High speed films of the initial nuclear fireball from the Operation Teapot – Turk nuclear test, March 7, 1955, 43 kilotons, atop a 508-foot-tall tower.
High speed films of the initial nuclear fireball from the Operation Teapot – Turk nuclear test, March 7, 1955, 43 kilotons, atop a 508-foot-tall tower.
So there I am, sitting in my car with the radio on. It’s playing commercials, so I’m not really paying attention… but then the guy says something that makes part of my brain go *POIT* and I start to pay attention. But what he said wasn’t repeated, and the rest of the commercial, oddly, didn’t give the name of the business, just a “text pound something-or-other on your cell phone.” Huh, I sez, then go on with life. Then, a week or three later I turn on the radio again and BAM, there’s that commercial again. This time I paid a bit more attention.
There’s nothing unusual about the commercial or the product… it’s for an orthopedic surgery clinic. Bust your knee, they fix you up. Nothing special. But what grabbed my attention was the name of the Doctor, mentioned once at the beginning of the commercial: Dr. Relyea.
Relyea.
Relyea?
R’lyeh!
I suppose reshaping your joints through non-Euclidian geometry might be one way to go. No you can bend your elbow a full 362 degrees in *four* axes!
Put those three together and you have the start of an aviation museum. A rather slim, ragged museum, but ya gotta start somewhere…
Looks like they stuck a GoPro onto the lower leading edge of one of the tailfins. It’s remarkable just how close to inline the fin seems to be to the middle turbofan.
And:
Video of the AN-225 take off from Chimore Airport, Bolivia. The #AN225 is performing a series of flights to deliver boilers for thermal power plant of Bolivia from Iquique, Chile, to Chimore, Bolivia. In each flight Mriya carries the cargo weighing up to 160 tons.
And:
Great googaly moogaly. This cop is either gonna get his butt in a sling or a medal. I just can’t tell. This goes kinda bonkers.
This is interesting…
“Ad Astra” is an exceedingly private school on the SpaceX campus. Current enrollment seems to be about 31, apparently half of whom are SpaceX employee’s kids. It’s secretive… because it can be. Almost nothing is known about the curriculum, but it seems to be heavy on STEM and lean on SJW BS.
Given how so many on the left display extreme jealousy towards the likes of Musk and seething hatred of their favorite projects (for example, read this steaming pile of journalistic cancer) especially those projects that might help expand and perpetuate western civilization, it’s not surprising that Musk would want to provide a safe environment to provide an *actual* education to the next generation.
Ancient though the design may be (older than me), it’s still hard to replace. Which is why it basically hasn’t been replaced, just updated.
Silent version, raw footage:
And then there’s just showing off:
“Stranger Things” is a surprisingly good Netflix show set in the 1980’s. If any of that was news to you, I can only assume you’ve been living under a rock. The first season was weird, set in 1983, and dealt with a monster, sort of a humanoid shark that could pass between dimensions. Scary and dangerous, but just an animal (more or less). Season two – 1984 – had an enemy that was substantially more Lovecraftian in scope; intelligence and evil intent wrapped around a hard-to-describe giant presence.
Season three, due out probably next year, is set in 1985. Netflix has not yet released a trailer for the series or really any information about it, but they have released this promotional video for “Starcourt Mall” in Hawkins, Indiana. Those of you too young to remember the 80s… this video is pretty accurate. The style of the video, the fashions, the stores in the mall, the fact that people are actually, y’know, actually interacting, the fact that everyone isn’t bloated… this really does a great job of capturing what the era was like. The only bits that threw me out were a few of the early exterior shots, showing the clock tower and the mall parking lot: these sure look like they were shot using modern drones. These sort of angles could have only been caught with choppers back in the day and there’s no chance that a cheapo promotional vid like this would have done that.
The phrase “as you know” is banned (well, it’s not clear that it has actually been banned… seems more like such a ban is the desire of members of the Junior Totalitarian League) because some students are not only ignorant boobs they are apparently also weak and fragile and incapable of surviving being told that they aught to already know something.
The University of Bath also produced this insanely whiny video about the importance of dropping down to the level of snowflakes. Examples of Very Bad Things include a French language lesson that includes the phrase “The women will be getting together the 6th of July” and then questioning, True or False, whether this was in the summer. The Snowflake Conundrum is… but what about an Argentinian student? For that student from the southern hemisphere, July is in winter. And so this globe trotting exchange student who has found him/her/it/zim/xer/floople/self in Britain apparently purely by chance and without the slightest bit of knowledge of Britain or the northern hemisphere will be utterly flummoxed by the question and could suffer permanent emotional scarring. Also includes complaints from students that in this British university located in Britain, they’ve only had teachers who were white. Students also complain of finding it difficult to find books in the library on African Studies and postcolonial theory. Suggestions include jamming discussions of gender, race and sexuality into the course work.
That latter one intrigues me.
“Q: The rocket engine has a specific impulse of 310 seconds. The initial mass of the vehicle is 15,000 kilograms. The burnout mass is 1,200 kilograms. How does this make Tony feel about post-colonialism?”
“Q: Civic planners need a bridge across the river Thames. Should they build it from cast iron, stainless steel, or critical race theory?”
“Q: A blue hypergiant with a mass of 1,350 Sols goes supernova. In the process, 50% of its mass is expelled in the form of a planetary nebula. The remainder is compressed to a diameter of 10,000 kilometers. Will this stabilize as a neutron star, continue to collapse into a black hole, or is there a more culturally sensitive way to make the star feel better about itself than to apply arbitrary othering labels?”
“Q: On December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy launched an attack on Pearl Harbor. In 10,000 words or more, describe how this attack was a justifiable response to American colonialism, whether furry culture should be celebrated, or whether you are a racist.”
Are you a small nation with big ambitions? Do you want to have your own nuclear weapons, but don’t have the industrial or scientific wherewithal to develop the reactor technology to produce plutonium? Well, good news! There’s an easier way!
Just stake out motels in high-crime neighborhoods and wait for idjits from the Department of Energy to park overnight and leave nuclear materials in the back seat of their rental car. Spoiler: smashy, smashy.