No, NOT the Girl Guides...although!  Here are some links to help out with different parts of the game.

SVN plays many games, under mostly SVN, but also under some other names too.  The following is a sample (so not all of the games) that we play.

For the Sith Empire we play as SVN.
For the Republic we play as GSS.
Some also have a toon or tow in other guilds....



Direct from SWTOR

I have downloaded and now uploaded a series of new wallpapers.  Each one is the largest I could find, some are retail ones I am sharing with you lot.  They are in the gallery for dwnloads, here is an example.

Multi-Monitor
SWTOR Wallpapers_9

Normal Dimension
SWTOR Wallpapers_6 SWTOR Wallpapers_7 SWTOR Wallpapers_11
yes, SVN now has it's own BF3 server.  It is a 32 slot Hard Core server we own for the next 12 months.   It also came with a ventrilo server which we will use as a backup server for SVN, and also as a public Ventrilo for BF3 etc.  Details are in in the ventrilo panel above, and also in the Ventrilo Status panel.
BF3 is now fully live in the US, and us Aussies cn connect, but run the hacked exe once, then place the original one back.

YAY!
The SVN merchandise store is now online, and cheaper than the original.  Please go through and get some stuff, it will help support this site.  Also, you can buy GTCs when they release them through the link at the top right, and not just for SWTOR, and it too will support the site on a small level.

If you have any ideas for designs of shirts or anything let me know, just be aware we have limited items to put them on, based on the company that does the work for us. 

Still to come in the design world are:
  • class t-shirts
  • class hats
  • anything else my brain comes up with, but I am working on a non SVN line atm as well soooo...

Although cold and gaseous rather than a desert world, the newfound planet Kepler-16b is still the closest astronomers have come to discovering Luke Skywalker's home world of Tatooine. Like Tatooine, Kepler-16b enjoys a double sunset as it circles a pair of stars approximately 200 light-years from Earth. It's not thought to harbor life, but its discovery demonstrates the diversity of planets in our galaxy.

"Kepler-16b is the first confirmed, unambiguous example of a circumbinary planet - a planet orbiting not one, but two stars," said Josh Carter of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). "Once again, we're finding that our solar system is only one example of the variety of planetary systems Nature can create."

Carter is second author on the study announcing the discovery, which appears in the Sept. 15th issue of the journal Science. He is presenting the finding at the Extreme Solar Systems II conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

Kepler-16b weighs about a third as much as Jupiter and has a radius three-fourths that of Jupiter, making it similar to Saturn in both size and mass. It orbits its two parent stars every 229 days at a distance of 65 million miles - similar to Venus' 225-day orbit.


Both stars are smaller and cooler than our Sun. As a result, Kepler-16b is quite cold, with a surface temperature of around -100 to - 150 degrees Fahrenheit.

NASA's Kepler mission detected the planet through what is known as a planetary transit - an event where a star dims when a planet crosses in front of it. The planet's discovery was complicated by the fact that the two stars in the system eclipse each other, causing the total brightness to dim periodically.

Astronomers noticed that the system's brightness sometimes dipped even when the stars were not eclipsing one another, hinting at a third body. The additional dimming events reappeared at irregular time intervals, indicating that the stars were in different positions in their orbit each time the third body passed. This showed that this third body was circling, not just one, but both stars.

Although Kepler data provided the relative sizes and masses of the stars and planet, astronomers needed more information to get absolute numbers. The crucial missing information came from the Tillinghast Reflector Echelle Spectrograph (TRES) on the 60-inch telescope at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Whipple Observatory in Arizona.

TRES monitored the changing velocity of the primary star as it moved around in its orbit. This yielded an orbital solution that set the scale of the Kepler-16 system. The team found that the two stars orbit each other every 41 days at an average distance of 21 million miles.

"Much of what we know about the sizes of stars comes from such eclipsing binary systems, and most of what we know about the size of planets comes from transits," said lead author and Kepler scientist Laurance Doyle of the SETI Institute. "Kepler-16 combines the best of both worlds, with stellar eclipses and planetary transits in one system."

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