New airplane hailed as "the fourth great breakthrough in aeronautical science"
Grok Headline matches for New airplane hailed as "the fourth great breakthrough in aeronautical science"
Salesboom.com’s new Distribution
Partnership Hailed as “Huge
Breakthrough”
Salesboom.com’s new Distribution
Partnership Hailed as “Huge
Breakthrough”
09/13/2004 04:14 PMSalesboom.com, leading provider of on demand Customer Relationship
Management (CRM) and Sales Force Automation (SFA) services today
announced it has brokered what has been referred to as a “Huge
Breakthrough” partnership in the Southeast Asian market. After meeting
with the President of Datapax Philippines, a provider of mobile and
wireless ondemand SFA and inventory solutions for the Southeast Asian
market a number of times during a week-long visit to Canada, the
partnership announcement comes with high expectations. [PRWEB Sep 13,
2004]
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature |
Teleportation breakthrough made
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature |
Teleportation breakthrough made
06/17/2004 08:31 AMTeleportation breakthrough made .. Beam Me Up ..
bbc
news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3811785.stm
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"BBC NEWS | Science/Nature |
Teleportation breakthrough made"
"BBC NEWS | Science/Nature |
Teleportation breakthrough made"
06/19/2004 09:14 PMGreat moments in science
Great moments in science
01/11/2004 07:54 AM Pop-scienc
e writing by Karl Kruszelnicki, scientist and
broadcaster. Includes fun
with
kissing,
bad breath
,
biscuit
dunking,
broccoli<
/a>, Botox,
uses of
cow parts,
maggots
in wounds and the
IgNobel
prize-winning
bellybutton lint
research.
Great Computer Science Papers?
Great Computer Science Papers?
11/16/2003 08:08 AMGreat television science presenters and
their shows
Great television science presenters and
their shows
06/04/2004 05:23 PM
Great television science presenters and their
shows: Tim Hunkin "
the Secret Life of
Machines", Jacob Bronowski "
The Ascent of Man", James
Burke "
Connections",
David Attenborough "
Trials of
Life" "
Blue Planet"
etc.,
Marlin Perkins "
Wild Kingdom", Don
Herbert "
Watch Mr. Wizard", Adam Hart-Davis "
Science Shack"
"
Rough
Science", Jack Horkheimer "
Star Gazer".
Does anyone else have any favorites, past or present?
Great Moments in Science - Lemmings
Suicide Myth
Great Moments in Science - Lemmings
Suicide Myth
12/27/2004 05:26 PMabc.net.au/science/k2/moments/s1081903.htm
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Great science fiction radio plays, open
licensed and free for downloading
Great science fiction radio plays, open
licensed and free for downloading
12/12/2003 05:31 PMMy pal hugh Spenser is a hell of a science fiction writer, and he's
got a passion for the golden age of science fiction radio dramas. He
wrote a six-part series of radio plays about the early days of science
fiction fandom, which were produced by the wonderful
Shoestring Theater and aired last
summer on NPR. Hugh and Shoestring have released all six epiisodes as
MP3s under a Creative Commons license that allows for the
noncommercial redistribution -- give them a listen, they're way boss.
Amazing Struggles Episode 1,
28.8MB MP3 Link
Amazing Struggles Episode 2,
29MB MP3 Link
Amazing Struggles Episode 3,
29.4MB MP3 Link
Astonishing Failures
Episode 1, 30.1MB MP3 Link
Astonishing Failures
Episode 2, 31.2MB MP3 Link
Astonishing Failures
Episode 3, 30MB MP3 Link
U.S. Mad Cow Hailed From Canada
U.S. Mad Cow Hailed From Canada
01/07/2004 01:55 PMDNA tests confirm that the cow diagnosed with the first U.S. case of
mad cow disease was born in Canada. Investigators will use the test
results to search for the source of infection.
