GLO 76

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Hramm
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GLO 76

Post by Hramm »

Preview out:
Image

Raw: Phase76 raw

Scanlation:
Phase 76 more download links at download ---> manga
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andlgx
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Post by andlgx »

:O
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jkays
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Post by jkays »

I cant read russian but would i be right in assuming that the statue Alita is looking at is of Laika the first dog in space
Kern
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Post by Kern »

kudriawka Sputnik 6 in 1960
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MrFaber
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Post by MrFaber »

I'm waiting to see how useless and pointless is this tail :D
Kamui04
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Post by Kamui04 »

Actually searching for info and reading the few legible bits from that textbox, the dog is Laika. Yes, the dog & first living being that was sent into orbit in the sputnik-2 on nov 3, 1957, but the plate and textbox are using her original name, Kudryavka.

Some blog entries I found about her.
http://transcendentalbloviation.blogspo ... -wake.html
http://ideonexus.com/2007/11/03/50th-an ... vka-laika/

Quick trans

Phase;76 I'll show to the whole world.
Text: Those unexplored fields
Text: are there for us to explore!
TL Note: the literal translation is "The walls/barriers known as unexplored fields(or unprecedented discoveries/achievements) are there to tear holes in them". Yes, that's the literal translation so don't complain.
Textbox: Space Dog Kudryavka
Textbox: кудрявка
Textbox: preview not legible enough to read completely, but for short it mentions Laika's launch into orbit in the Sputnik-2 on Nov. 3, 1957.


Venusian: What the hell is this!?
Text: An state of emergency stirs Mbadi to act.
Last edited by Kamui04 on Wed Mar 19, 2008 5:23 pm, edited 7 times in total.
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HumanRage
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Post by HumanRage »

yeah, more ladder council, and more french-venusian-baby-eaters :P
Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes. (Oscar Wilde)
Corporations have no soul to save, and they have no body to incarcerate. (Baron Thurlow)
Twitchywrote
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Post by Twitchywrote »

MrFaber wrote:I'm waiting to see how useless and pointless is this tail :D
Well, don't forget, she wove that body from the inside of Tungunska (sp?), so she may have just used it as a residual image.
Besides, it swatted away Frova. :)
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Akumeno
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Post by Akumeno »

Yes More GLO!!!!! most find a stick and poke crazyankan, Thanks in advance dude!! :D
Flan is harmony
Flan is power
Flan is law
Flan is destiny
Flan is survival

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crazyankan
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Post by crazyankan »

Will start on a LQ scanlation right after I get the script. I promise!

And stop poking me with sticks all the time ;)
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Sergio Nova
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Post by Sergio Nova »

Anxiously awaiting the link to download it.
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Sergio Nova
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Post by Sergio Nova »

crazyankan wrote:Will start on a LQ scanlation right after I get the script. I promise!

And stop poking me with sticks all the time ;)
Well, as you must be aware, there are guys who like that!!
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Sergio Nova
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Post by Sergio Nova »

HumanRage wrote:yeah, more ladder council, and more french-venusian-baby-eaters :P
Did you really like the idea of French eating children?
Initially I understood that as a bad taste joke with haute cuisine.
But perhaps there is a pun with some sexual perversion, although I believe such things exist everywhere (especially in Japan, so he did not need to use French as models).
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Akumeno
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Post by Akumeno »

well is common to blame always the outsider guy :shock:
Flan is harmony
Flan is power
Flan is law
Flan is destiny
Flan is survival

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ederly
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preview

Post by ederly »

Are they watching the tower under zalem ?
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hepar
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Post by hepar »

I can clean the first page (as I did for GLO75) for you on the weekend if you like.

Kosmonauts claim that when it's complete silence on ISS at night sometimes you can hear a dog barking in space.
Last edited by hepar on Thu Mar 20, 2008 1:02 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Kamui04
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Post by Kamui04 »

No need to waste time cleaning that Lo-res image Hepar, wait till the raw it out. Hope they upload it around the weekend >.<
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Post by Kern »

The first animals intentionally sent into space were fruit flies, accompanied by corn seeds aboard a U.S.-launched V2 rocket in 1947. The purpose of the experiment was to explore the effects of radiation exposure at high altitudes. Some further V2 missions carried biological samples, including moss.

Albert II, a Rhesus Monkey, became the first monkey in space on June 14, 1949, in a U.S.-launched V2, (after the failure of the original Albert's mission). Albert II died on impact after a parachute failure. Numerous monkeys of several species were flown by the U.S. in the 1950s.
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MrFaber
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Post by MrFaber »

>Are they watching the tower under zalem ?

