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Walt wrote:But when the hour is nigh, and the lights are low, and I got a little toothpick of a shwag joint in my teeth, and my friends want to hear me play "Into the Void", or "TNT", "or "Cemetery Gates"...I plug my 600 dollar guitar into my 150 dollar amp, and I am a Rawk gawd.
ajaxlepinski wrote:Recorded on June 20, 1969.... 50 years ago...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iYYRH4a ... adio=1&t=9
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iYYRH4apXDo[/youtube]
Can't get youtube vids to show... what's up wit dat?
Ry Manchu wrote:It's too bad they didn't send a drone to drive the lander vehicle around to celebrate 50 years of American technology. After a battery replacement, you know that bitch will still work.
I could never be a skeptic, because my mother calculated the trajectory and wrote the computer program for it.
TurboPablo wrote:Ry Manchu wrote:It's too bad they didn't send a drone to drive the lander vehicle around to celebrate 50 years of American technology. After a battery replacement, you know that bitch will still work.
I could never be a skeptic, because my mother calculated the trajectory and wrote the computer program for it.
Wait, so you don't beleive Steph Curry?
Ry Manchu wrote:It's too bad they didn't send a drone to drive the lander vehicle around to celebrate 50 years of American technology. After a battery replacement, you know that bitch will still work.
I could never be a skeptic, because my mother calculated the trajectory and wrote the computer program for it.
fretless wrote:Ry Manchu wrote:It's too bad they didn't send a drone to drive the lander vehicle around to celebrate 50 years of American technology. After a battery replacement, you know that bitch will still work.
I could never be a skeptic, because my mother calculated the trajectory and wrote the computer program for it.
Tell us more Hommie . The women of NASA had to endure some serious high level top down BS every single day . They deserve a medal for putting up with that shit and opened the door for all women to follow .
fretless wrote:Ry Manchu wrote:It's too bad they didn't send a drone to drive the lander vehicle around to celebrate 50 years of American technology. After a battery replacement, you know that bitch will still work.
I could never be a skeptic, because my mother calculated the trajectory and wrote the computer program for it.
Tell us more Hommie . The women of NASA had to endure some serious high level top down BS every single day . They deserve a medal for putting up with that shit and opened the door for all women to follow .
fretless wrote:Cool story Thanks !
on a slightly related but off topic , my new fav artist
https://www.flookart.com/
Ry Manchu wrote:fretless wrote:Ry Manchu wrote:It's too bad they didn't send a drone to drive the lander vehicle around to celebrate 50 years of American technology. After a battery replacement, you know that bitch will still work.
I could never be a skeptic, because my mother calculated the trajectory and wrote the computer program for it.
Tell us more Hommie . The women of NASA had to endure some serious high level top down BS every single day . They deserve a medal for putting up with that shit and opened the door for all women to follow .
My mom didn't work for NASA, she worked for GE.
My mom graduated from Stetson University about a year after JFK made his moon pledge, May of 1962. She had a degree in math. She took computer programming in college because she thought it would become important in the future. She figured that there would be a lot of hiring in the Cape Canaveral area, so she got an apartment there and planned to walk in and try to interview at NASA and some of the big contractors. I don't know if her interview at GE was a walk-in, but I do know that she was hired in her first interview as she knew the programming language they were using.
GE had been involved in the feasibility studies pretty much from the outset of the Apollo program. Originally the mission was going to be unmanned. GE's job was to double check NASA's numbers, write the computer program and get that to work on the computer which GE made. I'm not sure exactly how many people were involved in the programming at GE, but it wasn't that many. My mom told me that they wrote the trajectory program on punch cards. She hated the punch cards because every time she would walk them over to the compiler she was worried that she would drop them and they would wind up out of order.
I asked her about flying through the Van Allen belt. She said that the plan was for the rocket to be going as fast as possible and for it to go through the belt at a time and angle where it was less expansive. The trajectory also involved a point when the moon was close on its elliptical orbit.
My mom married my father and moved to Texas in 1968, about a year before Apollo 11 launched. She planned to interview at NASA in Houston, but she got pregnant with my brother and my dad got a job with Texaco, so she put it on hold. I don't know too much else. I could ask her more.
Ostinato Rubato wrote:"That's the second boomery bro on this forum I've helped seduce to the greenside."
"Slow and steady gets to **** again eventually"
Ostinato Rubato wrote:"That's the second boomery bro on this forum I've helped seduce to the greenside."
"Slow and steady gets to **** again eventually"
Pepi wrote:Wow. FORTRAN. Hard language to use. Your mom must be a major math head. I had a hell of a time getting through this class