GE hailed as example by China
GE hailed as example by China
12/09/2003 02:44 AMBoston Globe Dec 9 2003 2:32AM ET
Boy hailed for air safety gadget
Boy hailed for air safety gadget
06/22/2005 02:40 AMA 12-year-old boy is praised for inventing a gadget which could help
prevent air crashes like the Concorde accident.
Rugby: Woodward hailed
Rugby: Woodward hailed
09/04/2004 04:35 AMJonny Wilkinson says Sir Clive Woodward will be a hard act to follow
as England coach.
Java, BPELJ hailed
Java, BPELJ hailed
04/09/2004 07:59 PMJava is getting promotional boosts in the form of a gathering of
vendors touting the latest Java specification and a whitepaper
pertaining to BPELJ (Business Process Execution Language for Java),
which links Java and Web services business processes.
Afghan voter registration hailed
Afghan voter registration hailed
08/01/2004 11:51 AMNearly all eligible voters have signed up to take part in October's
historic presidential poll, the UN says.
Brown hailed influential by Time
Brown hailed influential by Time
04/10/2005 02:39 PMChancellor Gordon Brown is one of the world's 100 most influential
people, US magazine Time says.
40th carnival hailed as a success
40th carnival hailed as a success
08/30/2004 03:33 PMThe 40th Notting Hill Carnival weekend is praised for its high
turn-out and peaceful spirit as it draws to a close.
Mars probe hailed as triumph for U.K.
technology
Mars probe hailed as triumph for U.K.
technology
12/21/2003 11:53 PMCNET Asia Dec 21 2003 10:34PM ET
Goss Hailed As Old Pro, Assailed as
Partisan (washingtonpost.com)
Goss Hailed As Old Pro, Assailed as
Partisan (washingtonpost.com)
09/13/2004 06:39 AMwashingtonpost.com - The CIA director's coat caught fire. Smoke rose
from Allen Dulles's tan tweed jacket as he sat behind his desk,
lighting his pipe, talking to a young Porter Goss. Goss was hoping to
become a clandestine service officer. This was his final interview.
Bush's Leadership Against Terror Hailed
(washingtonpost.com)
Bush's Leadership Against Terror Hailed
(washingtonpost.com)
09/01/2004 12:31 AMwashingtonpost.com - NEW YORK, Aug. 31 -- The Republican National
Convention spent a second night celebrating President Bush's
leadership in the struggle against terrorism, praising him for putting
"all his heart and soul" into the fight against America's enemies.
On a Jet Airplane
On a Jet Airplane
12/02/2003 12:45 AMAs Millions of others head for the airport I am a few minutes away
from joining my fellow Americans on...
Your great-great-grandmother didn’t
have to surrender her children. What
happened?
Your great-great-grandmother didn’t
have to surrender her children. What
happened?
04/01/2005 11:00 AM
The
Underground History of American Education You
aren’t compelled to loan your car to anyone who wants it, but you
are compelled to surrender your school-age child to strangers who
process children for a livelihood.... If I demanded you give up your
television to an anonymous, itinerant repairman who needed work
you’d think I was crazy; if I came with a policeman who forced you
to pay that repairman even after he broke your set, you would be
outraged. Why are you so docile when you give up your child to a
government agent called a schoolteacher? Airplane Parachutes
Airplane Parachutes
12/24/2004 12:57 PMGiant parachutes help small planes in distress float down
to safety: I saw a bit on The Discovery Channel about these once.
They started on ultralights, and I watched home video of a guy popping
his plane's chute after a massive structural failure caused both wings
to collapse. Very impressive.
There's a good picture with this article that will help you
understand the basic concept.
The company's most advanced parachute now can accommodate nearly
4,000 pounds. While small planes can weigh up to 2,000 pounds and
cruise at about 175 mph, regional jets weigh 80,000 pounds and fly at
more than 500 mph.
That's why Ballistic Recovery Systems is working with NASA —
which gave it $670,000 for research — to design a new generation
of emergency parachutes that would work on small jets and could be
steered by pilots as they drift to the ground.
