Monday, 24 April 2017

A 3-Year-Old Boy Recalls Past Life | reincarnations of our past lives





A 3-Year-Old Boy Recalls Past Life |reincarnations of our past lives





We’ve all experienced the explainable in life at one point or another, whether it be déjà vu or out of body experiences. Yet it can be easy to forget that what we consider unusual or out of the ordinary as adults were innately accepted and understood when we were children, prior to our conditioning. This is becoming more and more apparent as cases of children who remember past lives continue to surface around the world.





The story you are about to hear is true. Imagine you are the parents of a young child and as soon as the child can talk and express ideas, he begins to refer adamantly to a past life he has had. How would you respond?



In the case of this young man, there was more than just talk going on. He continuously insisted that he remembered a past life and that in that life he was murdered. The boy led his parents to a very specific spot and told them that this is where he had died. The parents felt compelled to give in and begin digging at the spot.



Can you guess what they found? Yes, a corpse! To add to the fascination of this amazing story, the boy also led his parents to the location of the ax that was used in his murder and this is thought to explain the red mark he was born with on his forehead.



The boy eventually told his parents the exact name of his murderer and after some time, the man was located and even confessed to the crime. The occurrence of past lives is still in the realm of theory from a standpoint of science, yet stories like these are extremely compelling and difficult to explain away. What do you think? Do we live multiple lives? Is it possible to remember them?



That is, until he lead village elders to the spot where he remembers being buried. Mixed in with the group of village elders was a man by the name of Dr. Eli Lasch. Dr. Eli Lasch is known in Gaza for developing a government medical system. Lasch witnessed all of these events.



The villagers dug up the spot where the boy says his former corpse remains and sure enough there was as skeleton there. Mysteriously, a large axe mark on the skeleton corresponds to a birth mark on the boys head.



The boy says he was murdered with an axe and then lead village elders to the spot where the murderer buried the weapon. Sure enough, they dug up an axe.



The boy then lead people to the village he was from in his past life and told them of his previous name.



When people of the boy's former home village were asked about a man going by this name...they said he had disappeared 4 years earlier and never returned.



Remember, the boy was three years old.



But strangest of all, the boy recounted exactly who the murderer was.

When the boy confronted his killer, the man's face turned a pale white and he started acting very suspicious.



Once the boy lead elders to the exact spot of his corpse and the murder weapon the killer gave in and admitted to the crime -- for which he ended up being charged with.



Is the boy a product of reincarnation? Are we all perhaps reincarnations of our past lives?


forYour children | Parents are flipping car seats too soon





forYour children | Parents are flipping car seats too soon



Most parents flip their child's car seat forward-facing too early, and loved ones who know better often don't speak up. A new campaign aimed at creating awareness is hoping to change that.



A new study from baby brand Chicco reports 72% of parents say they are uncomfortable talking to other parents about keeping their children riding rear-facing before age 2, even though most know American Academy of Pediatrics' recommendations.



The AAP says all infants and toddlers should ride in a rear-facing seat until they are at least 2 or until they reach the highest weight or height allowed by their car safety seat manufacturer. The CDC reports 59% of car seats are misused in a way that could reduce effectiveness. This comes at a time when motor vehicle injuries are the leading cause of death among U.S. children.





Dr. David Hill, pediatrician and Chicco child passenger safety spokesperson, said rear-facing car seats are five times safer than front-facing in a crash.



Daphne Oz, celebrity ambassador for TurnAfter2, said at a time when parents are bombarded with advice and information, often they're left to "guess" what's best for their children. She says TurnAfter2 promotes a positive way for parents to help each other keep families safe while traveling.

