Jersey*Girl
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Freescale has 20 employees on that plane. Freescale is a Defense contractor, right?
India Thursday deployed four warships to locate the jetliner missing for six days as Malaysia debunked as false leads Chinese satellite images of suspected debris in waters off Vietnam's southern coast.
Joining the massive international search operations, India pressed into service six aircraft including its latest special surveillance P-8I plane and three helicopters under 'Operation Searchlight'.
The IAF has also deployed two of its latest C-130J Super Hercules transport aircraft from Hindan air base.
Four warships have been dispatched from Andaman and Nicobar Command including INS Kumbhir, INS Kesari and INS Saryu from Navy and Coast Guard Ship Kanaklata Baruah to the areas specified by the Malaysian government.
http://www.newindianexpress.com/wor...ne/2014/03/13/article2107391.ece#.UyHdfD9dXHU
The Malaysian authorities also found no merit in US investigators suggestion that the flight MH370 with 239 people on board may have kept flying for four hours after its last radio contact on Saturday.
Ahmed said that reports that the flight MH370 flew beyond the last recorded transmission time of 0107 am local time on Saturday were totally "incorrect".
Rolls Royce and Boeing are cooperating and they did not receive any transmission after 0107 am local time on Saturday, he said. "That was the last transmission," Ahmed said.
Freescale has 20 employees on that plane. Freescale is a Defense contractor, right?
It reminds me of when someone can't admit they are wrong. It just baffles me that the US may have some info and Malaysia insists it doesn't exist.
Another question for pilots, is 12 years old old for a plane?
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It reminds me of when someone can't admit they are wrong. It just baffles me that the US may have some info and Malaysia insists it doesn't exist.
The US Navy would have submarines in the Indian Ocean. I wonder if sonar data detected a possible crash. They would be able to provide a pretty good location.
Pitbull's lines include 'Now it's off to Malaysia' and 'Two passports, three cities, two countries, one day'.
Links between the plane's mysterious disappearance and the radar-blocking capabilities of some of the aeronautical hardware technology produced by Freescale have been pushed by citizens news site Beforeitsnews.
"It is conceivable that the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 plane is 'cloaked', hiding with high-tech electronic warfare weaponry that exists and is used," according to the site.
"In fact, this type of technology is precisely the expertise of Freescale, that has 20 employees on board the missing flight," it said.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/malaysia-a...freescale-semiconductor-top-employees-1440097
Do we know what types of positions the 20 employees held? Did they have any top secret info, programming, etc..., or were they just regular employees?
NASA is getting involved. Sounds like good news to me...maybe now we can "see" where it may have crashed or landed?
http://www.space.com/25046-nasa-missing-airliner-flight-370.html?cmpid=514648_20140313_19997324
It reminds me of when someone can't admit they are wrong. It just baffles me that the US may have some info and Malaysia insists it doesn't exist.
I would be interested in knowing exactly what Rolls Royce has said. Did they say then engines ran for another 4 four hours and then powered down, ie the plane had landed. Or did they say the received data from the running engines for another 4 hours then the data stopped, ie the plane may have crashed at that point? What stopped: the engines or the data? Big difference.
How about this part:
The lyrics 'No Ali, No Frasier, but for now off to Malaysia' meanwhile were linked to the 'Mr Ali' tabloid press have been referring to for one of the two Iranian passengers, despite Malaysian authories having confirmed the 19-year-old is actually called Pouria Nourmohammadi.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...mblance-to-missing-plane-mystery-9189228.html