对于凡人,天堂只是一个梦,只是一个希望。
对于精神病人,天堂就在身边,想做什么做什么?
对于圣人,这种人是最坏的,他总告诉别人哪条路通向天堂。
thanks 明月出天山@DreamLand
from WEN’S Headquarters Thanks

about 1 billion light-years, 1025 meters
Most of space looks as empty as this, the glow of distant galaxies like dotted dust. This emptiness is normal; our own bright home-world is the exception. A tenfold larger view would show no new structure, no new void; the universe is roughly uniform at such dimensions. Novelty on so grand a scale is to be sought over time rather than from place to place. All swift change is in the past. This view will dim slowly, for a few billion years at least, as the faint clusters drift still farther apart.

about 100 million light-years, 1024 meters
We look toward our distant home in the Milky Way. But we see mostly one large intervening cluster of galaxies, called the Virgo Cluster. Galaxies as a rule associate into orbiting clusters and groups. There is reason to believe that our Milky Way is itself an outlier of the big Virgo Cluster, responsive to its steady gravitational pull: part of a supercluster. Out there beyond the Milky Way is a good-sized volume nearly devoid of noticeable galaxies.

about 10 million light-years, 3 megaparsecs, 1023 meters
These are the galaxies of our own cosmic region, each single bright spot made by the summed light of stars by the billion. Their mutual gravity binds stars into galaxies, every one a complex swarm of moving stars.

about 1 million light-years, 1022 meters
This flat circular disk is our own Galaxy, the Milky Way, with its spiral structure. It travels in space with two satellite galaxies, the irregular little Clouds of Magellan. Not many galaxies are larger than ours; nor are many seen that are smaller than the Clouds.

about 100 thousand light-years, 1021 meters
We look face-on directly at the Milky Way spiral. A hundred billion stars mutually bound by gravity encircle the central region, some passing close in, some in wider orbits. Our own sun swings with the rest in dignified passage clockwise about the distant galactic center, once every three hundred million years. External galaxies akin to our own are scattered throughout space as far as we can see. They too rotate slowly as they drift.

about 10 thousand light-years, 1020 meters
Clouds of stars and glowing gas, with patches of darkening dust, mark the slow-changing spiral patterns of the Galaxy disk. Our distant sun cannot be seen here, but it is in the center of the image, near the border of one spiral arm.

about 1 thousand light-years, 1019 meters
In this view we are within the disk of the Galaxy, right among a host of stars visible here as individuals. Almost every star of the thousand mapped by the old watchers of the sky, those who first gathered stars into constellations, lies within this square, our own galactic neighborhood. There are many other stars as well, too faint for the eye to see.

about 100 light-years, 1018 meters
A skyful of distinct stars; One among them, central, but too faint to pick out, is our sun. The star Arcturus, prominent in the northern sky of earth, shines brightly. Arcturus is intrinsically more luminous than our sun, and here we are nearer to it as well.

about 10 light-years, 3 parsecs, 1017 meters
Most of the matter we know is formed into stars, spheres of gas nourished by central nuclear fires that often maintain the glow for a very long time. At this point in the journey, with no star nearby, we see the realm of the stars chiefly as a distant background, no different from the night sky we view from earth. For several frames the star background remains unchanged; The visible stars are strewn so deep in space that these steps are small in comparison. Hence they cause no noticeable shifts.

about 1 light-year, 10 trillion kilometers, 1016 meters
Here one central star is brighter than the rest, only because it is so much nearer. That star is the sun. The contrast between night and day, between the cold glitter of the starry sky and life-giving warmth, is the consequence simply of our planet’s location next to one modest star. Once we have drawn away from the sun, we can recognize that it is one star among many stars, and all distant stars are in some way suns.

1 trillion kilometers, 1015 meters
Only the sun is to be seen, against a background of fainter stars beyond. Once that was all we knew of the frontier of the sun’s system. We know now that a great cloud of icy comets orbits slowly here, though invisible in the weak sunlight. We see comets only as year after year a few fall into the brighter regions near earth. There we catch sight of them, moving in the sky like temporary planets, the sun’s fires boiling out their long faint tails.
All the sun’s planets circulate within the small square. From earth the planets have always stood out, a few strange bright stars restlessly wandering in a skyful of unchanging patterns. Seen here from outside, the planets take on their Copernican aspect; they move around the sun on these nested ellipses, mapped by colored lines.
The paths of the outer planets fill this picture. That strongly tilted orbit belongs to little, awry Pluto. The four others are those of big Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, and Jupiter, with their many satellites. Between Jupiter’s path and the sun run the inner planets in their smaller orbits. The planets circulate counterclockwise here, all in nearly the same plane, which we view at an angle; The planetary system, apart from Pluto, is flat as a pancake.
Enclosed in the path of massive Jupiter, these are the orbits of the smaller earthlike inner planets: Mars, Earth, Venus, Mercury. Another swarm of objects too small and faint to make out without telescopic aid is present as well: asteroids and meteors ply this darkness in the belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
Now we see the inner solar system.The green arc is traversed by planct Earth during some six weeks each September and October.
This path marks the earth’s way for four days in October;within it the moon’s route is indicated relarive to earth.The moon at all times lies somewhere on that small ellipse which moves along with the earth in its orbit.
The farthest place our own kind has yet visited is the companion moon,our nearest celestial neighbor.Bright moonlight and the tides wimess her proximity.

