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iwondertoo

04/05/12 10:14 AM

#15818 RE: Anvil #15817

I am glad someone remembers the original story. If the true story is so very acceptable, then why did they need to hide it in the first place?

cookstove12

04/05/12 10:24 AM

#15819 RE: Anvil #15817

It is difficult to understand why some refuse to understand basic fundamentals. The Mineseeker product is not just GPSAR, as fully explained. GPSAR is available from several sources, although Mineseeker is the only company to have deployed this technology in Croaita on a light helicopter. The Mineseeker product combines GPSAR with the photo-mosaic products. One, without the other does not work. Mineseeker calls this MIR and this has been explained countless times and details are readily available on the Mineseeker websites.

Sputnik

04/05/12 11:42 AM

#15823 RE: Anvil #15817

Your Mineseeker recall is spot on.

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=55880913&txt2find=mineseeker|technology

This technology, developed by the British MOD, has been licensed to Mineseeker for humanitarian de-mining. We deployed the system in ravaged Kosovo and tested it in live conditions. The results were spectacular. This system can fix the problem within our life time.

Sputnik

04/05/12 11:53 AM

#15824 RE: Anvil #15817

Here is some more history to bolster your Mineseeker recall.

Aerospace boss pledges $1.4M to help landmine victims

The CEO of US-based Quasar Aerospace Industries Inc, Dean Bradley, has pledged a $1.4m financial package to the UK-based Mineseeker Foundation in a bid to provide ongoing practical support to the victims of landmine blasts worldwide – and will be the foundation’s first corporate patron.

The Mineseeker Foundation was founded by Mike Kendrick in 2001, when the former CEO of Virgin Airship and Balloon Company devised a means of detecting landmines using sophisticated radar detection carried by airships.

Nine years on,
the foundation continues to seek ways of aiding landmine victims whilst working simultaneously on landmine detection and eradication thanks to its sister company Mineseeker Operations UK Ltd. It plans to use a unique ground penetrating radar system that can detect landmines from an aerial platform – now a small plane or helicopter, rather than an airship – and accurately map minefields, detailing affected areas.