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DNAGlassingCoverx300.jpg (28811 bytes)   DNA Glassing is involved in the research of the teleportation of human matter. Each time a person rides in a subway, airplane, train, bus or car, in some way they are being teleported slowly to another location. The goal of DNA Glassing is to send people to their destinations electronically, at the push of a button. This web site is dedicated to the dream of teleportation, with complex reports that are focused on bringing it into a working reality. DNA Glassing has been researched by at least one of these reporters for eleven years. In order to more completely understand this subject it is suggested to read the wealth of nonfiction materials available on it. You may find that if attempted correctly, teleportation can be completed safely. The risks of teleportation are still high, especially with inexperienced industrialization and staff workers. A person still cannot be in two places at once with this materialization, but can in time be capable of being there in seconds. Progressions of these reports, and others should make people wonder if teleportation can be done.

 

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Excel Files
Rumors 2.0. xls
Rumors 2.0 with Sample Lab Results.xls
Rumors 2.1.xls
Rumors 2.1 with Sample Lab Results.xls
Word Files
 
New Firbrin DNA Glassing Corporation Contract for Services.doc

Zip Files
 
gamma.zip
 

Dear Customer,

Arranging the order of the Earth's amenities to satisfy our hunger for technology has become a necessity rather than a hobby for people. The most important advances that are happening now and in the near future for the world are pressing and directly a responsibility for us to satisfy. While people are starting to know their needs in the generations to follow, and far reaching inventions are becoming available, financing these new days with detailed research studies and budgets must be recognized. The use of some existing technologies has become dangerous to the existence of people. With these threats, like global warming, depletion of fossil fuel reserves, mining of exhaustible resources, financial ruin due to corporate bottom lines and risks of wars from uses of resources that cannot be honored, unsupported end use products like the spent nuclear fuels, making that form of energy less than desirable in all of its availability, and water spoiling, we are in a disaster like time. The risk of these warnings can spark poor spending habits also, in search of the solution for these spoils. But if the reports about new technologies, done by the inventors seem thorough and believable, a miracle for the future of our planet can be met. In light of these difficulties that the habits of each of us has brought on, we come forward with a risky but likely solution given the dollars and talented individuals necessary to implement it. This solution is near the possible state as technology permits today and researched by these individuals bringing forth this grant proposal respectfully. If one could imagine for a moment a big computer with an individual standing inside of it being given the cut and paste command to anywhere else in another big computer, through remote access, we can believe in teleportation in this age.