Candy Science: M&Ms pack more tightly
than spheres: Science News Online, Feb.
14, 2004
Candy Science: M&Ms pack more tightly
than spheres: Science News Online, Feb.
14, 2004
02/17/2004 06:09 AMCandy Science: M&Ms pack more tightly than
spheres
sciencenews.org/20040214/fob7.asp
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Videoconferencing on the airplane
(kottke.org)
Videoconferencing on the airplane
(kottke.org)
06/25/2004 07:24 AMVideoconferencing on the airplane (kottke.org) ..
via
kottke.org/04/06/videoconferencing-airplane
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Suspicious things I've done on an
airplane
Suspicious things I've done on an
airplane
08/06/2004 07:52 AMAn Indian-American blogger recounts the "suspicious" things he's done
on an airplane:
For reference, I am about 5'8", dark black hair and untrimmed beard
length about three to four inches. I weigh about 160lbs and have brown
skin. I am of Indian descent but am frequently mistaken for Arab. I
often wear religious headdress when traveling (a white cotton cap with
gold trim).
Here's some of the things I have done on an airplane, and why:
- Speaking a foreign language in hushed tones with other similar males
My language is a variant of Gujarati, with many Arabic vocabulary
words. I consider it rude to talk loudly on a plane, since people are
sleeping, and prefer to talkin my language with my friends or family
if we are discussing personal things because in my experience, people
eavesdrop in close quarters.
Link
(
via Electrolite)
Airplane versus Minivan
Airplane versus Minivan
06/22/2005 02:23 AMAs I plan and pack up for Alaska I have had a couple of offers from
guys who wanted to come with me from Boston to Anchorage (we leave
Wednesday). It turns out that the Cirrus SR20 is not that
practical for long trips unless you are either very thin or totally
friendless.Full fuel is necessary for some of the long legs in
the remote regions of Alaska, Yukon, and the Northwest Territories
where airports are widely separated and airports that sell fuel are
uncommon--mostly you only get fuel at airports that are accessible by
road or ship. With full fuel my old Diamond Star would carry 570
pounds. The Cirrus has a longer range but the penalty is that it
only holds 520 pounds fully fueled and its performance at gross weight
is marginal on warm days or at high elevations. You need a lot
of runway and to make sure that you don't need to outclimb any
terrain.
The airplane isn't any fun without Alex in the back seat.
Alex needs his Science Diet Nature's Best, which isn't widely
available, plus some other accessories. Dog+food is about 100
lbs. total. The plane needs a towbar, canopy cover, and tie-down
ropes at 20 lbs. For navigation one needs paper charts and
approach plates for a total of at least 20 lbs. Survival
equipment is required by statute (until 2000 or so the kit was
required include a gun and ammunition) and a full tent, mattress pad,
and sleeping bag is really a good idea for forced landings as well as
impromptu camping when hotels are full or not dog-friendly.
That's about 35 lbs. together. You want some electronics in the
airplane, such as headsets, EPIRB (the emergency locator transmitter
that Cirrus includes in the airframe is an ancient 121.5 MHz design,
which is not very effective for getting rescued), and maybe a little
Iridium phone. That's maybe 10 lbs. put together. If I
want to take a camera and some clothing and my 195 lb. carcass it
looks as though I will have only about 100 lbs. left over for a human
passenger. If I want to take a little folding bike that comes
down to 70 lbs. spare capacity.
How does a minivan compare? A 2005 Toyota Sienna has a "curb
weight" of 4120 lbs., 2000 lbs. more than the Cirrus. Its gross
vehicle weight is 5690 for a "payload" of 1570 (the curb
weight includes full fuel).
Making Science Fact, Now Chronicling
Science Fiction
Making Science Fact, Now Chronicling
Science Fiction
06/14/2004 09:32 PMDonna L. Shirley is director of the new Science Fiction Museum and
Hall of Fame in Seattle, where science fiction is used to spur
interest in science.
