Further continuing the panoramic documentation of the recent trip:
The “cutaway F-86.” Granted, all they did was simply remove the skin from an F-86, but it sure looks like a whole lot of extra work. That, I assume, is the modelmaker in me talking.
Reportedly, Trump just handed over secret info to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and ambassador Sergey Kislyak about how the US found out about ISIS threats. Supposedly, this throws some allies and their intelligence gathering under the bus.
Sheesh, Don. Not very good business practices. Hillary, at least, would have known to *sell* that information.
What happens when you take footage from Star Trek The Motion Picture and set it to the score from Tron: Legacy? Something that really works, Star Trek: Legacy.
Star Trek: Discovery has done just about everything imaginable to make itself seem unappealing and to shed my interest in the show. However… Good News, Everyone: there seems to be another contender in the wings for a decent Star Trek show, coming soonish to Fox: The Orville. This time, rather than being official Star Trek that makes a hash of Star Trek, this is an unabashed parody of Star Trek. And it looks really, really good.
Took me a sec, but the actress on the far left in the bridge shot above? She played Cassidy Yates, Cryin’ Ben Sisko’s main squeeze on Deep Space Nine.
The video title says “autistic,” but it’s really just “social justice warrior.” The two should not be confused like this, as there are substantial differences. For example:
It’s not unethical to be autistic.
If you happen to be autistic you can’t choose to not be.
Autism does often convey other benefits… many times autistic people provide valuable contributions to society.
Autistic people are often worthy of love and respect.
So… behold the modern campus (Western Washington University, apparently) leftist when they see an opinion they disagree with. If you are in an office setting… hell, crank it up. Let everyone enjoy this.
The guy killed six people, and managed to get released in a prisoner exchange. There are two “ponderables” that spring immediately to mind:
What does this say about the mindset of the people who voted for him?
What does this say about the wisdom of releasing terrorists in prisoner exchanges without first injecting them with AIDS, mercury, lead? Is it possible to create a small capsule that can be injected or swallowed that will sit there inert for, say, a year or two and then break open and infect the guy with rabies?
Continuing the panoramic documentation of the recent trip:
Head-on shot of the XB-70. This one involved peeking though other displays to get this angle. This is another Big Friggen Image; at 300 dpi, it’d print out at 5.4 feet wide.
B-2 on the left, SR-71 in the middle. Photography of dark *and* light aircraft in this dimly yet harshly lit environment is a bit of a challenge. I suppose I should have worked on high dynamic range proficiency before this trip, but it sadly never occurred to me.
Entrance into the Cold War gallery.
Another balcony overview of the Cold War gallery:
The X-15 and the YF-12 are sorta crammed together:
With the rise of rapid prototyping, the prospect of easy home-made pistols of some reasonable quality is rising. However, it has always seemed to me that the hardest part of making a decent pistol was making a rifled barrel. Most of the home-made pistols you’re likey to see tend to be smooth bore for the simple fact that that’s a whole lot easier than rifled. But as it turns out, rifling a pistol barrel seems to be a lot easier than you might suspect. This guy shows how to go about making a simple rifled barrel using nothing much more than a cheap drill press, a Dremel tool and a hydraulic car jack. Couple a barrel like this with the easy-to-manufacture parts of the rest of a pistol, and making guns at home becomes something virtually any amateur can do. And, perhaps, something any amateur *should* do, especially in uncivilized places where such things are legally frowned upon.
If you want better, cleaner rifling, more complex machines can be made. Even so, this should be well within the capability of a decent machinist.
These are two wholly different manufacturing methods to create the same thing. Both are, int he grand scheme of things, quite simple and straightforward. Certainly simpler than laws that pretend to ban firearms.