Thursday, May 17, 2007

Limited Technology + Limited Personell = Limited Accountability

Only a handful of people worked on the CSM and LM computer guidance systems, which in total memory, according Don Eyles - one of the MIT developers - amounted to 152Kb - less than 12% of the capacity of a common 1.4MB floppy disk.

http://www.klabs.org/history/apollo_11_alarms/eyles_2004/eyles_2004.htm
http://www.zip.com.au/~psmith/Luminary.html

Yes, it could have been simulated - and it was.

yaTelemetry
LM telemetry monitor
yaTelemetry would be a computer program that provides a monitor or terminal capable of displaying telemetry information downlinked from the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC). The AGC periodically transmitted telemetry information, which was displayed on monitors in Mission Control. Similarly, the virtual yaAGC periodically transmits telemetry data, using virtual radio waves consisting of a communication channel (socket), and yaTelemetry would be capable of receiving this information. The characteristics of the digital uplink and downlink can be explored by reading section 2 of the Guidance System Operations Plan (GSOP) for the LM or the CM.

The accompanying photo [not pictured on this blog] is actually a screen capture from the "Apollo 11" episode of the great HBO mini-series From the Earth to the Moon. I have so far been unable to find actual photographs or specifications of the telemetry displays.
In addition to telemetry downlinks---i.e., reception by ground control of data from the AGC---digital uplinks also possible. Uplinks were (and are) handled by the simple expedient of transmitting DSKY keycodes, encoded in a triply-redundant format to allow detection of errors. The AGC flight software treats DSKY and uplink keycodes in a very similar fashion, so ground control could remotely perform any task which the astronaut could perform at the DSKY keypad, including data entry, entry of short program patches into memory, and activation of programs.


Flight Simulator LM http://www.eaglelander3d.com/
DSKY Simulator http://apollo.spaceborn.dk/dsky.html

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

New Movies Uploaded to LiveVideo.com

Thursday, May 3, 2007

NASA Between a Rock and a Hard Space

Where have we seen this before?

Forget Apollo, Antarctic Moon-rock better

http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/node/666

This little gem should keep you truth-seekers busy for awhile as well:

http://www.erichufschmid.net/MoreInfoForScienceChallenge.html

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Getting that extra bounce - behind the rover...

Here is a video recently published that seems to prove that incredible 1/6 Gravity jumps are possible only when obstructed by an object near the feet. Hmmmm...

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Given the evidence, is it reasonable to assume the Apollo moon landings were faked?

It has been often argued that Apollo's NASA operation was too massive and that there were way too many professionals involved to conduct a successful cover-up the 7 trips to and from the moon as well as the 6 purported landings. In addition, it seems that there were too many systems involved not to experience anomalies in the data being received from the spacecraft's DSKY or onboard computer.

However, we must keep in mind that only a select few needed to know that the telemetry data being fed to Houston was in fact recorded earlier and rehearsed by NASA's Cold War Warriors - the Apollo 'moon-bound' astronauts. In addition, the DSKY was in fact a computer with a small amount of memory and processing power. Make no mistake - it could do it's job, but it could also in it's simplicity be easily manipulated by the right minds.



"Allowing for the identical Apollo guidance computer (AGC) in the Command Module (CM), containing a program called COLOSSUS, it is correct to say that we landed on the moon with 152 Kbytes [equivalent to less than 1/9th of a 1.4MB floppy disk] of computer memory."

Don Eyles - NASA DSKY [LEM Guidance Computer] Co-Designer

Although Luna16 does not presently have access to information which reveals exactly what counter-measures were taken to insure the success of the Apollo Moon Landings Hoax, we CAN know from the evidence we currently have - that fake films were indeed made, astronauts were directly involved, and that officials behind the scenes were conducting operations that average operator at Houston Control knew nothing about. This evidence has been released in the form of two moonmovie.com films: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon and Monkey Business: Apollo 11 Fake Photography.

Although the attached video provides for speculation on the part of those who don't buy into NASA's official story, there is no doubt that the practice of coercion and assasination are not exclusive to intelligence agencies.

Elliot Whitter

AFTH, LLC



Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Lunar Landing of Apollo 17 an Obvious Fake

In this video, it is easy to see upon close observation of the moon's surface, that although the craters should have jerked violently to the left as did the shadow of the Lunar Lander, they do not. The craters remain still, despite what should have been a violent shaking of the camera as well.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

"Well zoom it in slowly to get the best magnification we can." - Neil Armstrong

APOLLO 11 Astronauts caught deceiving public during in-flight television broadcast that never completed aired.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Opening of New Moon Landing Hoax Website


AFTH, LLC Moon Landing Hoax announces the beginning of a new website which will carry on the quest for truth behind the Apollo moon landings fraud.



At the beginning it will deal mainly with sales, but later develop into a Moon Landing Hoax Science Center.

A sister site has been published as well: MOONHOAX.US