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Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Monday, February 9, 2015
How to print a document from my iPad/iPhone with my network printer
I will first start introducing you to the apple tutorial that are well prepare for an airprint like much around in the market ; but what about our good network printer with no WiFi capability. there is a solution called appstore
About AirPrint
AirPrint is an Apple technology that helps you create full-quality printed output without the need to download or install drivers.
AirPrint
With AirPrint, it's easy to deliver full quality photo and document printing from your iOS and OS X apps. Just select an AirPrint printer on your local network to print from your favorite iOS or OS X app. AirPrint is built into most popular printer models. AirPrint features include easy discovery, automatic media selection, and enterprise-class finishing options.
To use your AirPrint printer with Wi-Fi, the printer must be connected to the same Wi-Fi network as your iOS device or Mac, either through bridging, or a direct connection to your Wi-Fi network.
You can learn more about using your AirPrint printers from these articles:
For best results
- Make sure your software is up to date. For iOS, verify that your device is using the latest version of iOS available and that the app you're printing from is up to date. For OS X, Use Software Update to update OS X and apps you've purchased from the Mac App Store.
- AirPrint printers connected to the USB port of an Apple AirPort Base Station or AirPort Time Capsule are not supported with AirPrint. Connect your AirPrint printer to your network using Wi-Fi, or connect it to a LAN port on your AirPort device using Ethernet.
- Make sure that your AirPrint printer is connected to your network before attempting to print. Some AirPrint printers can take several minutes to join a network after being turned on.
If you're unable to print
Check these things if you are unable to print, or if you see the message "No AirPrint Printers Found."
- Make sure your printer has paper, and enough ink or toner installed.
- Make sure your printer is connected to the same Wi-Fi network as your iOS device.
- Make sure your printer has power and is turned on. Try turning your printer off and then back on again to see if it resolves your issue.
- Check to see if your printer has any error lights or indicators displayed on the printer's control panel. Check the documentation that came with your printer to clear any errors displayed.
- Check with your printer's manufacturer to see if any firmware updates are available for your printer. Check your printer's documentation or contact the printer vendor for more information. A firmware update may be available, even if you just bought your printer.
The information below is provided by each manufacturer and is updated once a month by Apple. You can use the Find feature of your web browser (usually Command-F) to search for a specific device in this list. If you don't see your printer or server listed, check with the printer manufacturer for more information.
AirPrint servers
- HP ePrint Enterprise
- HP NFC/Wireless 1200w – Mobile Print Accessory
- Lexmark Print Management
AirPrint printers
The following printers come with AirPrint support.
Astro-Med
- Astro-Med ToughWriter 5
Brother
- Brother DCP-7180DN
- Brother DCP-8110DN
- Brother DCP-8150DN
continued here
Tutorial for network printer
1-Go App Store
2-Search for Printer Pro by Readdle and download it
3-Install the program and run it, follow the setup guide
3.1 if no printing are coming out yet
3.2 follow the second tutorial to get the link
[ https://support.readdle.com/ppd/ ];and download the extension that will use the desktop pc/mac to send the signal to printer from your ipad/iphone
Printer Pro Desktop allows users to print to any printer connected to your Mac/PC using Printer Pro app. We also advise to use Printer Pro Desktop in case the network printer is not compatible with Printer Pro application installed on the iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch.
Saturday, February 7, 2015
Sleep paralysis: Demon intervention of a disorder sleep?
Sleep paralysis is a phenomenon in which a person, either falling asleep or awakening, temporarily experiences an inability to move, speak or react. It is a transitional state between wakefulness and sleep, characterized by complete muscle atonia (muscle weakness). It is often accompanied by terrifying hallucinations (such as an intruder in the room) to which one is unable to react due to paralysis, and physical experiences (such as strong current running through the upper body). One hypothesis is that it results from disrupted REM sleep, which normally induces complete muscle atonia to prevent sleepers from acting out their dreams. Sleep paralysis has been linked to disorders such as narcolepsy, migraines, anxiety disorders, and obstructive sleep apnea; however, it can also occur in isolation
Classification[edit]
The two major classifications of sleep paralysis are isolated sleep paralysis (ISP) and the significantly rarer recurrent isolated sleep paralysis (RISP).[2] ISP episodes are infrequent, and may occur only once in an individual's lifetime,[2] while recurrent isolated sleep paralysis is a chronic condition, and can recur throughout a person's lifetime.[2] RISP episodes can last for up to an hour or longer, and have a much higher occurrence of perceived out of body experiences, while ISP episodes are generally short (usually no longer than one minute) and are typically associated with the intruder and incubus visitations. With RISP the individual can also suffer back-to-back episodes of sleep paralysis in the same night, which is unlikely in individuals who suffer from ISP.[2]
It can be difficult to differentiate between cataplexy brought on by narcolepsy and true sleep paralysis, because the two phenomena are physically indistinguishable.[2] The best way to differentiate between the two is to note when the attacks occur most often. Narcolepsy attacks are more common when the individual is falling asleep; ISP and RISP attacks are more common upon awakening.[3]
Signs and symptoms[edit]
