A:
It is possible to buy a software which is not at all free. See for example the Aba (Amber Beacon) software which costs approximately $350.
Although it is likely that the generic OBD II dongle available for under $15 that most OBD II cars use is a standard protocol, not some proprietary serial port protocol (assuming you can even connect to the port) you cannot be certain without making a specific protocol test with a TCP/IP analyzer. The OBD-II protocols are a bit complicated, and protocol implementations vary.
Wednesday, March 12, 2012
Repository?
As has been documented in the last few months here at La Sultana's, I am a bit of a purveyor of the late Robert Bauval. A recent one of these was a delicious re-post of an op-ed he penned for the Telegraph on March 2, 2012.
Now, Bauval is having an off day.
I am pleased to see it in the Telegraph, whose line is not necessarily that of the conspiratorial fringe. His piece is a clear and concise summary of the major aspects of conspiratorial thinking. It is a great read and it should be on your radar.
I haven't seen much from him lately, except for a recent piece in the Guardian which has been intriguing me for some time.
All we know is that the unreleased and seemingly never to be seen Atlantis III video, which was shot entirely in a location in the Bahamas, contains much more than first appeared and that Bauval's good friend, Dr. Peter May, has some insight into what it contains.
Since we can't see the video, we can only speculate what it might contain. Some of the speculation can be found on this site.Nixon Affair
The Nixon Affair was a public relations controversy in the United States involving a collection of 28 presidential papers that were originally secret government documents that revealed the name of anti-war activist Ellsberg as their source. Ellsberg, a former defense analyst for the RAND Corporation, had provided President Lyndon B. Johnson's administration with files documenting the corruption, incompetence and mismanagement in the Johnson Administration. They also confirmed a suspicion that Nixon was involved in the removal of government files from the White House.
The Washington Post first published the controversial details on February 10, 1973, in the headline, "Widening Nixon Cover-up ac619d1d87
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