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Okay, good evening to you Dave AC6CG. Thanks for checking in tonight. All right, no one else over on YouTube. I don't, let me send my emails real quick, see if there's anybody over there. Nope, nobody over there and nobody else on the net logger. So we'll continue on. All right, what are we going to continue with? The bulletins for this evening. For those of you who may be interested in ISS passes over your local area, the visible ones anyway, actually if you're looking for all of the passes as well, but right now we talk about visible passes. It's a little more interesting to see, but also you can, oh, oh, oh, oh, track them during the day for those of you who like to work satellites or see where the ISS is or work some of the satellite TV that they do every now and then. Right now, you may want to check out this website, www.heavens-above.com, that's www.heavens-above.com. And the one reason I like about this particular website is it gives me a nice list of the visible passes over the Denver area anyway. But put in your home coordinates and you put in your home coordinates and you can log in and it will come up with fairly accurate time for the ISS passes. Most of the ISS passes over the Denver area are transitioning from morning to evening in the next 10 days, so that's nice. You don't have to get up so early, you can stay up a little later. One thing I like about this particular website is I can click on a particular date of interest for a particular date of interest for a particular pass, and I get a nice large star chart which I'm displaying over on YouTube right now. You can take a look at that and you can see the path of the ISS through the skies and relate it to the various paths that it's going through. And that's it. That's all I have for you. Thank you.
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