Physiologically, sleep paralysis is closely related to REM atonia, the paralysis that occurs as a natural part of REM (rapid eye movement) sleep. Sleep paralysis occurs either when falling asleep, or when awakening from a session. When it occurs upon falling asleep, the person remains aware while the body shuts down for REM sleep, a condition called hypnagogic or predormital sleep paralysis. When it occurs upon awakening, the person becomes aware before the REM cycle is complete, and it is called hypnopompic or postdormital.[4] The paralysis can last from several seconds to several minutes, with some rare cases being hours, "by which the individual may experience panic symptoms"[5] (described below). As the correlation with REM sleep suggests, the paralysis is not complete: use of EOG traces shows that eye movement is still possible during such episodes; however, the individual experiencing sleep paralysis is unable to speak.[6]
Hypnagogic and hypnopompic visions are symptoms commonly experienced during episodes of sleep paralysis. Some scientists have proposed this condition as an explanation for reports of alien abductions and ghostlyencounters.[7] Some suggest that reports of alien abductions are related to sleep paralysis rather than to temporal lobe lability.[8] There are three main types of these visions that can be linked to pathologic neurophysiology.[9]These include the belief that there is an intruder in the room, the incubus, and vestibular motor sensations.[10]
Many people who experience sleep paralysis are struck with a deep sense of terror when they sense a menacing presence in the room while paralyzed—hereafter referred to as the intruder. A neurological interpretation of this phenomenon is that it results from a hyper-vigilant state created in the midbrain.[9] More specifically, the emergency response is activated in the brain when individuals wake up paralyzed and feel vulnerable to attack.[10] This helplessness can intensify the effects of the threat response well above the level typical of normal dreams, which could explain why such visions during sleep paralysis are so vivid.[10] Normally the threat-activated vigilance system is a protective mechanism to differentiate between dangerous situations and to determine whether the fear response is appropriate.[10] Some hypothesize that the threat vigilance system is evolutionarily biased to interpret ambiguous stimuli as dangerous, because "erring on the side of caution" increases survival chances.[10] This hypothesis could account for why the threatening presence is perceived as being evil.[10] The amygdala is heavily involved in the threat activation response mechanism, which is implicated in both intruder and incubus SP visions.[3]
The specific pathway through which the threat-activated vigilance system acts is not well understood. One possibility is that the thalamus receives sensory information and sends it on the amygdala, which regulates emotional experience. Another is that the amygdaloid complex, anterior cingulate, and the structures in the pontine tegmentum interact to create the vision.[9] It is also highly possible that SP hallucinations could result from a combination of these. The anterior cingulate has an extensive array of cortical connections to other cortical areas, which enables it to integrate the various sensations and emotions into the unified sensorium we experience.[9] The amygdaloid complex helps us interpret emotional experience and act appropriately.[11] This is conducive to directing the individual's attention to the most pertinent stimuli in a potentially dangerous situation so that the individual can take self-protective measures.[11]
Proper amygdaloid complex function requires input from the thalamus, which creates a thalamoamygdala pathway capable of bypassing the intense scrutiny of incoming stimuli to enable quick responses in a potentially life-threatening situation.[9][11] Typically, situations assessed as non-threatening are disregarded. In sleep paralysis, however, those pathways can become over-excited and move into a state of hyper-vigilance in which the mind perceives every external stimulus as a threat. The hyper-vigilance response can lead to the creation of endogenous stimuli that contribute to the perceived threat.[9] A similar process may explain the experience of the incubus presence, with slight variations, in which the evil presence is perceived by the subject to be attempting to suffocate them, either by pressing heavily on the chest or by strangulation.[10]
A neurological explanation hold that this results from a combination of the threat vigilance activation system and the muscle paralysis associated with sleep paralysis that removes voluntary control of breathing.[10] Several features of REM breathing patterns exacerbate the feeling of suffocation.[10] These include shallow rapid breathing, hypercapnia, and slight blockage of the airway, which is a symptom prevalent in sleep apnea patients.[9] According to this account, the subject attempts to breathe deeply and finds herself unable to do so, creating a sensation of resistance, which the threat-activated vigilance system interprets as an unearthly being sitting on her chest, threatening suffocation.[9] The sensation of entrapment causes a feedback loop when the fear of suffocation increases as a result of continued helplessness, causing the subject to struggle to end the SP episode.[10]
The intruder and incubus experiences highly correlate with one another, and moderately correlate with the third characteristic experience, vestibular-motor disorientation, also known as out-of-body experiences,[10] which differ from the other two in not involving the threat-activated vigilance system.[3] Under normal conditions, medial and vestibular nuclei, cortical, thalamic, and cerebellar centers coordinate things such as head and eye movement, and orientation in space.[9] A neurological hypothesis is that in sleep paralysis, these mechanisms—which usually coordinate body movement and provide information on body position—become activated and, because there is no actual movement, induce a floating sensation.[10] The vestibular nuclei in particular has been identified as being closely related to dreaming during the REM stage of sleep.[9] According to this hypothesis, vestibular-motor disorientation, unlike the intruder and incubus experiences, arise from completely endogenous sources of stimuli.
