We had it all wrong back in ’97…
Sat ,25/11/2017It could have been soooo much simpler, according to this picture….
candybowl
It could have been soooo much simpler, according to this picture….
candybowl
“the world needs Iron Maiden” – and yes, we DO.
candybowl
I have had an AmigaOne gathering dust next to my desk for several years now, and the last time I tried to fire it up, nothing happened – I suspect the power supply is bad. But after reading this, I may have to try again…..while I usually use Fedora most days, it’s certainly not by choice. Linux’s saving grace is that it isn’t Windows, although Win7 is light-years ahead of all the abuse in the past, despite now being two versions behind itself?! 🙂 MacOS I tolerate as always but am also several versions back on that one too – and that’s just fine by me…
The A-EON Amiga X5000: An alternate universe where the Amiga platform never died
candybowl
Another music tragedy – will they just please STOP?! RIP, Mr. Cornell…
also a much older clip from happier times here….
candybowl
🙂
candybowl
just finished this book, Alex & Me – very interesting read. here’s a short video of what the book is about – Alex, the amazing African Grey parrot! Sadly he passed away in 2007, but his legacy and insights learned from his ‘birdbrain’ – live on.
Alex also made an appearance on Scientific American Frontiers and met Alan Alda – watch the whole episode here. You can fast forward to about 9:59 if you want to just watch Alex.
candybowl
Long live the king. RIP, sir.
and his ‘spiritual heir’ from over ten years ago – fast forward to about 7:50..
candybowl
So following on from the previous post regarding touring the Shuttle Trainer at Boeing’s Museum of Flight, here’s the rest of all the ‘plane nerd’ photos from most of the rest of the museum – enjoy!
I have to say, despite no flash, that ridiculous new phone of mine actually takes decent pics…..click on one from the gallery, then click it again to get the high-res version….
candybowl
So for a bday thing, a friend and I went to the Museum of Flight yesterday and specifically to check out the Space Shuttle Trainer they have. When NASA’s Shuttle program ended, there was of course a mad dash by all the museums everywhere to ‘get’ a Shuttle. Boeing’s Museum of Flight naturally wanted one too, but ended up getting something arguably better – the full-on Space Shuttle Trainer mockup that was actually used in Johnson Space Center for hands-on training by the Shuttle crews.
It’s important to note – this is not a flight simulator – rather, this was meant to simulate and train on nearly everything else (equipment, evac, procedures, operations, etc.) – the thing is huge and has a fully-accurate, replica cockpit and crew module underneath, built to full scale.
So regular visitors can go in the main cargo bay and in the tail section, but only special tours (yes, costs extra) can go in the pilot section and the crew module. Naturally we did that!
What follows are pics from the tour. I’ll post all the ‘plane photos’ tomorrow from the other parts of the museum we went to, but the Shuttle tour was our first priority yesterday. Definitely very cool and the tour guide was well-informed. The main take-away for me is simply how impressive a technical achievement this thing is – in one of the movies you can watch (sadly about the Challenger and later Columbia disasters) they note at one point that at re-entry to the atmosphere, the heat outside is hotter than the surface of the sun – boggles the mind. In many ways the Shuttle is a tougher and more impressive achievement than even Apollo was, despite the program not ending up near as ‘affordable’ as they predicted nor as long-lived in the end.
here’s to you, NASA!
candybowl
Click on a gallery pic, then click it again to get the high-res version….