Thanksgiving Travel by Light Airplane
Thanksgiving Travel by Light Airplane
12/17/2004 06:36 PMAlex and I set off from Boston Tuesday on a trip via light aircraft
to northern New Jersey, Washington, DC, Norfolk, VA, and Gettysburg,
PA. I try to avoid flying in the clouds and I try to avoid
flying in the dark. But there was a cloud deck over New Jersey
at about 2500' above the ground and the weather for Wednesday was
forecast to be much worse. So it was going to be a flight
through at least some clouds. If I had been alone I would have
left around noon but a friend wanted a ride for the first leg of the
trip and couldn't leave work immediately. So we didn't take off
from Hanscom Air Force Base (Bedford, MA) until after 3 pm.
Knowing that there would be clouds in New Jersey and not wanting to
deal with the complex air space around New York City, I filed an
instrument flight rules (IFR) plan. Knowing that it would
be dark when we arrived I decided to go to Teterboro airport where
they have a precision instrument landing system (ILS) rather than
cheaper simpler Essex County Airport where they have smaller runways
and no ILS (Essex County is where JFK, Jr. kept his Piper Saratoga;
Teterboro is closer to Manhattan but horrifically expensive for fuel
and other services). From the weather forecasts that I'd seen it
sounded as though 6000' would put me above the lowest deck of clouds
and below the higher decks. That was indeed true until around
Hartford, CT. Then we were headed straight for the top of a
cloud. The dog in the back didn't budge from his sleeping
position but I could feel some tension from the right seat. "Why
aren't we climbing to get above that cloud?" my passenger asked.
An instrument clearance means that Air Traffic Control (ATC) has
cleared a block of airspace in front of you of any other airplanes
that are also flying under IFR. The pilot is still responsible
for looking for visual flight rules (VFR) airplanes when out of the
clouds but it is ATC's job to keep everyone inside the clouds
separated from each other. The system only works if pilots don't
deviate from their clearance, which includes an assigned
altitude. This I explained just as we went into the cloud
top. In addition to obscuring one's view of the horizon clouds
have a nasty habit of containing turbulent air. The airplane
rocked a bit.
The real problem with flying in clouds in the New England winter is
airframe icing. Whenever the temperature in a cloud is below 0 C
there is a risk of ice accumulation. The temperature, on
average, drops 2 degrees C for every 1000' rise in altitude. So
at 6000' it was about 12 degrees colder than on the ground or -2
C. A simple airplane such as my Diamond Star DA40 does not have
heated wings, a heated propeller, rubber boots along the wings
that can crack ice, or a system for spreading antifreeze out onto
the wings. It does have "pitot heat" to make sure that the
instruments for measuring airframe and altitude don't have their air
intakes frozen shut. I had turned this on just before entering
the clouds but it is only helpful for maintaining airplane control
while getting out of the ice. My rule for instrument flying in
the winter is that I won't go unless it is above freezing at 3000'
above the ground. Because there are no mountains or other
obstacles over the coastal sprawl of the East Coast it is always
possible to descend to 3000' without fear of hitting something.
After 15 minutes in the clouds small amounts of ice began to
accumulate on the "wing walk" grippy surface next to the
cockpit. Airliners and the one small airplane on the radio (New
York Approach) were complaining about ice accumulation and asking for
lower altitudes. The helpful controller said that people a
few miles ahead were reporting ice and asked me if I wanted
lower. I was cleared first to 5000' where the temperature was 0
and the ice accumulation stopped but the built-up ice did not come
off. At 4000' the temperature was +2 and the ice quickly
disappeared. We were still inside the clouds at 4:30 pm when the
sun was supposed to set so we noticed only a rapid darkening of our
surroundings.
Teterboro airport tends to be busy and a day with low clouds when
everyone is coming in IFR slows things down considerably. In
theory ATC should have parked us in a holding pattern somewhere.
