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more about #meteor GitEmSteveDave_ My Brute Dojo Code CDIAFIFE: Is anyone else surprised that MSNBC has a "Satellite Desk" in their news division? more » BullfightsOnAcid: This is how 'War of the Worlds' started... and 'Men in Black'... and 'The Blob'... and 'The Thing' and the Stephen King chapter of 'Creepshow'... and ... more » Garrison Dean: R.O.A.C.H.: I know what it is!!! [io9.com] more » normandesmond: It wasn't a meteor. It was the muscle car UFO in night-time mode. more » rek: This isn't going to help you steal Hans Island from us, Denmark, but congratulations on topping our meteor flash. more » goldfarb: wow...it's almost exactly like this one from November: [io9.com] more » ThisDudeRufus: Oh, I thought it was a jab at Scandinavia's weather. Whatevs. more » Garrison Dean: R.O.A.C.H.: If I lived up there I'd be keeping my eyes peeled for Moorwen. more » -
#whattowatch
Eureka And Warehouse 13, Plus Another Meteor TV Movie
Finally, some interesting new television! Syfy is premiering the new series Warehouse 13 (think of it as a G-rated X-Files) and Eureka is back for a new season. Also Jason Alexander and Christopher Lloyd team up for NBC's Meteor movie. More » -
#meteor
Giant Fireball Blazes to Earth in Texas
Experts have been scratching their heads over a huge, bright fireball that zoomed out of the sky over Texas yesterday. Reporters and the FAA claimed it was satellite debris, but astronomers say they're wrong. More » -
#megaimpacts
The Earth-Bashers
Mars isn't the only planet with awe-inspiring craters. Here on Earth, we've been pummeled by space rocks in the not-so-distant past, and our planet has the scars to prove it. A new photo essay in National Geographic by Stephen Alvarez tells the story of planetary impacts like this one (above) in Arizona, U.S., called simply Meteor Crater. It's almost a mile wide. Check out an even more awesome one below. More » -
#meteor
James Bond Fails To Stop New York From Getting Atomized
Long before there was Armageddon or Deep Impact, or even the fear of our own falling spy satellites, there was Meteor. Sean Connery goes into full science mode as he tries to stop a huge meteor named Orpheus from crashing into the Earth. The good news: he's partially successful. The bad news: Oops, sorry about that Hong Kong and New York. The opening scene, where astronauts watch the cosmic ballet of a comet striking an asteroid just before it obliterates them and their ship, is worth the price of admission alone. More » -



