Can You Hear Me Now -- in Space?
Apr. 13th, 2005 01:33 pmEver feel like no one is listening to what you have to say? I mean NO ONE?
Well, now you can shell out some dough and have a one-way conversation with aliens in a galaxy far, far away with the help from "the avionics members of the Civilian Space eXploration Team (CSXT) -- the team that launched the world's first private/amateur rocket into space on May 17, 2004." (For details, visit: http://www.civilianspace.com)
On their site Talk To Aliens you could have your email or phone message broadcasted into space!
"We decided to point our antenna into the area of the sky with the highest density of regional stars (and, thus, hopefully planets and other civilizations). That region is commonly referred to as the "Milky Way" -- the galaxy in which our own solar system resides. As the sky appears to turn over the earth, our fixed-mounted parabolic antenna sweeps through much of the Milky Way Galaxy (and its estimated 400 billion stars)."
I am so doing this -- as soon as I figure out what to say.
Well, now you can shell out some dough and have a one-way conversation with aliens in a galaxy far, far away with the help from "the avionics members of the Civilian Space eXploration Team (CSXT) -- the team that launched the world's first private/amateur rocket into space on May 17, 2004." (For details, visit: http://www.civilianspace.com)
On their site Talk To Aliens you could have your email or phone message broadcasted into space!
"We decided to point our antenna into the area of the sky with the highest density of regional stars (and, thus, hopefully planets and other civilizations). That region is commonly referred to as the "Milky Way" -- the galaxy in which our own solar system resides. As the sky appears to turn over the earth, our fixed-mounted parabolic antenna sweeps through much of the Milky Way Galaxy (and its estimated 400 billion stars)."
I am so doing this -- as soon as I figure out what to say.