Hd Tv Reviews
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Peer Review/Futurama (TV Series)
Futurama (TV series)
I was impressed by this article and nominated it as a featured candidate, but it clearly it is not to that standard yet. On the recommendation I received there, I am referring this article to peer review. It's pretty good, but it needs improvement. I'd love to see this reach featured standard. --L33tminion | (talk) 17:02, Mar 8, 2005 (UTC)
I have removed the article from FAC, since it's not meant to be in both places. I hope you don't mind, please just re-nominate it on FAC whenever you're ready to! Peer reviewers can see the FAC commentary already gathered here, there's quite a lot of it. Bishonen | Talk 17:54, 8 Mar 2005 (UTC)
I read it, found it funny and entertaining (just like the show). Nice work! -- Zalasur 18:31, Mar 8, 2005 (UTC)
I'd suggest to resolve FAC objections first - especially the lack of references and merging short paragraphs etc. Lead should be expanded, it misses basic info like the series lenght and its status (cancelled). Remember, unless they are resolved, this article will be put down at FAc again and again. This should be fairly easy to fix, the article needs no expantion, just some rewriting. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus Talk 12:01, 9 Mar 2005 (UTC)
* I'm a bit confused by the complaint that the article is "mostly lists" as it reads fairly well for me, and I'm not sure how to make it prose-like without removing a lot of interesting information. At any rate, I really appreciate your help. --L33tminion | (talk) 15:58, Mar 11, 2005 (UTC)
* I'm confused about most of what they said. Seems the main objections are
::1. The article has lists
:::I argue we have more prose then lists. If this is the reason for FAC rejection, this can be argued. Maybe if we have more then 7-10 items in the list, we can defer it to an external list. The smaller ones do not need a lone article because that's all they will be. 5 points or so with little information. A merge
Peer Review/227 (TV Series)
227 (TV series)
I have recently gained a newfound interest in this sitcom, and I have edited information with all I've been able to gather from television interviews (such as I Love the 80s, thus the lack of written sources). I would love for this to become a more well-rounded article (I am not sure if it has enough potential to be an FA), so opinions are welcomed. Mike H 22:54, Apr 6, 2005 (UTC)
:It seems pretty decent, if a bit on the short side. You might consider adding would be some humorous quotations and/or running jokes from the show, as well as individual character descriptions. — RJH 05:38, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Peer Review/List Of Movies With TV Shows And Other Movies In Them
List of movies with TV shows and other movies in them
I have been working on this list for a long time and it is still far from being any where near comprehensive. Also, the title is pretty awkward. Hopefully after being reviewed everyone can think of a few to add to the list. --The_stuart 07:07, 30 May 2005 (UTC)
Aside from comprehensiveness, it needs pictures, references, and a longer lead section. Also, I can't understand which one is meant to be the movie, and which one is the internal movie of TV show, please clarify. --Dmcdevit 07:17, 30 May 2005 (UTC)
I pretty much agree with Dmcdevit. About the only thing I can think to add is the issue of eliminating the bars or patterns (similar to Moiré patterns) that appear when a TV show is displayed in another TV. — RJH 15:58, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)
HD HD represents, among other things:
The American poet Hilda Doolittle
High Definition media formats, for instance HDTV (high definition television) or the HD-DVD format
Hard disk or hard drive, a type of computer storage hardware
Harley Davidson, an iconic American motorcycle manufacturer
The Home Depot, a chain of home improvement warehouse retailers
* Home Depot's ticker symbol on the New York Stock Exchange
Hyperactivity Disorder, as in Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD)
High Density (in reference to a floppy disk or other magnetic media)
Higher Diploma a type of academic award.
The Henry Draper star catalogue
Hodgkin's disease
Huntington's disease
Category:Lists of two-letter combinations
de:HD
it:Hd
sv:HD
HDS Hitachi Data Systems Corporation (HDS) is a subsidiary of Hitachi. Its enterprise storage systems group is based both in Japan and in Santa Clara, CA.
The Hitachi TagmaStore universal storage platform establishes a new industry category, reaching previously unattainable levels of consolidation and bringing to reality the virtualization of internal and external heterogeneous storage into one pool.
