Month: February 2013

  • Send a Braves fan to the FanCave!

    Atlanta Braves fan Bryan Mapes is in the top 52 fans to be a part of the 2013 MLB Fan Cave. You can help him out by going to the MLB Fan Cave link and voting for him.

    This is a vote all you want type of deal, so here is my suggestion, if you’re willing.

    1. Go to the link.
    2. Refresh the page until his video is in the top row of displayed fans. He’s there by name (Bryan Mapes) and he’s also the only fan from Braves Country to make it, so look for the Braves logo.
    3. Proceed to click back and forth between his video and the vote button, shown in the image here.

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    That’s it! Let’s send a Braves fan to the Fan Cave!

  • Nuclear History and Bureaucratic Chivvying

    The wonderful What If blog by Randall Munroe put me back onto a blog that I’d found last year called Nuclear Secrecy. I’d originally been introduced to this blog through the web application NUKEMAP, whereby you can choose a location and then blow it up with the nuclear weapon of your choice. The map shows the circles of destruction based on initial fireball, blast effects, radiation exposure, and more. It’s a lot of “fun”, but it’s not what this post is about.

    If you follow the links in the What If blog post, it takes you to a series of press releases that were prepared prior to the original testing of the atomic bomb in Alamagordo, NM in 1945. As they weren’t certain what would happen when they pressed the BOOM button on the new device, the press releases covered the gamut from “accidental explosion” to “widespread devastation”. If you click into the scanned PDF of the releases, you’ll find a memo attached that details why more information than is shown in the releases should not be provided to the public.  There are eleven reasons, but my favorite is number nine.

    9. As soon as secrecy is lifted, the project will be subject to harassing investigation, official inquiries, time-consuming visitors, newspaper requests for stories and photographs, scientific curiosity and all the miscellany of crack-pots, columnist, commentators, political aspirants, would-be authors and world-savers—all of which will set the project back on its heels with the result that the probability of successfully meeting anticipated dates would be decidedly lessened. ((This paragraph would be an excellent case study surrounding the Oxford Comma.))

    Tell me that you can’t identify with the people writing and approving this memo. I certainly can. See any of my posts about Ashford Dunwoody.

  • Weekend Goal: New Closet Accoutrements

    Today’s and tomorrow’s job will be to replace the closet shelves that were so helpfully destroyed by Apollo.

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    There used to be a number of shelves, hanging clothes, sweaters, etc. in that empty space. The closet shelves were probably a bit over their intended mass capacity when this large feline…

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    …decided to leap from the top shelf, imparting enough of an impulse to cause structural failure.

    I can only imagine how surprised the cat was when everything came tumbling down (we were not home). Alas, he hasn’t taken the lesson to heart and is still climbing on top of everything.

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    So today we fix the closet. I’ll do my best to make it only one trip to Home Depot.

  • Good Morning

    I call it, “sunrise in the powerlines.”

    Good morning, everybody!

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