White Hex Plan


A White Hex Corporation Mission

I am studying Harmonics right now. It appears the formula E = mc^2 = hv / λ has great significance and π a role in every equation.
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Table 1. SI base units |
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Root -1 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiLine
Root -2 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiSquare
Root -3 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiCube
Root -4 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiHyperCube
Root -5 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiCircle
Root -6 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiEllipse
Root -7 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiSphere
Root -8 is the Hypotenuse of a AntiHyperSphere
In any Space all these HyperSpaces exist at the same time.
Toaism


Google China Policy: http://tinyurl.com/yhfgo9k
China attacks Google: http://tinyurl.com/yhzmuo6
White House backs Google: http://tinyurl.com/ycundep

Freedom of Religion
Freedom of Expression
Freedom of Association
Freedom of Location


I have been putting in significant time absorbing the entire contents of this book.
Unicode is a computing industry standard allowing computers to consistently represent and manipulate text expressed in most of the world’s writing systems. Developed in tandem with the Universal Character Set standard and published in book form as The Unicode Standard, the latest version of Unicode consists of a repertoire of more than 107,000 characters covering 90 scripts, a set of code charts for visual reference, an encoding methodology and set of standard character encodings, an enumeration of character properties such as upper and lower case, a set of reference data computer files, and a number of related items, such as character properties, rules for normalization, decomposition, collation, rendering, and bidirectional display order (for the correct display of text containing both right-to-left scripts, such as Arabic or Hebrew, and left-to-right scripts).[1]
The Unicode Consortium, the nonprofit organization that coordinates Unicode’s development, has the ambitious goal of eventually replacing existing character encoding schemes with Unicode and its standard Unicode Transformation Format (UTF) schemes, as many of the existing schemes are limited in size and scope and are incompatible with multilingual environments.
Unicode’s success at unifying character sets has led to its widespread and predominant use in the internationalization and localization of computer software. The standard has been implemented in many recent technologies, including XML, the Java programming language, the Microsoft .NET Framework, and modern operating systems.
Unicode can be implemented by different character encodings. The most commonly used encodings are UTF-8 (which uses 1 byte for all ASCII characters, which have the same code values as in the standard ASCII encoding, and up to 4 bytes for other characters), the now-obsolete UCS-2 (which uses 2 bytes for all characters, but does not include every character in the Unicode standard), and UTF-16 (which extends UCS-2, using 4 bytes to encode characters missing from UCS-2).
The Unicode Consortium: http://unicode.org/