Products
Key hardware products from HDS include the latest monolithic SAN array TagmaStore, the Lightning 9900v series of high-end systems, Thunder 9500v modular systems, a NAS blade for the Lightning and NAS gateways via a reseller deal with Network Appliance.
On the software side, HDS offers array based replication, remote replication, copy-on-write snapshot, asynchronous remote replication across HDS and third-party systems and storage area management.
http://www.hds.com Hitachi Data Systems Corporation
HD 209458b
HD 209458b, unofficially dubbed Osiris by its discoverers after the Egyptian god Osiris, is an extrasolar planet that orbits the Sun-like star HD 209458 in the constellation Pegasus, some 150 light years from Earth's solar system. HD 209458 is a 7th magnitude star, visible on Earth with binoculars.
The radius of the planet's orbit is only 7 million kilometers, ~0.047 astronomical units, one-eighth the radius of Mercury's orbit. This small radius results in a year only 3.5 Earth days long and an estimated surface temperature of about 1000°C. Its mass is 220 times that of Earth's (0.7 Jupiter masses), suggesting that it is probably a gas giant.
HD 209458b was the first transiting planet discovered, the first extrasolar planet known to have an atmosphere, the first extrasolar planet observed to have an evaporating hydrogen atmosphere, and the first extrasolar planet found to have an atmosphere containing oxygen and carbon.
Discovery
Spectroscopic studies first revealed the presence of a planet around HD 209458 on November 5 1999. Astronomers had made careful photometric measurements of several stars known to be orbited by planets, in the hope that they might observe a dip in brightness caused by the transit of the planet across the star's face. This would require the planet's orbit to be inclined such that it would pass between the Earth and the star, and previously no transits had been detected.
On November 7, though, a 1.7% drop in HD 209458's brightness was measured, which was later confirmed as being due to a transit. Each transit lasts about three hours, and about 1.5% of the star's face is covered by the planet during the transit.
The star had been observed many times by the Hipparcos satellite, which allowed astronomers to calculate its orbital period very accurately at 3.524736 days. The planet was unofficially named "Osiris" (Ausare in Egyptian), after the Egyptian god who lost part of his body after
HD 209458b Removed from article:
thumb|right|200px|Artist's concept illustrating Osiris' atmosphere loss
Do we have permission to use this? And if so, I'm sure the artist would like to get credit. --mav
:This is public domain. Sennheiser checked the "i affirm that i have permission..." box when he uploaded. Sennheiser! 16:34, 8 Feb 2004 (UTC)
::I can't find the source of the image anyway. (I should have pasted the address of the source, but I was newer than I am now) I found another image media:heic0403a.jpg from the ESA/hubblesite which is copyright free, and is a good illustration. We can replace the other one with this one. Sennheiser! 16:39, 8 Feb 2004 (UTC)
:::Wait, I found it!! http://www.spacetelescope.org/bin/news.pl?string=heic0303 --Sennheiser! 16:42, 8 Feb 2004 (UTC)
::::Very cool. Thanks! :) --mav
Fate
I think an estimate of when Osiris becomes a Cthonian planet would be in order. A statement of some astronomer would be best, but if that can't be found, we can do a simple calculation based on the rate of loss and the size of the atmosphere. I tried doing it, but my result is about 4 trillion years (either I am too stupid to do simple math, or Osiris is relatively safe), ignoring that helium (BTW, there must be some helium, why it's not mentioned in the article), oxygen, carbon would have a different loss rate, ignoring the possibility of an orbit change and assuming the rate of atmosphere loss remains constant. 81.211.110.171 18:39, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC)
:Your calculation is correct, "10,000 tonnes of hydrogen per second" is far too low (!) to cause any appreciable loss of hydrogen, even after billions of years (4 thousand billion years to lose all its mass, or ~300 universe lifetimes, or a mere 150 lifetimes, if only half is hydrogen). Hence I question either the 10,000 or the implication of a Cthonian fate here. -Wikibob | Talk 04:20, 2005 Apr 2 (UTC)
::I found a conference paper which appears to be the only reference to Chthonian
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