Something Random

Fushigi

Storage Is My Life
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Jan 23, 2002
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The free coffee at work is a "kona blend" which I'm pretty sure translates as 5% Kona, 65% shredded tree bark, and 30% random crap scraped up off the street. So I take a cup with me from home (usually Eight O'Clock Coumbian; sometimes Caribou's Obsidian). Somethings I stop at Caribou and get their light roast du jour instead of/in addition to my cup from home.

DD's coffee is fine and as I mentioned I drive by several but I rarely stop in. If I stop there I'm too tempted to get some donuts.

Charbucks, er, Starbucks is passable, but Caribou is definitely better to me. I'm not sure I can count high enough to say how many I drive by on my commute.

For flavored coffee there's a small coffee shop by me run by two ladies. They're flavored coffees are the best I've ever had. They actually soak the beans in the flavor oils so it comes through a lot better than some others. Many flavored coffees only smell different to me; these actually taste like hazelnut, toffee, etc.

Oh, Splenda + half & half please. I never could bring myself to drink coffee black with the exception of whatever Richard Walker's Pancake House serves.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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I am omnipresent
So I just watched the teaser trailer for the new Star Trek movie.
I'm not a trekkie, but it looks pretty cool. To me, though, the coolest thing about it was the little soundbites from John Kennedy and Neil Armstrong, from back in the days when we knew all about our spacemen.

We've had some really great movies about the space program - I'm thinking mostly about the Right Stuff but also Apollo 13, but at the same time nobody really pays much attention or really even gives a shit about what we do in space anymore. The men and women we send up are basically the peak of human achievement. I am sitting here thinking that those people should be heroes to us. They aren't. We don't even know who they are, even when they do something amazing.

A few months ago a woman named Barbara Morgan went into space. 20 years ago, she was Christa Mcauliffe's backup as the schoolteacher selected to go into space. She knew, in 1985, that she wasn't going to get her chance. Turns out, she continued to work with NASA both in public outreach AND to fully qualify as a mission specialist, a real astronaut and not just a deadweight passenger. She did that as a middle aged woman, starting her training in the late 90s.

Cool as a new Star Trek movie might be, I wish we could have the same sense of wonder and admiration for the real life heroes who actually get to do the things we make science fiction movies about.
 

ddrueding

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As cool as people going into space is, it isn't nearly as cool or amazing as it was decades ago. I'm not saying that they aren't doing neat stuff, or making progress. I'm just saying that they need to take amazing to the next level to get some fresh attention. A moon base would do it, or a trip to another planet or asteroid. I know sending a human isn't worth it from a science point of view, but sending a robot doesn't get the "wow" factor needed for public attention.
 

jtr1962

Storage? I am Storage!
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Jan 25, 2002
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Flushing, New York
As cool as people going into space is, it isn't nearly as cool or amazing as it was decades ago. I'm not saying that they aren't doing neat stuff, or making progress. I'm just saying that they need to take amazing to the next level to get some fresh attention. A moon base would do it, or a trip to another planet or asteroid. I know sending a human isn't worth it from a science point of view, but sending a robot doesn't get the "wow" factor needed for public attention.
That's exactly why the space program hasn't gotten the attention it deserves. When I was younger, I actually wanted to be an astronaut. Yes, me. The same person who adamantly refuses to step on an airliner today. I would have gone without a moments hestitation to Mars, or the moons of Jupiter, or anywhere else they cared to send me. I suppose I still would. What caused me to lose interest was that we stopped "going places". Just going into low Earth orbit in what was basically a space truck had little appeal to me. Sure, there were a lot of experiments and discoveries which might have kept me somewhat interested. However, it's just not the same as setting foot on another world, literally going where none have gone before. It's this whole unknown thing. So much about living on Earth is mundane, predictable. Doing something where you don't know what will happen, even if there are risks, is a whole other plane of existence.

Sad to say, but by the time we might actually start going places, I'll either be dead or way too old to make the journey. Still, my hats off to all those who stuck with the program, knowing full well they would likely end their careers no further than low Earth orbit. They'll pave the way for the next generation, those who are just born now. How wonderful I think it would have been to look up at a point of light in our sky, and say "I've been there". I won't ever get that chance, but maybe if my niece has children they will, and I'll be around to see it.
 

Fushigi

Storage Is My Life
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Illinois, USA
Many people think of the shuttle program as UPS for the space station. Not a thrilling PR image. It doesn't help that the shuttles themselves are aging 1970s technology with lots of modernization. They don't exactly have that iPod bling factor anymore.

