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26-J39

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Everything posted by 26-J39

  1. You will need to keep an eye on your forward speed and vertical speed. When you pitch up to slow down you will need to reduce your collective to maintain altitude, as the helo slows more collective will be needed to maintain altitude. It's essential here to use you vertical airspeed ind so you don't enter a vortex ring. The velocity vector on your HUD is a good aid also.
  2. Why don't we all sit back and take some advise from a great man.. Bring him back :cry:
  3. Ether & GG, while i'm still skeptical i appreciate your mature responses. One thing tho, i to thought it was a prescription drug but i seem to be able to buy it online freely.
  4. :bored: So.. with our scientific studies and reports why is Aldara freely available? http://aldara1.com/ Excerpt: Uploaded with ImageShack.us
  5. Our beloved 7 Worst Drug Companies 2010 - http://www.bnet.com/blog/drug-business/the-7-worst-drug-companies-of-2010/6909?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter This year was a cracker for pharmaceutical management incompetence. Investigations? Recalls? Management churn? Making pills the wrong size? Not making pills at all? These Christmas turkeys are all that and a bag of test tubes. In ascending order of incompetence, BNET presents the seven worst drug companies of 2010. Remember, it’s an honor just to be nominated. Drumroll, please … 7. Mannkind (MNKD) The FDA was set to vote on Dec. 29 on an approval for its inhaled insulin product Afrezza when — just at the wrong moment — it was sued by its former chief regulatory affairs officer alleging “unlawful” clinical trial data practices. D’oh! The company has been sued before by a former vp of medical/regulatory affairs alleging something similar and the company failed again, in a years-long search, to find a a Big Pharma marketing partner on the drug. If the FDA says yes on Dec. 29, we’ll all owe Mannkind an apology. 6. Elan (ELN) Elan began the year with every reason to believe that it was on the upswing: It had just closed a $1.4 billion deal with Johnson & Johnson for its Alzheimer’s drugs. Then it emerged that the deal contained an undisclosed poison pill, one of many that the company has ingested in order to insulate itself from the hostile takeovers. Its management were exposed as being riddled with conflicts of interest. It ended the year by giving back every penny it had ever made on its seizure drug Zonegran, due to illegal marketing. The company was No.4 on last year’s chart. 5. Generex (GNBT) Generex really blotted its copybook this year by suing TheStreet.com biotech reporter Adam Feuerstein for defamation. This only drew attention to Feuerstein’s articles about the company, which he alleged was “a 15 year-long stock promotion scheme.” Generex claims its Oral-lyn oral insulin spray is approved in Ecuador, India, Lebanon and Algeria, but the company doesn’t book those revenues. Not to worry, it does sell Baboom! “energy spray” with the tagline “Let’s get this party started,” and it’s funded by South American gold mine investors. 4. AVI BioPharma (AVII) Chronically unprofitable AVI has had three — count ‘em! — CEOs this year. In chronological order: Leslie Hudson, J. David Boyle II, and Chris Garabedian. The turmoil followed a shareholder revolt that forced the ouster of Hudson. Investors have much to revolt over. As Xconomy described it: AVI … is one of the oldest companies in biotech, having sputtered around since 1980 without ever developing an FDA-approved drug, burning through more than $250 million in investor cash at last count, and never becoming profitable. 3. RanbaxyThe Indian generic maker lost its title as Earth’s worst drug company last year but stays on the chart for 2010 due to its continued comical performance. Its CEO quit without notice in August to go run a newspaper. Two other senior executives may or may not have hit the ejector button in November. (A mystery that’s still unsolved.) Executive musical chairs aside, the company saw an antidepressant and a cholesterol drug recalled in Europe. The company remains under an FDA ban of 30 of its products following a faked data scandal. 2. KV Pharmaceutical (KVa.N) KV Pharma began the year by announcing it would pay $27.6 million in fines after pleading guilty to criminal charges for not disclosing in 2008 that its was making its generic pills too big. The company then said it couldn’t pay its fines on time. The company expected to resume shipping normal size pills in Q4 2010, but that didn’t happen. Instead, it took on a $120 million loan at a whopping 16.5 percent interest. 1. Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) It’s tough to screw up a drug as basic as Tylenol, a brand that famously survived a cyanide saboteur 30 years ago. But CEO William Weldon managed it. With 11 recalls of the painkiller and other non-prescription drugs, Weldon’s team has inflicted more damage on Tylenol and the McNeil Consumer Healthcare unit that makes it than the Chicago murders of 1982 ever did, despite allegedly being warned of problems at the factory in 2007. (Remember Tylenol was back on the market within a year of the cyanide crisis.) Currently, J&J is in such disarray it can’t even make tampons properly. You trust these companies with your children? :doh:
  6. There's always going to be hocus pocus miracle remedies whether they are natural/herbal or from pharma companies. It's up to the individual to do his/her research to see whether it has any credit, anything that works shouldn't be ignored. The point is we as individuals should be able to choose what ever we think is right for us, but soon even a choice will be gone. By allowing such a bill to pass is allowing the pharma companies to say "here's your one and only choice!". Is that what we call freedom or democracy in the year 2011? Funny (not really) but even most doctors know about the dreaded pharma companies and what they are doing, the ones that don't are suckers for pharma spin. <-- That comment was from a doctor i spoke to awhile ago.
