Moderator: Soñadora
Lin wrote:I chuckled when I saw this.
Over the years there have been a number of threads dedicated to the Mary Ann VS Ginger debate.
(personally I think French Toast girl would and should win with a resounding margin, had she factored into the competition)
Coming this week to Vancouver ...
http://www.vancouverboatshow.ca/features/show-features/
Ish wrote:Lin wrote:I chuckled when I saw this.
Over the years there have been a number of threads dedicated to the Mary Ann VS Ginger debate.
(personally I think French Toast girl would and should win with a resounding margin, had she factored into the competition)
Coming this week to Vancouver ...
http://www.vancouverboatshow.ca/features/show-features/
Cool. I just got a pair of free tickets for Thursday...now I just have to get organized enough to get there in time to enjoy it.
Mary Anne...I'd just as soon remember her as she was.
Orestes Munn wrote:Ah, the French toast lady. Cute, yes, but I'm too old to eat that stuff and I'm not sure she'd have much entertaining to say about Quine, Wittgenstein and the philosophy of language, an obligatory topic on a voyage of any significant duration.
Lin wrote:Ish wrote:Lin wrote:I chuckled when I saw this.
Over the years there have been a number of threads dedicated to the Mary Ann VS Ginger debate.
(personally I think French Toast girl would and should win with a resounding margin, had she factored into the competition)
Coming this week to Vancouver ...
http://www.vancouverboatshow.ca/features/show-features/
Cool. I just got a pair of free tickets for Thursday...now I just have to get organized enough to get there in time to enjoy it.
Mary Anne...I'd just as soon remember her as she was.
That is a wise approach.
Have a great time at your Safety At Sea Course and the boat show! Pure sunshine is forecast for Vancouver while you are here. Enjoy.
Lin wrote:Orestes Munn wrote:Ah, the French toast lady. Cute, yes, but I'm too old to eat that stuff and I'm not sure she'd have much entertaining to say about Quine, Wittgenstein and the philosophy of language, an obligatory topic on a voyage of any significant duration.
She might be cooking savoury French toast with challah, herb de provence, garlic, parmesan cheese and tomato chutney. : P
Orestes Munn wrote:Lin wrote:Orestes Munn wrote:Ah, the French toast lady. Cute, yes, but I'm too old to eat that stuff and I'm not sure she'd have much entertaining to say about Quine, Wittgenstein and the philosophy of language, an obligatory topic on a voyage of any significant duration.
She might be cooking savoury French toast with challah, herb de provence, garlic, parmesan cheese and tomato chutney. : P
Hamotzi lechem min ha'aretz!
Orestes Munn wrote:Ah, the French toast lady. Cute, yes, but I'm too old to eat that stuff and I'm not sure she'd have much entertaining to say about Quine, Wittgenstein and the philosophy of language, an obligatory topic on a voyage of any significant duration.
Orestes Munn wrote:Ah, the French toast lady. Cute, yes, but I'm too old to eat that stuff and I'm not sure she'd have much entertaining to say about Quine, Wittgenstein and the philosophy of language, an obligatory topic on a voyage of any significant duration.
Tigger wrote:Plus, it is no longer Mary Anne or Ginger ... it is Kate or Pippa!
LarryHoward wrote:Tigger wrote:Plus, it is no longer Mary Anne or Ginger ... it is Kate or Pippa!
Wouldn't that be two apples from the same tree?
OM. Waaay too high brow for this thread. I'm headed in to supervise removing a 3,000# generator from a very small space while our Navy customer watches and offers pithy advice. Then we'll get 8" of snow. At least the traffic will be light.
Orestes Munn wrote:LarryHoward wrote:Tigger wrote:Plus, it is no longer Mary Anne or Ginger ... it is Kate or Pippa!
Wouldn't that be two apples from the same tree?
OM. Waaay too high brow for this thread. I'm headed in to supervise removing a 3,000# generator from a very small space while our Navy customer watches and offers pithy advice. Then we'll get 8" of snow. At least the traffic will be light.
At least you get to be useful. I am something called, "Tier I", which means I get to sit in my office with no one else around and do stuff I could easily do at home, until "dismissed" by my "supervisor". Taken literally, this means I should have been at work since 2010.
Whelp, time to gird up my loins, such as they are. At least the streets should be quiet.
Slick470 wrote:Larry, I deal with the electrical design side of generators on and off with my job. All critical application, life safety (obviously also critical) or stand-by.
We have had more issues on the units where the manufacturer has decided to combine all of the electronics on one board. The tech shows up and says "the boards bad" but has no idea why.
We've also had a rash of natural gas generators having line pressure/regulator issues. Not fun.
BeauV wrote:Many years ago we did a AI program to diagnose a bit of military equipment. We had the "bright" idea of linking it to a big-ass computer back at HQ that would do the difficult job of running the BIG AI software, yards and yards of PROLOG code (for those with a tech history bend). Well, this worked GREAT at the lab, but we sort of forgot about the fact that this piece of equipment was going to get tossed out of a C-130 and the guys on the ground didn't want the SatPhone link we'd assumed they would use broadcasting a signal that was like a "bomb here" signal for one and all to receive.
We "redesigned" the entire system to work with a 8.5X11 inch laminated sheet of paper that showed a flow chart, and a Marine who read off light patterns on the front panel. No "AI" anywhere, damned little electronics. It cost about 1/100th of what the AI radio linked system did and worked about 95% as well; it got a much higher rating than that from the guys in the field who didn't have to broadcast anything! Within two hours almost every Marine who took the class could diagnose the busted systems faster than the AI software back at HQ. It was a lesson in the appropriate and inappropriate application of technology that I've never forgotten.
justinkelleher wrote:I never miss an opportunity...
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPOL8C4FPdc[/youtube]
BeauV wrote:Larry,
We need a BIG bottle of your favorite booze and we could have a BALL draining it while telling stories about technology applied to these sorts of programs. I still get angry thinking about it all, and it's been two decades. We'll definitely need alcohol.
BV