When I was at a conference in Feb '06 they had a guy from JPL come on stage to talk about the Mars rovers. His opening line was something like "Welcome to day 727 of our 90 day mission" (I don't remember the numbers exactly but that was the general scale). And as you can see the mission is still on some two years after that and may even run to 2009 as long as the rovers can hold out. Pretty damn impressive for devices designed to last 3 months. Our space program is capable of doing some amazing things but NASA's PR machine, and the lack of manned travel to/beyond the moon, are keeping people from realizing it.
 

Bozo

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Twilight Zone
So I just watched the teaser trailer for the new Star Trek movie.
I'm not a trekkie, but it looks pretty cool. To me, though, the coolest thing about it was the little soundbites from John Kennedy and Neil Armstrong, from back in the days when we knew all about our spacemen.

We've had some really great movies about the space program - I'm thinking mostly about the Right Stuff but also Apollo 13, but at the same time nobody really pays much attention or really even gives a shit about what we do in space anymore. The men and women we send up are basically the peak of human achievement. I am sitting here thinking that those people should be heroes to us. They aren't. We don't even know who they are, even when they do something amazing.

A few months ago a woman named Barbara Morgan went into space. 20 years ago, she was Christa Mcauliffe's backup as the schoolteacher selected to go into space. She knew, in 1985, that she wasn't going to get her chance. Turns out, she continued to work with NASA both in public outreach AND to fully qualify as a mission specialist, a real astronaut and not just a deadweight passenger. She did that as a middle aged woman, starting her training in the late 90s.

Cool as a new Star Trek movie might be, I wish we could have the same sense of wonder and admiration for the real life heroes who actually get to do the things we make science fiction movies about.

Well said Merc. When John Glenn was launced into space, I was in Jr High. Every activity in the school came to a stop. We got to watch it on live (B&W) TV. Now, if you talk to most High School students, the only thing they know about going into space, is getting high.

Bozo :joker:
 

ddrueding

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Things NASA has done that are interesting to kids since I was a kid.

1. Challenger accident - It is a tragedy, and they didn't mean to do it, but it got my attention (I was 6) and showed that they were doing dangerous stuff. Made me want to be an astronaut.

2. Hubble launch - Some pretty pictures always get good attention. Though the fact that they messed up so badly put a stink on the project.

3. Mars missions - More pretty pictures, up to and including the current rovers. They aren't going to get any more "wow" with just pictures.

4. ISS - Very cool, people living in space. Not a good "bang for the buck" WRT PR, though.

Summary? No more pictures! We get it! We can send cameras to places. It may even be scientifically useful. But they need PR. That means they need humans to go somewhere interesting. Hell, even landing is optional; just take the ISS and stick some small motors on it. Have it go out and do a round-trip of Mars and come back.
 

Fushigi

Storage Is My Life
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That's called a "frankencheesie". Seriously. I've seen it on menus around here, although I don't think it was batter-dipped.
 

Fushigi

Storage Is My Life
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[FONT=&quot]On this day in 2006, three independent observing campaigns announced the discovery of the first cool rocky/icy extrasolar planet around a main-sequence star (OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb, near the center of the Milky Way galaxy). In 2004, the Opportunity rover (MER-B) landed on surface of Mars. In 1994, the Clementine deep space probe launched. In 1890, Nellie Bly completed her round-the-world journey in 72 days. And in 1881, Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell formed the first telephone company. Happy Birthday Alicia Keys (1981), Steve Prefontaine (1951-1975), Etta James (1938 ), Edwin Newman (1919), Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), Robert Burns (1759-1796) and Robert Boyle (1627-1691).

"It is far more impressive when others discover your good qualities without your help."
- Judith Martin (Miss Manners)[/FONT]
 

Pradeep

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Runny glass
Party for your country
Cayla Dengate

'Don't worry," Dad said as thick, black smoke billowed out of the barbecue. "The first sausage always burns."

There is a rule in our house that the barbecue is the man's domain. Sure, women can observe, and most definitely make the accompaniments, but when it comes to turning a steak and sausage, it's Dad's job.


It's also Dad's job to put out any fires created in the process, and go to the shops to pick up extra sausages when the first lot burns.


But on Australia Day, no one seems to mind if the snags are blackened or the steaks are well done. In fact, it's almost expected. Like the summer heat and the ever-orbiting flies, a burnt snag is part of the rough and ready Australian way of life.


Australia Day is a time to relish our own cliches throw a prawn on the barbie, pour half your VB on to a barbecuing steak, take off your double-plugger thongs and frisbee them at your mates.


Add to that some newer traditions like the Big Day In lazing about recovering from Big Day Out while listening to Triple J's Hottest 100, or on the other end of the scale, preparing a high-brow culinary feast with all-Australian ingredients.


TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE OF ALL THINGS AUSTRALIAN WITH THE AUSTRALIA DAY QUIZ


No matter how you choose to celebrate, there are a few vital ingredients for a good Australia Day party, and one is a barbecue.