Teleportation has been on the wish list of humanity since the 1960s. To travel places anywhere in the universe in just about a minute, seems hard to grasp, but the science that exists today combined, has the ability to deliver it. We believe that there are several ways that easily have separate patents for originality. The work in DNA and computers allows many different solutions to the problem of teleportation. Recent beliefs are that the energy and financial obligations can be reduced to working domains. The otherwise unsatisfactory side effects can be reduced to norms that exponentially reduce global warming, corporate bottom lines and water spoilage. New Fibrin DNA Glassing holds the promise of a bright future for many generations by offering teleportation services if the research proves that it works. Binary energy pulses at a terahertz frequency are the secrets of teleportation. Other things are taken into consideration like a differentiation of DNA that allows for synthesized quantities and a binary system with a nonzero set of constants .9990999 and 1.0009009. This makes the timer circuitry extremely accurate, and with the mathematical formula to link all quantities in the binary system, the reliabilities of transitions in the electronics is highly delimiting in frequency ranges, all this narrowed down to one final number in the DNATERAHERTZ report that has a great similarity to the Rumors 2.0 and 2.1 Excels. A unique and plentiful set of catalysts Diphenylxenon, Ammonia Glass, Copper Cyanoferrate alloy and Jarosite, where the Diphenylxenon can be replaced by ethane or hydrogen, the process that controls teleportation can be manipulated and diluted as well, with little trade off to the quality of the product. Given the proportions of the chemicals in molecular weights, individual chambers at remote locations can be built as long as the glass powder can be forced through the chamber fast enough to eventually vaporize the customer on location and the second argument for melissic acid is met at another location. Safeties need to be developed to calibrate these machines, including the inspection of the through wires in the chambers periodotically, to secure the guaranteed completion of any teleportation anywhere with the pressing of several buttons and the pricking of a thumb or squeezing of a personal blood supply eyedropper to initiate genome sequence transmittal. But the beginning of such a possession is planned so far at http://www.dnaglassing.org . The building and other aspects of the New Fibrin DNA Glassing process are outlined financially in an Excel amortization table revealing a budget necessity of $27,424,400.00. This amount is $25,160,000.00 plus a 9% interest loan from the United States Government. These dollars will pay for a 144 teleporter facility that can pay for itself in about one year at 2 transports per chamber per day at a sale price of $1,000.00 per teleportation. This method of sales per day would also pay for two other facilities of the same size in that year. Materials for each transport will easily be paid for. The actual amount of transports per facility day could reach 100 per chamber, because the glass crushing tower could be filled easily with enough glass to complete that many teleportations per day. There are new contemporary designs for teleportation that are better than these reports and drawings that are being built in the designs of the future. One such design is shown on the Discover Channel at a look at a supercity design proposal off the coast of Tokyo Japan. The pipe structure for long distance teleportation can be changed to deliver the glass powders and hints of DNA to these facilities, and the genome information necessary in many efficient electronic pulses can be met with intertnet based software collaborations. Internal Touch Screen Teleportation Modules within these types of buildings that would allow side to side or up or down teleportation by just holding the wire are possible; but these buildings will start as Medical Test Laboratories and Mortuaries at first. To fill the parking lots with people of all places interested in saving their DNA is a financing necessity. There are laws presently on DNA databanks in many places already. Medical Test Laboratories of this nature are needed and insurances to pay for one set of tests like the New Fibrin DNA Glassing Rumors 2.0 and Rumors 2.1 shows could spark costs per person per year of approximately $1,000.00. Tax plans based on land ownership budgets in cities should be considered just to get this system designed in place. As of January 31, 2008 a two year study with certified drawings that are similar to the Drawing link here with some wall corrections were sent to the capital buildings in the 50 United States and the Mayor of Washington DC, several other companies, politicians, and seminaries followed. The scale for those drawings was slightly off but the service contract asks for accounting human error. The universe probably has enough statistical binary information data and the materials to carry out safe and worthwile teleportation in unlimited quantities. The DNA in the DNA Courtyards must also be preserved in all designs and the glass powders must be sifted out of the DNA in the preservation process. A light turns green when you should hold the wire; the gamma.zip file is for the server that controls the infomation for the necessary illumination of the chambers. The company confidential reports may be obtained by anyone for a fee in these planned facilities. The DNA preserved has uses in possible medical and hunger problems in the world. New contemporary designs are sought in your area. The designs that are presently available are $1,500.00. There was a problem in the Excel calculations from the DNATERAHERTZ report in the Peroxytrifluoroacetichydroethylene and Lithium Cero-N Amylene calculations so they were left out in the Rumors 2.0 and 2.1 Excels. The cleaning reagent Cerium still was given as it is used in improving the clarity of glass in industry. Fluorine was used also in the timers and the materials sciences report is given. The nonzero constants and binary energies are not calculated in the Excels and it is suggested that the reader does not print the Human Genome but pays attention to the 96 column Excel in conjunction to the referenced columns and numbers in the upstream documentation. The CR column is also very important. The Human Genome release has a M chromosome that helps us understand mutations more, but the reference numbers may have been affected and it is suggested to try to explain this with as little complications as possible. The system requirements for data storage of this nature are very high, in the terabytes for the entire facility but a Personal Computer operator may start with some files already on a hard drive and use slightly more than 50 Gigabytes to understand large amounts of this information completely. Persons downloading this data are advised to have Dual Layer DVD/RW capability to back up the compressed zip files. To open some of these files it is suggested to have Windows XP Service Pack 2, or a good version of Vista, Adobe Reader 7.0 and Microsoft Office 2007. The server at the facility must be a 200 terahertz processor and have approximately 57.6 Terabit per second ethernet capability that is approximately 50 Gigabytes per second for 144 chambers. There is only about 20 Gigabytes active at the wires of each chamber at a time; these being integrated by the results in the Rumors 2.0 and 2.1 equations on each side. The locations possible can be based on the reference numbers in the upstream documentations of the Human Genome files which has approximately 110,016 locations that are numbered in the 96 columns of the Excels. The genome results open the AGTC sequences for each chamber. The test results for each chamber are given for a Human, Feline or Canine with just a tingle from holding or being collared to the wire in the chamber at these facilities at first. DNA Exchangers find many uses in curing diseases. These 200 Terahertz computers may be powered by the lithium batteries found in the Excel results. Some of the Excel results were generated automatically by the proper use of the Excel program in subtracting lines while reconstructing legnthly results giving extra results in the final lines. Financially speaking this risk seems like a good one.

