paralleled experience.  As we enjoyed dinner, I then remembered my peanut butter sandwich in the car.  It had been hours since breakfast, but in our pursuit for a turkey I had didn?t eat a thing.  I wasn?t really that hungry, though, for lunch.Looking back though, I didn?t have time nor a need for a sandwich.  The hunt for a Thanksgiving turkey requires too much attention for one to get caught up in the details of what?s for lunch.  Although I had never been hunting before, I felt like a forager of food that day before Thanksgiving. And every time I will tell the story, I?ll make sure to say, ?Not one turkey?TWO turkeys with the same shot!?   A Thanksgiving to remember for sure..

Illumina`s Sequencing Technology Will Support EA`s New Plant and Animal GenomicServicesSAN DIEGO–(Business Wire)–Illumina (NASDAQ:ILMN) today announced that Expression Analysis, an Illuminacertified service provider (CSPro) and leading supplier of genotyping, geneexpression, and resequencing services for genetic research, purchased its firstGenome Analyzer . With this purchase, Expression Analysis becomes the only CSProthat owns all four of Illumina`s genomic research platforms: Genome Analyzer,iScan, BeadStation, and BeadXpress online past life regression . This means that customers can perform trulyintegrated genetic analysis studies, from whole-genome to targeted screening how to past life regression . “We continue to invest in Illumina`s technology because of the significantclient demand for their genomic research platforms,” said Steve McPhail,President and CEO of Expression Analysis . “At next week’s Plant and AnimalGenome Conference we will launch our new agricultural genomics servicesoffering. The Genome Analyzer plays a critical role in this program because ofits ability to offer a broad range of sequencing applications to supportcomprehensive DNA, gene expression and regulation, and epigenomics-basedstudies, for this market segment.” “In addition to owning at least one of every platform marketed by Illumina,we`re excited to know that Expression Analysis opted to purchase their firstGenome Analyzer in order to expand sequencing service offerings, based on clientdemand.

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