Elliott Sadler Stanley Tools 2010 Diecast Review

Posted on July 6th, 2010 by admin in stanleytools | 2 Comments »

This is a cool car. I forgot the 360 view sorry!

Duration : 0:4:36

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Stanley Donwood and Dr. Tchock Exhibiton in Barcelona

Posted on July 1st, 2010 by admin in stanley works | 7 Comments »

A film by Shorn Rah concerning the exhibition of works by Stanley Donwood and Dr. Tchock in Barcelona in November 2006

Duration : 0:9:33

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A Clockwork Orange TRAILER

Posted on July 1st, 2010 by admin in the stanley works | 25 Comments »

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 satirical science fiction film adaptation of a 1962 novel of the same name, written by Anthony Burgess. The adaptation was produced, co-written, and directed by Stanley Kubrick. It stars Malcolm McDowell as the charismatic and psychopathic delinquent Alex DeLarge whose pleasures are classical music (especially Beethoven), rape, and ultra-violence. He is the leader of a small gang of thugs (Pete, Georgie and Dim), whom he calls his “droogs” (from the Russian word ???? meaning “friend” or “buddy”). Alex narrates most of the film in “Nadsat”, a fractured contemporary adolescent argot comprising Slavic (especially Russian), English, and Cockney rhyming slang. A Clockwork Orange features disturbing, violent imagery to facilitate social commentary on psychiatry, youth gangs, and other topics in a futuristic dystopian Britain.
The film features a soundtrack comprising mostly classical music selections and Moog synthesizer compositions by Wendy (then Walter) Carlos. One notable exception is “Singing in the Rain,” which was chosen because it was a song actor Malcolm McDowell knew all the words to.

Duration : 0:1:1

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Stanley Tools Dealer Meeting in Bahrain (13-01-2010)

Posted on July 1st, 2010 by admin in stanleytools | No Comments »

Stanley Tools has conducted the FIRST dealer meeting in Bahrain with M. H. Al Mahroos showing the new technologies and products that provides competitive advantage and uniqueness on the products, and to be close to the dealers.

Stanley is proud of its reputation for excellence. We are dedicated to continually testing, designing and improving our products to ensure quality and maximum function. Maintaining our standing of being the world’s best at what we do is important to us and what you expect from a name like Stanley.

For More Information:-

http://www.stanleytools.com

http://www.almahroos

Duration : 0:1:50

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6-Minute Memristor Guide

Posted on June 26th, 2010 by admin in stanley works | 25 Comments »

R. Stanley Williams, whose team discovered the memristor (the fourth fundamental circuit element) gives us a quick whiteboard talk about how the device works.

Duration : 0:6:2

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Flat Stanley’s Motorcycle Trike Adventure

Posted on June 21st, 2010 by admin in stanley works | No Comments »

The children’s character, Flat Stanley, takes a ride on a motorcycle trike and learns how it works.

Duration : 0:9:7

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The Dawn of Man: 2001 Space Odyssey

Posted on June 21st, 2010 by admin in the stanley works | 16 Comments »

http://encognitive.com/Alpha-Centaurians.pdf

http://www.encognitive.com

Bluntly, 2001 is one of the best science-fiction films made to date, if not the very best. Stanley Kubrick was a genius of a film maker and this is one of his very best works. And although it is misunderstood by many, and respectively underrated, it is considered one of the best films of all time and I’ll have to agree. Back in 1968, no one had done anything like this before, and no one has since. It was a marvel of a special effects breakthrough back then, and seeing how the effects hold up today, it is no wonder as to why. The film still looks marvelous after almost forty years! Take note CGI people. Through the use of large miniatures and realistic lighting, Kubrick created some of the best special effects ever put on celluloid. This aspect alone almost single-handedly created the chilling void of the space atmosphere which is also attributed to the music and realistic sound effects. I can’t think of another film where you can’t here anything in space, like it is in reality. Not only is the absence of sound effects in space realistic, it is used cleverly as a tool to establish mood, and it works flawlessly.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0062622/

Duration : 0:7:13

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Stanley Tools – 1980’s UK Advert

Posted on June 21st, 2010 by admin in stanleytools | No Comments »

‘ Stanley – The best tools you can lay your hands on’

Duration : 0:0:12

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Stanley Meyer VIC resonant electrolysis mod

Posted on June 17th, 2010 by admin in stanley works | 25 Comments »

Can’t see video? Download HERE (New Link): http://www.divshare.com/download/5125853-8f9

This video actually works on some browsers, but recently it gives “sorry, this video is no longer available” on other browsers. If that’s the case, follow the above link

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Splitting distilled water with a 12 volt power supply. This came out of an attempt to maximize reactive power and minimize active power in the circuit… although I’m not sure that was accomplished in the video. Anyway…

Circuit and parts are listed in the video. The setup is basically the Voltage Intensifier Circuit of Meyer with one major change: the second inductor (2nd wire in a bifilar-wound E core) instead of being in series with the circuit, has only one end attached to the circuit. How or why this works, I don’t yet know, but it does allow more power into the distilled water than any other method I have tried so far.

It is also frequency-dependent, unlike other methods where bubble action didn’t depend on any magical frequencies. Here, though, the first major resonant point is around 20kHz for my cell. There is about 2 inches of overlap between inner and outer steel cell. Also I drew the bulb location wrong – in the video it’s after the WFC, but in my diagram it was shown before… no difference since it behaved the same either way.

The bulb was put after the WFC as an indicator of power flow, and potentially as the “amp consuming device” Meyer talked about. Yeah I know it’s supposed to go before the WFC but goofed in my setup for the video, but it works the correct way just the same.

I tried resistors to limit current but they got hot as and burned my finger… potentiometer sparked and smoked, so a little lightbulb (only 4 ohms though) was my next try and that, plus the free floating second inductor terminal, is what you see here.

My guess is that the second bifilar wire is being driven both by capacitive current and magnetic field EMF from the first wire, and the electrons within the wire oscillate longitudinally in a standing wave, and that somehow does “something” to the bottom edge of the circuit by maybe injecting and taking away electrons when needed. So it acts as a forced electron reservoir perhaps, like a syringe sucking in and expelling electrons from a subdermal insertion point in the circuit.

Duration : 0:7:10

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The Stanley Works SWK (NYSE:SWK) Stock Trading Idea: 41.2% Return in 5 Months

Posted on June 17th, 2010 by admin in the stanley works | No Comments »

SmarTrend alerted subscribers to an uptrend on The Stanley Works (NYSE:SWK) on July 15, 2009 at $35.51. in roughly five months, The Stanley Works has returned 41.2% as of December 15ths closing price of $50.15.

Duration : 0:0:34

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