darrellbear

darrellbear t1_j3b28xo wrote

Kiddie Kart Ice Cream Co. I drove several summers for them long, long ago. Most fun job ever, got to hang out with kids, teen girls and housewives every day. Business was better in lower class neighborhoods--rich kids were behind closed doors with the AC on. Noon to sunset six days a week. Had a heckuva tan except for the back of my legs. The original owner had an amazing collection of retired jeeps going back to Willys days. Ding ding, ding ding, ding ding, ding ding... little ship's bell mounted on the left side of the windshield frame, rang it with a pull cord. Drove the route at idle in first gear, ding ding, ding ding, ding ding, ding ding... I made change in my head, worked out of a change apron. No calculators or such.

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darrellbear t1_j2e9nij wrote

We have it easy in the northern hemisphere--Earth is closest to the Sun on January 3, farthest from the Sun in July. The southern hemisphere gets the worst of it in both months (hotter summers and colder winters), though it's mediated somewhat by more ocean in the southern part of the planet.

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darrellbear t1_j208154 wrote

Meteoroid, not meteorite--it's only a meteorite if it reaches the ground. It's only a meteor if it's burning up in the atmosphere. If it's out in space it's a meteoroid.

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darrellbear t1_j0ql7ci wrote

Try lightly tapping/jiggling the flush handle. If that works you probably just need to adjust the length of the chain connecting the flush handle to the flapper valve a touch longer.

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darrellbear t1_iytvs2w wrote

But that's a morning moon, at least as seen from the northern hemisphere. Evening crescent moons always face to the lower right as seen from the northern part of the world. Morning moons face lower left. If you consider the arc of the crescent as an archery bow, then string an arrow on the bow, bisecting it, the arrow will point toward the sun below the horizon.

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darrellbear t1_ix6uvkc wrote

Asimov's Three Rules of Robotics seem naive nowadays:

First Law

A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.

Second Law

A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.

Third Law

A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

Zeroth Law

A robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.

The zeroth law was an addition.

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darrellbear t1_ix6h14c wrote

There are three galaxies visible in the image--Messier 31 is the big one, M110 to the upper left, M32 just to the right. They're satellite galaxies of M31, rather like the Magellanic Clouds are to our Milky Way. See the bluish regions such as at the lower left and upper right of the galaxy's disk? Those are areas of star formation, lots of bright and massive class O and B stars.

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