I would have been responsible for driving around in fairly precise
ovals, 1 minute long on the flat side, at some precise point in
space. In practice the New York controllers are so good and they
have complete RADAR coverage so to be nice they just gave me vectors
that took me northwest of Teterboro until it was my turn to come back
in. With vectors they just say "fly heading 270" and you point
the airplane west at the present altitude. After about a
10-minute vector delay we were turned back in towards Teterboro and
cleared down to 3000'. We didn't break out of the clouds
completely until we were at 2000' and heading in towards Runway 19 at
Teterboro. It can be a challenge to locate a runway amidst the
clutter of parking lot and street lights in an urban area but the
Teterboro runway is 7000' long and has a fancy centerline lighting
system. In any case it isn't necessary to visually identify the
runway until several hundred feet above the ground. An ILS is
flown by tracking two radio beams emanating from just in front of the
runway. The localizer beam gives left/right guidance and the
glideslope beam gives up/down guidance. Deviation from the
center of these beams is displayed on a little round dial on
the airplane dashboard. Not wanting to trust my perceptions in
the dark, I flew the gauges while running the pre-landing
checklist.
Once on the ground we taxied off the runway as fast as possible
because there was a huge Gulfstream business jet right behind us,
moving at more than 2X the speed of the little Diamond Star.
Both of us taxied into Jet Aviation, one of the airport gas stations
at Teterboro. Their parking lot this Tuesday before Thanksgiving
was crammed with business jets and turbine-powered helicopters.
There were probably $2-3 billion worth of airplanes on their ramp and
in their hangars. The Jet Aviation staff took our bags from the
plane through the palatial terminal into a waiting Hertz rental car, a
little over 2 hours after we'd taken off from Bedford and about 3
hours after we'd left Cambridge.
Next stop is Washington, DC. We have a big family dinner
there at 4 pm on Thanksgiving Day but the weather forecast calls for
clouds, rain, strong headwinds, turbulence, gusty surface winds,
etc.
Fair Summary of Airplane, Airport Wi-Fi
Fair Summary of Airplane, Airport Wi-Fi
08/08/2004 12:01 AMVeteran Times tech/ecommerce columnist writes about Internet access in
the air and in the terminal: Regular readers of this site will find
this New York Times piece covers territory we write about and link to
regularly, albeit the article has less detail as it's intended for a
broader traveling audience with less interest in the particular
technologies and speed, but rather more about the applications.
Tenzing is fairly covered, but it should be noted that they'll be able
to compete on speed with Connexion by Boeing when they are able to use
Inmarsat's new satellites. Connexion by Boeing is now in five
Lufthansa planes, this article discloses, and Tenzing low-speed and
email service is in hundreds of planes. The article notes that Tenzing
has dropped its prices a bit, from $16 for domestic flights down to
$10. Surcharges applies for email attachments, but I believe as before
there are ways to prevent viewing the surcharged part of the email
until you decide you need to see it. Shorter flights might cost as
little as $5 earlier this year; international flights run $20. I'm not
sure what this sentence was supposed to mean, but it appears to have
become garbled in editing: Tenzing, for now, operates at roughly the
same speed as most dial-up modem connections, because it relies on
radio frequency signals to send and retrieve data. But speeds could
improve considerably, depending on whether the airline chooses a
satellite connection. I believe the writer would have written that
Tenzing is relying on a lower-speed network in the U.S., but the
satellite system they employ internationally and will use for
higher-speed services starting in 2005 uses radio frequencies,
too--just different ones. The big news, reported a number of times
earlier, is that Tenzing will able to cut the cord out of its domestic
operations, FCC approval pending, to allow Wi-Fi access to its
service. In domestic flights, you have to use the seat-back or
arm-rest telephone to connect. Quite an ordeal, which the company
openly acknowledges....
