This Is What I Think.
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
No Exit
TV Show Episode Scripts > The First (2018) > Season 1 > Cycles
The First (2018) s01e03 Episode Script
Cycles
(from internet transcript)
This looks systemic.
Let's not jump to any conclusions.
This isn't a crisis yet.
We don't know if our ascent vehicle is making fuel.
http://hvom.blogspot.com/2016/09/battlestar-galactica_26.html
Posted by Kerry Burgess at 5:32 PM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2016
Battlestar Galactica
JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 02/13/09 3:51 PM
I sense nothing but hate from these people.
This place is pure evil.
[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 13 February 2009 excerpt ends]
http://en.battlestarwiki.org/wiki/No_Exit
BATTLESTAR GALACTICA WIKI
No Exit
Episode No. Season 4, Episode 15
US airdate USA February 13, 2009
Back in sickbay, Anders awakens, asking Kara to gather up the others of his kind. He remembers everything about his past as a Cylon and its significance.
"Make Room for Daddy" (1953) {For Every Man There's a Woman (#9.1)} USA:2 October 1961
From 10/2/1961 ( premiere US TV series "Password" ) To 2/13/2009 is 17301 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/16/2013 ( --- ) is 17301 days
http://www.tv.com/shows/battlestar-galactica/no-exit-1247294/
tv.com
Battlestar Galactica Season 4 Episode 15
No Exit
Aired Friday 10:00 PM Feb 13, 2009 on Syfy
As Sam Anders recovers from his head injury onboard the Galactica, he begins to remember events from ancient Earth. Meanwhile, the Final Cylon struggles with the fallout from the Final Five's former plans. One of the humanoid Cylons vows to get revenge for being created in the image of Man. Tyrol informs Admiral Adama about the extensive structural damage on the Galactica.
AIRED: Feb 13, 2009
"Battlestar Galactica"
"No Exit"
USA 13 February 2009
Episode 15 Season 4 DVD video:
00:27:48
Ellen Tigh: Something's happened.
Cavil: They've destroyed the Resurrection Hub.
Ellen Tigh: Begun contemplating your mortality?
Cavil: More than that. Our extinction.
Ellen Tigh: Always so dramatic.
Cavil: It's true, Ellen. We can't procreate biologically, so we're going to have to find a way to rebuild Resurrection.
Ellen Tigh: Well, good luck with that.
Cavil: Don't need luck. I need your help. They destroyed the Hub, but they don't even know about the Colony. All your equipment is there.
Ellen Tigh: I only know part of the system, John. It would take all five of us to rebuild it, and even then, I'm not sure -
Cavil: You're lying.
Ellen Tigh: No, I'm not, John.
Cavil: Don't insult my intelligence.
Cavil: Your children are dying, Ellen, and you won't lift a finger to save us? Why? Out of spite? Because I refuse to kneel to your orthodoxy? [ to Boomer: ] Now you finally see the truth about your Final Five.
Boomer: Just tell us. Tell us about Resurrection.
http://hvom.blogspot.com/2016/09/thats-blessed-relief.html
Posted by Kerry Burgess at 5:55 AM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2016
From 3/6/2009 To 3/16/2013 ( --- ) is 1471 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/12/1969 is 1471 days
http://www.tv.com/shows/battlestar-galactica/islanded-in-a-stream-of-stars-1247297/
tv.com
Battlestar Galactica Season 4 Episode 18
Islanded in a Stream of Stars
Aired Friday 10:00 PM Mar 06, 2009 on Syfy
The rebel Cylons and the Colonial humans react to Hera's kidnapping while the physical condition of the Galactica continues to deteriorate.
