I don't like vampires. I'm gonna take a stand and say they're not good.

Xander ,'Beneath You'


Natter 65: Speed Limit Enforced by Aircraft  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


msbelle - Apr 26, 2010 7:14:44 am PDT #25167 of 30001
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

JUST TURNED 9! all I'm sayin.

halfway kidding. He doesn't do the hungry or thirsty thing at bedtime, but wanting one thing over and over for meals? yep. refusing to eat unless he gets it? yep. throwing fits unless he gets what he demands? yep. He actually seems to have turned a bit of a corner with all this toddler-like behavior and has calmed a bit. It is quite lovely and I have told him so. I think it is finally starting to click with him and he wants approval enough to curb behavior.


tommyrot - Apr 26, 2010 7:17:09 am PDT #25168 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Mars Rovers Set to Break Red Planet Record

On Thursday, NASA's beleaguered Spirit rover could become the longest-running mission on the surface of Mars, surpassing the Viking 1 lander's record of six years and 116 days of operation on the Martian surface — if it's still alive, that is.

Spirit fell silent on Mars on March 31, when it skipped a planned communications session with Earth. It may be hibernating through the harsh Martian winter. But even if Spirit doesn't survive, its robotic twin Opportunity is poised to break the Mars mission record in early May.

Beating Viking's record, which NASA set in the 1980s, would be a major feat for a rover the size of a golf cart that was only supposed to last for three months and spent the past year stuck in Martian sand. The milestone would also be a welcome surprise to the team of scientists and engineers that have been commanding Spirit for these past six years.


Scrappy - Apr 26, 2010 7:19:39 am PDT #25169 of 30001
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

Harriet M. Welsch was 11, and she had a tomato sandwich every single day for lunch, don't forget.


Aims - Apr 26, 2010 7:22:17 am PDT #25170 of 30001
Shit's all sorts of different now.

t makes out with Scrappy for being so ... Scrappy


Jessica - Apr 26, 2010 7:29:08 am PDT #25171 of 30001
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

We rearranged our desks this morning in my office and I'm now facing my co-worker head-on with only our laptops in-between us. Fortunately this is a co-worker I'm friends with, but it's still a little unnerving to be sitting face-to-face this close.

Signed, Give me back my cube, damnit. This open-plan thing blows.

(And no, there's not a good way to arrange the desks so we don't face each other. I stared at our space for a long time trying to figure one out.)


flea - Apr 26, 2010 7:33:44 am PDT #25172 of 30001
information libertarian

Dillo is usually too rambunctious to eat enough dinner at dinnertime, so sometimes he really is hungry. Also, he plays his daddy by asking for snacks at bedtime and dilly-dallying. This game does not work with mommy.


tommyrot - Apr 26, 2010 7:43:16 am PDT #25173 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Huh. Here's an advantage to being a four-dimensional being that never occurred to me:

SF writers make up monsters for a kids' writing program

The Hyperman exists in four spatial dimensions. When it protrudes into ours, you see it as a series of slices (imagine that you are sticking your face through a sheet of paper, being observed by a two-dimensional flat person drawn on the page) -- the tip of the nose, the bridge, the face, the head, the back of the head.

The Hyperman can go from anywhere to anywhere by taking strides through four-space. If it brings a three-dimensional object, say, a book, into the fourth dimension and rotates it on the 4D axis, it comes back into three-space with all the type backwards. If it does this with a piece of cake, it comes back with all its sugars reversed, so that you can eat it without gaining weight (but you might get explosive diarrhea).


tommyrot - Apr 26, 2010 8:12:38 am PDT #25174 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

I'm going to quote Sullivan ranting about Palin because I love the phrase "media-ideological-industrial complex"...

Look: what we have seen this past year is the collapse of the RNC as it once was and the emergence of a highly lucrative media-ideological-industrial complex. This complex has no interest in traditional journalistic vetting, skepticism, scrutiny of those in power, or asking the tough questions. It has no interest in governing a country. It has an interest in promoting personalities and ideologies and false images of a past America that both flatter and engage its audience. For most in this business, this is about money. Roger Ailes, who runs a news business, has been frank about what his fundamental criterion is for broadcasting: ratings not truth. Obviously all media has an eye on the bottom line - but in most news organizations, there is also an ethical editorial concern to get things right. I see no such inclination in Fox News or the hugely popular talkshow demagogues (Limbaugh, Levin, Beck et al.), which now effectively control the GOP. And when huge media organizations have no interest in any facts that cannot be deployed for a specific message, they are a political party in themselves.

"In Palinworld, Palin, By Definition, Speaks The Truth."


Sophia Brooks - Apr 26, 2010 8:14:15 am PDT #25175 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

My grandma ate the same thing for lunch everyday as well -- a peanut butter sandwich with grape jelly and Campbell's soup. I got to half half of the Campbell's soup and a peanut butter and no jelly sandwich.

This Stuff on My Cat is cracking my up. The expressions on their faces!

[link]


Jessica - Apr 26, 2010 8:19:03 am PDT #25176 of 30001
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

I could be pretty happy eating a burrito every day for lunch, but the long-term effects on my waistline and bank account would not be pretty.