Helicopter versus airplane noise
Helicopter versus airplane noise
12/17/2004 06:36 PMHelicopters that are descending with a fair amount of power produce
an annoying sound called "blade slap". Beginners are cautioned
to avoid this condition because it leads to people on the ground
complaining to the FAA about "those damned helicopters." (One
can avoid blade slap by lower the collective to descend more
positively rather than drifting slightly down.) A big
turbine-powered helicopter flew over Harvard Square the other day,
slapping away. I was with a friend, call her "K", who hasn't
spent much time in the work force. I asked her whether she found
the sound annoying.
"Helicopter noise doesn't bother me," K responded. "I assume
that it is a traffic helicopter or some sort of medical
emergency. What I really hate is airplane noise."
Why?
"Whenever I hear a big commercial jet overhead I think about
companies sending their employees out for ridiculous meetings with
each other where they will show vacuous PowerPoint presentations and
have meaningless conversations."
A short trip in a small airplane
A short trip in a small airplane
04/09/2004 04:11 PMFriday, March 26: BED to GAI plus some training. Stop
at TEB for lunch with Lynn and Olivia. Stay in Bethesda with
parents.
Sunday: GAI to Oklahoma City (KPWA has the cheap gas)
Monday, March 29: to http://www.cowboyhalloffame.or
g/ at 0900 to see the Bierstadt paintings, in the afternoon
to KABQ, stay with Susie Atlas
Tuesday, March 30: to Sedona (KSEZ), 5000' high with a 5000'
runway, rent car, maybe we can see the Roden Crater? Andy says
that Jerome, AZ is an interesting town.
Thursday, April 1: to Los Angeles (KSMO), visit new Frank Gehry
concert hall, see Harry Gittes
Friday, April 2: can tour the concert hall 9-3 either today or
Saturday, all performances sold out but call (323) 850-2000 to check
last-minute tix.
Saturday, April 3, 8 pm: scored tickets on Craigslist (thanks
to the kind folks commenting for this idea) for Shostakovich concert
at LA Phil.
Sunday, April 4: to Catalina Island and then at sunset to
KMYF in San Diego, dinner with Christopher
Monday, April 5: tour of www.salk.edu (Louis Kahn building, call
in advance to reserve, set for 12:00), dinner with Gittes family
Tuesday, April 6: to Marfa, Texas (http://www.chinati.org gives tours
Wednesday-Sunday); stay http://www.hotelpaisano.com/
P>
Wednesday, April 7: tour of Chinati, fly to Huntsville, TX
Thursday, April 8: talk at SHSU.edu, fly to Ft. Worth, TX
(KFTW)
Friday, April 9: visit Tadao Ando Modern Art Museum and Japanese
Garden, fly to KCHA?
Saturday, April 10: fly to GAI
Sunday, April 11: fly to BED
Open questions for readers:
- what's a good place between GAI and KPWA to stop for fuel and
maybe an airplane museum or something else interesting and close to
the airport?
- where to stay in Sedona, AZ and also a good hotel in Ft. Worth
close to the art museum and botanical garden?
- is it practical to fly to Catalina Island for the day and do
anything?
Man Found Dead in Wheel Well of Airplane
Man Found Dead in Wheel Well of Airplane
12/25/2003 11:41 AMReuters via Wired News Dec 25 2003 9:41AM ET
Airplane Workers Used Toilets As Seats
(AP)
Airplane Workers Used Toilets As Seats
(AP)
07/23/2004 06:01 PMAP - Two Ryanair employees were fired Friday for sitting in the
toilets of a packed airplane in breach of aviation regulations.
Paper airplane that flaps its wings
Paper airplane that flaps its wings
09/08/2004 12:20 PM
Cory Doctorow:

Keith sez, "This is a link to a site that shows how to make a paper
airplane that actually flaps its wings when it flies without use of a
motor, rubberbands, etc. All you need is a piece of typing paper, an
inch of tape and a penny. As far as I know, it's the only flapping
paper airplane in the world."
Link
(
Thanks, Keith!)