130,000 pages of Project Blue Book UFO files released online
Posted: 01/19/2015, 02:41pm | Nick Kotecki, Digital Editor at Sun Times Network
After years of filing Freedom of Information Act requests, UFO enthusiast John Greenewald has finally uploaded 130,000 pages of declassified UFO reports from the Air Force’s Project Blue Book to his database.
The files were posted by Greenewald to his online database called Black Vault. You can access Greenwald’s Black Vault here.
Greenewald’s Black Vault also includes documents from Project Sign and Project Grudge, which predate Project Blue Book and go back to the 1940s.
From USA Today:
Though the documents have been available for some time, there’s been no way to easily sift through the 12,600 files. They were previously on microfilm available only at the National Archives in Washington. Black Vault makes them available in downloadable PDF format.
The files were posted by Greenewald to his online database called Black Vault. You can access Greenwald’s Black Vault here.
Greenewald’s Black Vault also includes documents from Project Sign and Project Grudge, which predate Project Blue Book and go back to the 1940s.
From USA Today:
“Project Blue Book was based at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio. Between 1947 and 1969, the Air Force recorded 12,618 sightings of strange phenomena — 701 of which remain ‘unidentified.’There is nothing of 1947′s infamous Roswell, New Mexico crash in the declassified files. Many conspiracy theorists believe the military retrieved a crashed alien spacecraft and the aliens traveling inside.
“According to a 1985 fact sheet from Wright-Patterson, posted online by the National Archives, the Air Force decided to discontinue UFO investigations after concluding that ‘no UFO reported, investigated and evaluated by the Air Force has ever given any indication of threat to our national security (and) there has been no evidence indicating that sightings categorized as “unidentified” are extraterrestrial vehicles.’”
Though the documents have been available for some time, there’s been no way to easily sift through the 12,600 files. They were previously on microfilm available only at the National Archives in Washington. Black Vault makes them available in downloadable PDF format.
Sasquatch romps through Yellowstone National Park
Posted: 02/06/2015, 03:01pm | Nick Kotecki, Digital Editor at Sun Times Network
The Old Faithful geyser cam in Wyoming’s Yellowstone National Park apparently caught four “Bigfoot” creatures casually stalking a group of bison.
Afraid, indeed.
But wait. Who exactly are these dark figures in the background, lazily strolling through the snow?
Bigfoots? Bigfeet? Sasquatches? (Note: There is no official plural for Sasquatch listed in the Merriam-Webster dictionary.)
Another YouTuber who has 26 videos on the Bigfoot phenomenon, ThinkerThunker, took care to examine the footage in meticulously grave detail. He rules out the “creatures” being the product of computer animation, park rangers or people in ape costumes. He does not give a conclusive answer, but instead leaves the identity of the mysterious bipeds in question, “…are we witnessing some ancient scene that has been going on for thousands and thousands of years? You decide.”
We’ll leave this one to the “experts.”
The Old Faithful geyser cam in Wyoming’s Yellowstone National Park apparently caught four “Bigfoot” creatures casually stalking a group of bison.
RELATED: Reactions to Sasquatch stomping through Yellowstone
The footage was taken by the geyser’s online streaming cam and originally uploaded to YouTube by Mary Greeley. Greeley runs a “news” channel on YouTube and each video begins with the chirping of crickets. She purports to post items she believes to be “News the Mainstream don’t cover and are too afraid to show you.”Afraid, indeed.
Amateur Bigfoot analyst ThinkerThunker examines the clip in painstaking detail. –
Bigfoots? Bigfeet? Sasquatches? (Note: There is no official plural for Sasquatch listed in the Merriam-Webster dictionary.)
Another YouTuber who has 26 videos on the Bigfoot phenomenon, ThinkerThunker, took care to examine the footage in meticulously grave detail. He rules out the “creatures” being the product of computer animation, park rangers or people in ape costumes. He does not give a conclusive answer, but instead leaves the identity of the mysterious bipeds in question, “…are we witnessing some ancient scene that has been going on for thousands and thousands of years? You decide.”
We’ll leave this one to the “experts.”
For more oddities, visit Sun Times Network’s Kwerky Section
Amateur Bigfoot analyst ThinkerThunker examines the clip in painstaking detail. –
Correction: An earlier version of this post incorrectly stated that Yosemite rather than Yellowstone National Park is in Wyoming. We have made the correction and regret the error.
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