AIRED: 3/6/09
JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 03/06/09 10:49 PM
http://my.excite.com/tv/prog.jsp?id=EP007107490082&sid=24533&sn=SCIFIP&st=200903062200&cn=58
Battlestar Galactica (New)
58 SCIFIP: Friday, March 6 10:00 PM
Science fiction
Islanded in a Stream of Stars
Original Air Date: Mar 06, 2009
[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 06 March 2009 excerpt ends]
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/wfried.htm
William Frederick Friedman
Colonel, United States Army
He was the chief cryptanalyst of the War Department in Washington, D.C. from 1941 to 1947. He led the U.S. Army team (Special Intelligence Service) which broke the major Japanese diplomatic code in 1940 (Purple Code) and subsequently remained a key member of the Operation Magic teams which decoded Japanese ciphers and enabled U.S. military commanders to read Japanese intercepts on Japanese military movements.
Magic was the code name for the joint Army and Navy operation, first set up in 1939, to break Japanese diplomatic and military codes, Magic provided the U.S. military and political chiefs with much important intelligence throughout the war and its contribution to maior Allied operational successes has until recently been largely underestimated. The Navy Special Intelligence Unit, Communications Security Unit, with a staff by 1942 of about 300, worked with Army Signals Intelligence Section (SIS), deciphering and relaying enormous amounts of traffic in coded messages sent by the Japanese government to their agencies worldwide and by Imperial Headquarters to their commanders at sea and in the field.
Probably the most important contribution made by Magic was to the U.S. victory in the Pacific was the decoding of ciphers that revealed the Japanese attack plan for the Battle of Midway in mid-1942. Informed in advance of the Japanese objectives, Admiral Nimitz was able to preempt Japanese strategy and fight off a superior Japanese force, decisively halting the thrust of the Japanese offensive in the Pacific.
He was born in Kishinez, Russia, on September 14, 1891, he came to the United States in 1893. He died at Washington, D.C. on November 12, 1969 and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Courtesy of the National Security Agency
http://www.giac.org/paper/gsec/431/colonel-william-f-friedman-the-godfather-cryptology/101052
Global Information Assurance Certification Paper
Conclusion
Colonel William Friedman is just one of many notable personalities who participated in the evolution of Cryptography, he is in the company of Julius Caesar, Sir Francis Bacon, and Thomas Jefferson, just to name a few. Colonel Friedman went on to become a key cryptologist of the Department of Defense. In 1964 President Harry Truman awarded him the Medal of Merit, which was the highest Presidential civilian award. He retired in 1955. He died in Washington DC on November 12th, 1969 and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. He is still known as the greatest cryptologist of all time. His epitaph reads “knowledge is power”.
From: Kerry Burgess
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 1:05 PM
To: Kerry Burgess
Subject: Re: computer revolution
Kerry Burgess wrote:
http://news.com.com/1946+ENIAC/2009-1006_3-6038974.html?tag=nefd.lede
This computer, unfurled to scientists on Feb. 14, helped launch the computer revolution and the U.S. tech dominance for decades. Few suspected actually what those next 60 years would bring. The evolution of computing devices has come a long way since the days of ENIAC.
[The way I see it, this was the modern equivalent of man inventing fire. Today's PC are a much improved version of that invention, in essence, a match or a butane ligther. Software is the fuel for that energy source. I don't think we have reached a point yet where you could compare the computer to the combustion engine. After that would be the progress that produces the computer equivalent of a jet engine. Of course, some marketing weenie is going to read this and start trying to refer to their products as jet engines.]
[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 14 February 2006 excerpt ends]
JOURNAL ARCHIVE: From: Kerry Burgess
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 1:05 PM
To: Kerry Burgess
Subject: Re: computer revolution
http://news.com.com/1952+UNIVAC/2009-1006_3-6038974-2.html?tag=st.next
1952: UNIVAC
Univac was the primary product of the Eckert-Mauchly computer company. Not only was it faster, but it demonstrated the shift from base-ten to binary code. A Univac was used by CBS news to predict the outcome of the 1952 Presidential Election. That event brought computing into the public eye, according to many historians. It wouldn't be long before scientific focus shifted to microprocessors.
[Not only was it binary machine language, but to manually program it, you had to start with base-10, convert that mentally to base-8, and then mentally convert that to base-2, or binary.]
[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 14 February 2006 excerpt ends]
caprica_s1e5_00h35m12s.jpg
- posted by Kerry Burgess 11:02 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Wednesday 24 October 2018