Sunday, 23 April 2017

Erin Moran, Joanie from "Happy Days", dead at age 56





Erin Moran, Joanie from "Happy Days", dead at age 56





Henry Winkler and Ron Howard lead tributes to their Happy Days co-star Erin Moran after actress who played feisty teenager Joanie Cunningham dies aged 56 of suspected heroin overdose

Child star Erin Moran was found dead by EMTs in Indiana on Saturday afternoon

She shot to fame in her role as Joanie on the popular sitcom Happy Days

Her co-stars including Henry Winkler said they hoped she would find peace

Moran continued the role in 1982 in the short-lived spinoff Joanie Loves Chachi



In 2012 she was kicked out of a trailer she was sharing with her husband



Erin Moran, who shot to fame playing teenager Joanie Cunningham in 1970s sitcom Happy Days, has died at the age of 56.

Authorities found Moran’s body in Indiana following a call about an ‘unresponsive female about 4pm Saturday.



Winkler, who played Arthur ‘Fonzie’ Fonzarelli in the show, tweeted just moments after the death was announced: 'OH Erin, now you will finally have the peace you wanted so badly here on earth, Rest In It serenely now, too soon.'

Howard, who played Richie Cunningham, tweeted a tribute to his on-screen little sister, saying: 'Such sad sad news. RIP Erin. I'll always choose to remember you on our show making scenes better, getting laughs and lighting up tv screens.'

A Burbank, California native, Moran began acting in TV and movies before she was 10 years old. She was just 14 when she signed on to play Joanie, the feisty little sister of Ron Howard's character Richie Cunningham, on Happy Days.

She became a household name as a result of her performance on the show, which started in 1974 and ran for almost a decade

Thursday, 20 April 2017

Facebook Expects AR Smart glasses To Go Mainstream In 2022





Facebook Expects AR Smart glasses To Go Mainstream In 2022





For a brief moment it seemed that Google Glass and the concept of smartglasses was a failure given that Google shut down the project (the first iteration), and also based on the hostility towards users with smartglasses. However we haven’t seen similar backlash when Snap launched Spectacles which was basically a pair of augmented reality glasses.





Does this mean that AR-based wearables are due to become mainstream? According to Facebook, yes, but we shouldn’t expect that to happen until at least 2022. Speaking at Facebook’s F8 conference, Michael Abrash, Facebook’s chief scientist of Oculus Research said, “Despite all the attention focused on AR today it will be five years at best before we’re really at the start of the ramp to widespread, glasses-based augmented reality, before AR has its





Abrash also goes on to add, “20 or 30 years from now, I predict that instead of carrying stylish smartphones everywhere, we’ll wear stylish glasses. Those glasses will offer VR, AR and everything in between and we’ll use them all day.” That being said, it is interesting that Facebook is looking into AR tech, especially given that they have a vested interest in VR with their acquisition of Oculus.

Sunday, 16 April 2017

Computer pioneer Robert W Taylor dies aged 85





Robert W Taylor, who was instrumental in creating the internet and the modern personal computer, has died at the age of 85.



Robert W Taylor, who was instrumental in creating the internet and the modern personal computer, has died in California.



His son, Kurt, said Mr Taylor was 85 when he died on Thursday in Woodside.



Mr Taylor funded researchers or led teams of scientists who are responsible for some of the most important technologies of the modern world.



As he had predicted, the limited communications tool morphed into a system that supplies people with fingertip access to everything from encyclopedias to investment advice.



In 1961, Mr Taylor was a project manager for NASA when he directed funding to Douglas Engelbart at the Stanford Research Institute, who helped develop the modern computer mouse



Taylor oversaw pioneering PC's creation

He also oversaw a team that helped create the Alto — a pioneering personal computer — while working at the Xerox Corp's Palo Alto Research Centre (PARC).



The technology inspired the Apple Macintosh computer, with Apple co-founder Steve Jobs declaring a GUI "inevitable" after some of his engineers convinced him to visit PARC at the end of 1979.



Mr Taylor's engineering team also helped develop ethernet local networking and a word processing program that became Microsoft Word.



Stanford University Silicon Valley Archives project historian Leslie Berlin told the New York Times



In 2004, he and other PARC researchers were awarded the Draper Prize from the National Academy of Engineering for development of "the first practical networked personal computers