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'Beamship The Movie' is a 1985 documentary film featuring Billy Meier's extraordinary contact experiences with the Pleiadians (Plejaren).

All photographic and video evidence produced by Billy Meier has been verified by multiple researchers and experts, and found to be authentic.

There are a few people in great positions of power and control who would not like this information to be shared with the masses and have tried all possible ways to stop Billy from going public with his contact experiences, however have failed in doing so.



Billy Meier has miraculously survived 17 assassination attempts and shares some of his experiences in another brilliant documentary called "The Silent Revolution of Truth".



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Steve Jobs was always very open about his psychedelic use in the mainstream media sharing his positive LSD story with the masses. He said LSD helped him find solutions to complex problems which he otherwise found hard to crack.

Broadly considered a brand that inspires fervour and defines cool consumerism, 'Apple' has become one of the biggest corporations in the world, fuelled by game-changing products that tap into modern desires. Its leader, Steve Jobs, was a long-haired college dropout with infinite ambition, and an inspirational perfectionist with a bully's temper. A man of contradictions, he fused a Californian counterculture attitude and a mastery of the art of hype with explosive advances in computer technology.

Insiders including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, the chairman who ousted Jobs from the company he founded, and Jobs' chief of software, tell extraordinary stories of the rise, fall and rise again of Apple with Steve Jobs at its helm.

With Stephen Fry, world wide web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee and branding guru Rita Clifton, Evan Davis decodes the formula that took Apple from a suburban garage to global supremacy.




Biography :

Steven Paul Jobs (February 24, 1955 -- October 5, 2011) was an American businessman and inventor widely recognized as a charismatic pioneer of the personal computer revolution. He was co-founder, chairman, and chief executive officer of Apple Inc. Jobs was co-founder and previously served as chief executive of Pixar Animation Studios; he became a member of the board of directors of The Walt Disney Company in 2006, following the acquisition of Pixar by Disney.

In the late 1970s, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak engineered one of the first commercially successful lines of personal computers, the Apple II series. Jobs directed its aesthetic design and marketing along with A.C. "Mike" Markkula, Jr. and others.

In the early 1980s, Jobs was among the first to see the commercial potential of Xerox PARC's mouse-driven graphical user interface, which led to the creation of the Apple Lisa (engineered by Ken Rothmuller and John Couch) and, one year later, of Apple employee Jef Raskin's Macintosh. After losing a power struggle with the board of directors in 1985, Jobs left Apple and founded NeXT, a computer platform development company specializing in the higher-education and business markets.




Steve Jobs Documentary Film

In 1986, he acquired the computer graphics division of Lucasfilm Ltd, which was spun off as Pixar Animation Studios. He was credited in Toy Story (1995) as an executive producer. He remained CEO and majority shareholder at 50.1 percent until its acquisition by The Walt Disney Company in 2006, making Jobs Disney's largest individual shareholder at seven percent and a member of Disney's Board of Directors.

In 1996, NeXT was acquired by Apple. The deal brought Jobs back to the company he co-founded, and provided Apple with the NeXTSTEP codebase, from which the Mac OS X was developed." Jobs was named Apple advisor in 1996, interim CEO in 1997, and CEO from 2000 until his resignation. He oversaw the development of the iMac, iTunes, iPod, iPhone, and iPad and the company's Apple Retail Stores.

In 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer. Though it was initially treated, Jobs reported of a hormone imbalance, underwent a liver transplant in 2009, and appeared progressively thinner as his health declined. In August 2011, during his third medical leave, Jobs resigned as CEO, but continued to work for Apple as Chairman of the Board until his death.

On October 5, 2011, he died in his Palo Alto home, aged 56. His death certificate listed respiratory arrest as the immediate cause of death, with "metastatic pancreas neuroendocrine tumor" as the underlying cause. His occupation was listed as "entrepreneur" in the "high tech" business.








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The Japanese have always known to be 50 years ahead of the rest of the world when it comes to technology. There is some truth to this, here is an example of one such achievement by the Japan's Ministry of Defense who've developed a Spherical Flying Machine.

Weighing about 12 ounces (350 g), with a diameter of 16-inches (42 mm), this flying ball can launch and return vertically, maintain a stationary hover and zip along at up to 37 mph (60 km/h).

This should make one wonder why can't we use this technology instead of burning fuel all around the world driving our vehicles. Well, anytime soon now ... :)


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Over several months a crew from Swedish Television has been following the secretive media network, WikiLeaks, and its work behind the scenes. The result is a one hour feature documentary called "WikiRebels" that tells the story behind the story.

'WikiLeaks' has become world famous in record time after having made the biggest disclosure of classified information in history. There has been a dramatic increase in the amount of information available to the world about everything from torture in the war in Iraq to the shady business dealings of Icelandic bankers. But few know anything about what drives WikiLeaks or about its mysterious founder Julian Assange, declared a hero by some and accused of everything from espionage to rape by others. Who are the people behind WikiLeaks and how did they get where they are today?


We are in the midst of a revolution, with a new brand of rebels headed by an IT guerilla with no national base, who has become a global power in no time. But what few people realise is that the publishing of classified American documents is only a small step along the way, in a long-term political and ideological struggle.

WikiLeaks' ambition is to change the entire world using information as its weapon. The idea is to combat all the secretiveness of government and industry in order to expose all the hidden criminality and abuse of power. The struggle is waged from students’ flats, hotel rooms, cafés and server halls all over the world.

In WikiRebels, Jesper Huor and Bosse Lindquist follow the organisation’s development, from back when its founder Julian Assange was a teenager, hacking into the army’s mainframe computers, up until the present. Along the way, the documentary recounts how WikiLeaks has posted millions of classified documents on the web and blown the whistle on everything from corrupt African presidents to swindling Swiss and Icelandic bankers.

Assange and several of the organisation’s key players appear in the programme, giving their first in-depth interviews. The documentary will also be the very first to give a detailed account of the central role that was and is still being played by two small countries on the northern edge of Europe – Sweden and Iceland.


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