CIT director of the Center for Tourism and Hotel Management Stuart Walsh is Canberra's unofficial barbecue expert. As the previous executive chef at the Royal Melbourne Golf Club, he knows barbecues can be classy affairs.


"Australia Day falls in the right time of year for a barbecue," he says. "The sun is shining and it's the perfect weather to grab a bowl of salad and barbecue some lamb chops they're tasty and so quick to barbecue for a party outdoors."


He said the "first sausage always burns" phenomenon is well documented. "The most common mistake when barbecuing is people have it too hot. It chars the outside of the meat, and then it's almost impossible to cook the inside.


"Another common mistake is that when making your own marinade, a lot of people put too much sugar in it. Marinades with high sugar tend to burn rather than cook. It's better to start cooking marinade meats on a low heat on the hotplate then finish it off over the flames."


Then there's the seafood. Walsh recommends barbecuing anything in a shell, especially prawns, bugs and crayfish.


"Seafood works well on modern barbecues that have a hood you can pull down and heat it up, almost creating an oven. The best way to cook seafood is to turn it down low, put the hood down and cook it slowly, then you can go off and enjoy yourself while it's cooking."


And enjoy you will with a few adult-friendly Australia Day games. Create your own citizenship test with the ever-important questions about Australia, such as "What colour were Australian starlet Kylie Minogue's hotpants in Spinning Around?"; "Which 1930s prime minister frequently wrote love letters to his wife in Tasmania?"; "Which other poet did Banjo Patterson verbally duel with about city versus country?"


If you're not feeling proactive, you can always rely on Carlton Draft bottle top trivia to entertain guests.


There is an unofficial rule that Australia Day will always be hot. The sun gods must love our sunburnt country, and never fail to deliver a scorcher, so the beer tastes better, the sausages cook faster, and the plunge into a pool is all the more refreshing.


Staying cool becomes of prime importance, yet the days of Slip n Slide and running rampant under the sprinkler are over. There are simple ways to stay cool without draining the territory's precious water resources. The easiest option is to choose a site near a river or lake, and in Canberra, we're spoiled for choice. Laze about the sheltered southern shores of Lake Burley Griffin, join the barbecuers at the Cotter or for a more secluded spot, try Kambah Pool or take the boat out on Molonglo River.


If you'd rather stay at home, pick up a few shallow blow-up wading pools with just enough water to splash about in.


Keep in mind that Australia Day isn't about perfection. The sausages will inevitably burn. Someone will nick your Coopers and replace it with Four X. Mum will put too much zinc on the kids and if you're really lucky, the stars will come out at night, and as the Southern Cross shines brightly, Uncle Albert will take all his clothes off and dive bomb into the pool. Now that's Australian.

Source:The Canberra Times

Happy Australia Day!
 

ddrueding

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Can anyone identify this sink/workstation or one like it? I like the concept, and would like to see more. There are trays that slide around a circular track, and a couple sinks underneath.

2221852639_d4d59e64e9_o.jpg
 

LunarMist

I can't believe I'm a Fixture
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USA
Can anyone identify this sink/workstation or one like it? I like the concept, and would like to see more. There are trays that slide around a circular track, and a couple sinks underneath.

2221852639_d4d59e64e9_o.jpg

Where did you get the photo?
 

ddrueding

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Messages
19,747
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Horsens, Denmark
It is a screen cap from a BBC channel 4 TV show called "Grand Designs". Season 4, episode 3 - "Sugar Cube Sussex". I've been to the website, and gone down the list of credited suppliers, and can't find anything like it.
 

Fushigi

Storage Is My Life
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Jan 23, 2002
Messages
2,890
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Illinois, USA
[FONT=&quot]On this day in 1996, President Jacques Chirac announced a "definitive end" to French nuclear testing. In 1978, Sweden outlawed aerosol sprays due to their harmful effect on the ozone layer, becoming the first nation to enact such a ban. And in 1886, Karl Benz patented the first successful gasoline-driven automobile. Happy Birthday Sara Gilbert (1975), Heather Graham (1970), Oprah Winfrey (1954), Ann Jillian (1950), Tom Selleck (1945), Paddy Chayefsky (1923-1981), John Forsythe (1918 ), W.C. Fields (1880-1946), John D. Rockefeller Jr. (1874-1960), Anton Chekhov (1860-1904) and U.S. President William McKinley (1843-1901). RIP Willie Dixon (d. 1992), Leif Erickson (1986), Jimmy Durante (1980), Freddie Prinze (1977), Robert Frost (1963) and H. L. Mencken (1956).

"Always render more and better service than is expected of you, no matter what your task may be."
- Og Mandino

[/FONT]
 
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