Unlikely, if Kaos and Vector even started its constuction it can't ben far over the preliminar works, like foundings and even workers' apartaments. Ah, not mentioning the scraps removal, the tower have to be build in the place of the main scrap pile. :)
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hepar
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Post by hepar »

Kern wrote:The first animals intentionally sent into space were fruit flies, accompanied by corn seeds aboard a U.S.-launched V2 rocket in 1947. The purpose of the experiment was to explore the effects of radiation exposure at high altitudes. Some further V2 missions carried biological samples, including moss.
Soviet Government doesn't consider this low attitudes as "space" or "kosmos".
Before launching Sputnik-I and II soviet engineers sent dogs on low attitudes 8 or so times too. I think 2 dogs died that time in an accident and one ran away from space city to be never found.
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hepar
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Post by hepar »

Kamui04 wrote:No need to waste time cleaning that Lo-res image Hepar, wait till the raw it out.
Yes, I'm talking about good-looking raw to clean.
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Cailon
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Post by Cailon »

hepar wrote:and one ran away from space city to be never found.
Maybe it was complete silence in space and the dog heard another dogs bark :D. Funny story though!

Anyway, I like Kishiro for accrediting the sowjet space program. Everyone only talks about the first landing on the surface of the moon today, but Sputnik, Laika and Gagarin were the real beginning.
The chapter seems to be a mix of the ZOTT intermission andsome new events; as everyone, I can't await it!
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Post by Kern »

Before Sputnik, in 1946, scientists in the New Mexico desert were able to see the first-ever

picture of earth as it is seen from space.

The grainy, black-and-white photos were taken from an altitude of 65 miles by a 35-millimeter

motion picture camera riding on a V-2 missile launched from the White Sands Missile Range.

Snapping a new frame every second and a half, the rocket-borne camera climbed straight up, then

fell back to Earth minutes later, slamming into the ground at 500 feet per second. The camera

itself was smashed, but the film, protected in a steel cassette, was unharmed.

Fred Rulli was a 19-year-old enlisted man assigned to the recovery team that drove into the

desert to retrieve film from those early V-2 shots. When the scientists found the cassette in

good shape, he recalls, "They were ecstatic, they were jumping up and down like kids." Later,

back at the launch site, "when they first projected [the photos] onto the screen, the scientists

just went nuts."

Before 1946, the highest pictures ever taken of the Earth’s surface were from the Explorer II

balloon, which had ascended 13.7 miles in 1935, high enough to discern the curvature of the

Earth. The V-2 cameras reached more than five times that altitude, where they clearly showed the

planet set against the blackness of space. When the movie frames were stitched together, the

panoramas covered a million square miles or more at a single glance. As Clyde Holliday, the

engineer who developed the camera, wrote in National Geographic in 1950, the V-2 photos showed

for the first time "how our Earth would look to visitors from another planet coming in on a

space ship."

It was one of many firsts for the V-2 research program of the late 1940s, during which the Army

fired dozens of captured German missiles brought to White Sands in 300 railroad cars at the end

of the war. While the missileers used the V-2s to refine their own rocket designs, scientists

were invited to pack instruments inside the nosecone to study temperatures, pressures, magnetic

fields and other physical characteristics of the unexplored upper atmosphere.

Holliday’s discussion of the photos therefore leaned toward the technical. In those days before

Walt Disney and Collier’s magazine planted the idea of space exploration in the public

imagination, he was even sparing with his use of the term "space." The V-2 photos, he wrote in

1950, were taken in "the little-known reaches of the upper air." Today, even though the

definition is somewhat arbitrary, anything above 100 kilometers (62.5 miles) is considered

space.
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HumanRage
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Post by HumanRage »

Sergio wrote:
HumanRage wrote:yeah, more ladder council, and more french-venusian-baby-eaters :P
Did you really like the idea of French eating children?
Initially I understood that as a bad taste joke with haute cuisine.
But perhaps there is a pun with some sexual perversion, although I believe such things exist everywhere (especially in Japan, so he did not need to use French as models).
i'm french, and it makes me laugh because we usually say people living in the north of France do eat people ( that may be true, but it's rare, but when it happens, it's in the north :P )
Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes. (Oscar Wilde)
Corporations have no soul to save, and they have no body to incarcerate. (Baron Thurlow)
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hepar
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Post by hepar »

Cailon wrote:Maybe it was complete silence in space and the dog heard another dogs bark :D. Funny story though!
The dog who had to fly in rocket on low attitudes, named Bolek, suddenly disappeared from Space City. So scientists cougt some unlucky stray dog and put her in rocket without any training. (Her name was later anounced as 'ZIB' - Missing Bolek Proxy). After that they let unharmed dog go.
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