1 thousand kilometers 1 million meters

0.1 micron 1 thousand angstroms
What will we see,and what will we come to understand,once we enter the next levels?
os: windows 2003 server ent sp2
Microsoft SQL Server 2005 – 9.00.1406.00 dev
我的sp2安装成功了,错误日志忘记保存了.从网上转了一份(同时有解决方法).
以下转载自sqlnewsgroups.net
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;925976
**************************************************************************
问题:
I am running Windows 2003 Enterprise SP2 running SQL 2005 Enterprise and am
getting repeated failures applying SQL 2005 SP2. The error is always the
same (see below).
I have made sure that there are no disabled services in the SQL Server
family of services, but this does not appear to have helped. This SQL
installation is pretty minimal, basically just the Database Engine. The
services list is:
SQL Server (MSSQLSERVER) Started Automatic Local System
SQL Server Active Directory Helper Manual (was disabled) Network Service
SQL Server Agent (MSSQLSERVER) Started Automatic Local System
SQL Server Browser Manual (was disabled) Local System
SQL Server FullText Search (MSSQLSERVER) Started Automatic Local System
SQL Server VSS Writer Started Automatic Local System
from the summary: ———————————————————————————-
Product : Database Services (MSSQLSERVER)
Product Version (Previous): 2047
Product Version (Final) :
Status : Failure
Log File : C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\90\Setup
Bootstrap\LOG\Hotfix\SQL9_Hotfix_KB921896_sqlrun_sql.msp.log
Error Number : 29528
Error Description : MSP Error: 29528 The setup has encountered an
unexpected error while Setting Internal Properties. The error is: Fatal error
during installation.
from the event log:
Event Type: Error
Event Source: MsiInstaller
Event Category: None
Event ID: 1023
Date: 5/3/2007
Time: 6:37:36 PM
User: RLTESTENV002\Administrator
Computer: RLTESTENV002
Description:
Product: Microsoft SQL Server 2005 – Update ‘Service Pack 2 for SQL Server
Database Services 2005 ENU (KB921896)’ could not be installed. Error code
1603. Additional information is available in the log file C:\Program
Files\Microsoft SQL Server\90\Setup
Bootstrap\LOG\Hotfix\SQL9_Hotfix_KB921896_sqlrun_sql.msp.log.
Event Type: Error
Event Source: MsiInstaller
Event Category: None
Event ID: 10005
Date: 5/3/2007
Time: 6:37:35 PM
User: RLTESTENV002\Administrator
Computer: RLTESTENV002
Description:
Product: Microsoft SQL Server 2005 — Error 29528. The setup has encountered
an unexpected error while Setting Internal Properties. The error is: Fatal
error during installation.
**************************************************************************
解决方法:
From the error message “Error Description : MSP Error: 29528 The setup has
encountered an unexpected error while Setting Internal Properties. The
error is: Fatal error during installation”, this is a known issue. This
issue occurs because of one of the following reasons:
· An operation has removed the local groups for the initial installation of
SQL Server 2005.
· An operation has changed the security identifiers (SID) for the local
groups.
Considering your SQL Server is not a clustered instance, please follow the
below steps to workaround the problem:
Warning: Serious problems might occur if you modify the registry
incorrectly by using Registry Editor or by using another method. These
problems might require that you reinstall your operating system. Microsoft
cannot guarantee that these problems can be solved. Modify the registry at
your own risk.
1. Remove the following registry subkeys that store SID settings:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL.X\Setup\SQLGroup
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL.X\Setup\AGTGroup
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL.X\Setup\FTSGroup
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL.X\Setup\ASGroup
Note In these registry subkeys, MSSQL.X is a placeholder for the
corresponding value on a specific system. You can determine MSSQL.X on a
specific system by examining the value of the MSSQLSERVER registry entry
under the following registry subkey:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft SQL Server\Instance
Names\SQL\
2. Reinstall the SQL Server 2005 service pack or the SQL Server 2005 hotfix
package.
For more information about this issue, please refer to KB 925976
Star Trek-Enterprise / Russell Watson / Where My Heart Will Take Me
- Dennis McCarthy
It’s been a long road
Getting from there to here
It’s been a long time
But my time is finally near
And I will see my dream come alive at last
I will touch the sky
And they’re not gonna hold me down no more
No.they’re not gonna change my mind
Cause I’ve got faith of the heart
I’m going where the heart will take me
I’ve got faith to believe
I can do anything
I’ve got strength of the soul
No one’s gonna bend or break me
I can reach any star
I’ve got faith
I’ve got,I’ve got
I’ve got faith
Faith of the heart