Review of my new airplane, the Cirrus
SR20
Review of my new airplane, the Cirrus
SR20
06/05/2005 11:56 PMI've posted a review of my new airplane, the Cirrus SR20, at
http://philip.gr
eenspun.com/flying/cirrus-sr20Airplane grounded by praying
pentecostals
Airplane grounded by praying
pentecostals
05/27/2004 05:07 PMA pair of praying Pentecostal preachers grounded a plane when they
panicked passengers and pilots by saying 9/11 was "a good reason to
pray."
One preacher told fellow passengers as the Continental Airlines plane
taxied down the runway, "Your last breath on earth is the first one in
heaven as long as you are born again and have Jesus in your heart,"
according to FBI spokesman Paul Moskal. Passengers on the Wednesday
flight to Newark, New Jersey told a flight attendant, who alerted the
plane's captain, officials said. The captain turned the plane around.
"They were sincere in their beliefs and were not malicious," Moskal
said by telephone from Buffalo. "In the context of 9/11 it may not
have been the best way to promote their religion."
Link (
Thanks, Mike)
Great-Great-Grandmother Shoots Robber
(AP)
Great-Great-Grandmother Shoots Robber
(AP)
04/15/2005 04:32 PMAP - A man accused of bursting into a convenience store demanding
money was in the hospital Friday shot, authorities said, by the
great-great-grandmother working behind the counter.
Money and Sex: Two Great Tastes That
Taste Great Together!
Money and Sex: Two Great Tastes That
Taste Great Together!
06/19/2004 03:13 PM
"Don't equate happiness with money"... "Exercise
Regularly"... "Have Sex"... Advice from a German investment
bank on how to enjoy life. Taking CitiBank's cynical
"Live
Richly" ad campaign a step farther?
obilgatory joke "I remember when the bank only
gave away free toasters..."
In other news,
A bank
in India is targeting "sex workers" as new customers,
Insert
Sperm
Bank Joke Here.
heh heh heh... he said "Insert
Sperm"... How to build a paper airplane that flaps
its wings
How to build a paper airplane that flaps
its wings
09/08/2004 11:57 PMThe
Flapper
homepage.mac.com/keithgreenstein/Flapper/PhotoAlbum41.htmltrack
this site | 5 links
Grok Description matches for New airplane hailed as "the fourth great breakthrough in aeronautical science"
GrokA matches for New airplane hailed as "the fourth great breakthrough in aeronautical science"
American versus Canadian airplane
factories
American versus Canadian airplane
factories
06/05/2005 11:56 PMPicking up an airplane in Duluth, Minnesota is a bit different from
my last experience picking one up in London, Ontario. The
Canadian factory didn't have a "Guns are banned from these premises"
sign out front. Another difference is that the Cirrus factory
has an F-16 parked right next to it, belonging to George W. Bush's
beloved Air National Guard. This F-16 is apparently in need of
some maintenance because it has been sitting out for the entire
winter. Only our government can afford to leave a $30 million
airplane outside exposed to the harsh northern elements!
One thing that is more or less the same is the miserable
weather. For the morning flight today the weather was 100'
overcast and 1/4 mile visibility. I went to the Duluth Aquarium
instead and then to the Richard I. Bong museum in Superior,
Wisconsin. Bong was a Wisconsin farm boy who went on to become
the U.S.'s most successful P-38 fighter pilot in the Pacific War,
downing more than 40 Japanese planes. The museum staff, having
noticed my coupon from Cirrus, hauled out an old movie on "how to fly
your new P-38" from Lockheed circa 1942. The product was
described in the video as a "real fighting man's airplane" and a
"man's airplane". Close-to-the-ground maneuvers were described
as "not likely to be a habit-forming." The plane worked well for
Bong, who survived all of his combat missions. Sadly he was
killed while test-flying a jet-powered fighter in 1945. Major
Bong was 24 years old.
Airplane 3G mobile phone test successful
Airplane 3G mobile phone test successful
07/16/2004 03:44 PMinfoSync Jul 16 2004 6:04PM GMT
New airplane hailed as "the fourth great breakthrough in aeronautical science"