This was sent to all persons receiving the project which included all US Governors and the Mayor of Washington DC at http://www.usa.gov/Contact/Governors.shtml. The certified drawings are much better to look at but not to scale. Then you would have to download this directory which contains the Build 36.1 finished human genome assembly (hg18, Mar. 2006). The chromosomal sequences were assembled by the International Human Genome Project sequencing centers.

Files included in this directory:

chromAgp.zip - Description of how the assembly was generated, unpacking to one file per chromosome.

chromFa.zip - The assembly sequence in one file per chromosome. Repeats from RepeatMasker and Tandem Repeats Finder (with period of 12 or less) are shown in lower case; non-repeating sequence is shown in upper case. Repeat masking was done using the following RepeatMasker/RepBase versions: RepBase Update 9.11, RM database version 20050112. The main assembly is found in the chrN.fa files, where N is the name of the chromosome. The chrN_random.fa files contain clones that are not yet finished or cannot be placed with certainty at a specific place on the chromosome. In some cases, including the human HLA region on chromosome 6, the chrN_random.fa files also contain haplotypes that differ from the main assembly.

chromFaMasked.zip - The assembly sequence in one file per chromosome. Repeats are masked by capital Ns; non-repeating sequence is shown in upper case.

chromOut.zip
- RepeatMasker .out file for chromosomes. These were created by RepeatMasker at the -s sensitive setting.

chromTrf.zip - Tandem Repeats Finder locations, filtered to keep repeats with period of less than or equal to 12, and translated into one .bed file per chromosome.

contigAgp.zip - Description of how the assembly was generated from fragments at a contig layout level.

contigFa.zip - The assembly sequence contigs, in one file per NCBI contig. All contigs are in forward orientation relative to the chromosome. In some cases, this means that contigs will be reversed relative to their orientation in the NCBI assembly. Repeats from RepeatMasker and Tandem Repeats Finder are shown in lower case; non-repeating sequence is shown in upper case.

contigFaMasked.zip - The assembly sequence ;contigs, in one file per contig. Repeats are masked by capital Ns; non-repeating sequence is shown in upper case.

contigOut.zip - RepeatMasker .out file for contigs. These were created by RepeatMasker at the -s sensitive setting.

contigTrf.zip - Tandem Repeats Finder locations, filtered to keep repeats with period less than or equal to 12, and translated into one .bed file per contig.

hg18.2bit - hg18.2bit contains the complete hg18 Human Genome in the 2bit format. A utility program, twoBitToFa (available from our src tree), can be used to extract .fa file(s) from this file.

est.fa.gz - Human ESTs in GenBank. This sequence data is updated once a week via automatic GenBank updates.

liftAll.zip - Offsets of contigs within chromosomes.

mrna.fa .gz - Human mRNA from GenBank. This sequence data is updated once a week via automatic GenBank updates.

refMrna.fa.gz - RefSeq mRNA from the same species as the genome. This sequence data is updated once a week via automatic GenBank updates.

upstream1000.zip - Sequences 1000 bases upstream of annotated transcription start of RefSeq genes. This includes only the cases where the transcription start is annotated separately from the coding region start. Note that upstream files are generated only when an assembly is released. Therefore, the data may be slightly out of synch with the RefSeq data in assemblies that are incrementally updated nightly.

upstream2000.zip - Same as upstream1000, but 2000 bases.

upstream5000.zip - Same as upstream1000, but 5000 bases.

xenoMrna.fa.gz - GenBank mRNAs from species other than that of the genome. This sequence data is updated once a week via automatic GenBank updates.

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To download a large file or multiple files from this directory, we recommend that you use ftp rather than downloading the files via our website. To do so:

ftp hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu
Username: anonymous
Password: <your email address>
go to the directory goldenPath/hg18/bigZips

To download multiple files from the UNIX command line, use the 'mget' command. mget <filename1> <filename2> ...
- or -
mget -a (to download all the files in the directory)
Use the 'prompt' command to toggle the interactive mode if you do not want to be prompted for each file that you download.

All the files ;in this directory are freely available for public use.

ftp://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg18/bigZips/


That’s everything on the 5.4 GB Genome Rumors SM DVD and other mail involved over the web. New Fibrin DNA Glassing wishes the participants at this website the best of luck with their quest for teleportation.

Sincerely,

John Egidio Smothergill
President New Fibrin DNA Glassing

 

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