  7. Do you really believe that?? I recommend you educate yourself on the subject through open media sources, you will find it quite obvious what happens.. They perpetuate sickness and the need for more artificial drugs "talk about placebo's!" then offer all their false hope (misery). Natural cures for most of the diseases that are prevalent today have been around for thousands of years they are just suppressed by governments and pharma to maximize their power, control and wealth. Nothing new, no conspiracy theories just conspiracy facts unfortunately. :noexpression:
  8. As close as it gets :D :doh:
  9. Matt, u may have slightly misread my post.. just to clarify. ;) :D
  10. Also you can try to maximize on transitional lift, don't take off vertical into a hover. Even on a farp you can get some forward speed before lift off, every bit counts. After lift off a balance between a nice pitch forward and collective to increase your forward speed and lift. Into the wind is good too. ;)
  11. Nice work Zomba :thumbup: Who are those crazy pilots :P
  12. No. :P I believe ED didn't feel they had enough data here to implement the specifics you are asking for which in turn answers #6. :)
  13. IMO trying to setup throttle&brake pedals as rudder using PPJoy.... priceless if you want future psychiatric treatment and medication.. :D
  14. My post had nothing to do with the "vortex ring" it was regarding the anti-torque rotor. ;)
  15. Ah ha sorry i see this is FreetrackNoir which is different software to Freetrack, havent used the Noir
  16. Yes i've been using free track http://www.free-track.net/english/ for quite some time now and i cant fault it.. It takes a bit of stuffing around to tweak it the way you want it but it's all worth it.. The only other thing is you may need a little bit of basic electronic knowledge (well it helps) as you will need to make your own "head tracking thingy".. which is basically just 3 or 4 IR LEDs set up on a baseball cap or so.. Happy to help if you need any further info. ;)
  17. CBU's have been broken in Beta4.. don't use or load them till presumably Beta5.
  18. Yes it a reset button.. Not sure if it's functional tho.
  19. Customizable knee boards would be cool. Or an animation of the pilot writing co-ords with a grease pencil on the canopy :D
  20. Its quite interesting to see so many posts on this thread that question the design of the Chinese fighters. If you saw a picture of a F-22 when the F-117 was in development would you think the F-22 looked "stealthy"? Just food for thought.;) I personally don't doubt China's ability's here.
  21. Here's some pic's from FTX.. truly amazing terrain and water.. as well as every little detail imaginable. http://fullterrain.com/
  22. hehe.. cool post.. does bring back memories, oh how the commodore 64 rocked my world. I remember seeing Chuck Yeager's Air Combat (yes how could you all forget ;)) on a 286 and i was like :surprise: LOL
  23. AFAIK.. there is no Tacview ver compatible for DCS-A10C... :huh:
  24. Yuya... You do not have a 64 Bit operating system so you cannot install the 64 bit version, you will have no option to install it because you only have a 32 bit operating system. ;)
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