Friday, April 29, 2011

My messed up blog statistics page

is messed up.

Proof of Case #1: Numbers
This problem is common throughout all my electronics.
Evidence Item A:

97+2=99, not 100








Proof of Case #2: Spacing
This doesn't get the point across as well as one might want.

It's even worse on my "Traffic Sources". On the Graph:
1 unit goes about 8 lines
2 units go exactly 0 lines (0 pixels)
7 units go about 1.5 lines
And the verdict?
Defendant (Computer, spoken for by me) pleads insanity; Judge (me), Jury (me) drop charges on account that the computer doesn't mess up any of my work stored on the hard drive.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

One of my favorite teachers, Part 1: Miss Carney

One of my favorite teachers, whom I remember very clearly, was in Colorado. Ms. Carney was my 7th Grade Social Studies (sort of like geography, only more toward the cultural side, i.e. comparing cultures of North America and East Asia).
I actually don't remember much, I only remember A) how well she kept peace and order in her classroom, and B) how she celebrated Halloween.
First off: Keeping order. Ms. Carney was like a ninja in terms of spotting people talking, chewing gum, or anything of the sort. She was so profficient at spotting these sorts of things that she wouldn't even break a sentence to tell someone not to do something. i.e.
 "...The Romans conquered much of the known world, and _____, can you stop talking, but a key to there success was there microgovernments. _____, please spit out your gum. Unlike previous rulers, the Romans..."
Then, of course, her Halloween tales. She had the class gather around, and she told her horror story:

"Once, there was a couple, living happily in the swamplands of Louisiana. All day, the wife would stay home fixing up the house, and the husband spent all day chopping trees for lumber. This way, they kept a steady income.
However, this style of living got uprooted when, while out working, the man screwed up, and ended up having a tree land on his arm. The doctors managed to save him, but not his arm. Being as wealthy as they were from built up funds, they managed to buy a cheap prosthetic arm out of gold*, and he was able to get back to work soon, but he just could not get as many trees downed per day, and so they had to go without many luxuries.
A couple months after the accident, the husband started noticing a pain in his shoulder. The doctors looked at it, and found an infected area from the accident they had failed to clean before. The wife tried to save enough money, but they infection was making the husband slower than ever at chopping trees.
Eventually, the husband died. And, as is customary with funerals in/near swamps, they buried him in an above ground mausoleum. The wife mourned and mourned for several months, but eventually got over it.
A year after her husband died, the wife was having huge financial difficulties, and decided it had been long enough since he died. She then goes to the mausoleum, breaks it open, and cuts off the golden prosthetic. This she then pawns for enough money to get her some tools to get a steady job.
On the first night after work, she goes to bed, but is startled back awake to a sound:
"Whoooooooooooooo"
She realizes that it's probably just the wind in trees, and goes back to sleep.
On the second night after work, she goes to bed, but is startled awake to a sound:
"Whooooooooooooos"
She makes the same conclusion as the night before, and goes back to sleep
Third night, and she hears:
"Whooooooooos  gaaaaaw"
She is a bit more frightened, but makes the same conclusion.
This pattern continues, until, one night, she hears:
"Who's got my arm!"
She then hears her husband's boots at the front steps. Scared, she covers her face in her blankets. Then the boots get closer, and closer, until... BOOOO!!!!!!!!!!"
Yeah, it was scarier when she told it in person.
Lastly, an amusing thing about Carney was that, even in Colorado, people didn't have "suthern accents", at least not strong ones. But Carney was complete Texan accent.
All in all, she was a great teacher.


*I use cheap loosely here. By cheap, I mean compared to a working prosthetic. Also, gold is good because it won't rust and infect him, so it's not just a status symbol here.

Monday, April 25, 2011

My Great Grampa Lucas

My Great Grampa Lucas was a great man. He grew up on a farm, joined the Canadian Army when WWII broke out, and was injured during Normandy. He served in the 3rd Antitank Regiment of the Winnipeg Rifles.
He fought in Normandy from the moment he landed on D-Day +1 (7 June 1944) until the day he got injured, (12 August 1944), he served his 6-pounder gun crew well.
Sometime around October, 1942

Around 1943




The Newspaper reads "Germany Surrenders!"
In this photo you can see his injured arm. It is thought to be a piece of shrapnel.

For those of you with no clue what a 6-pounder is: |^|^|^|^|
 Now, for my next trip to Hobbyhouse, I think I shall get this:
Tamiya (#35005) - Tamiya 1/35 British 6-Pounder Anti-Tank Gun
So that I can make a diorama of my very own Great Grand-dad.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Error: Overload

As of recently, my sidebar with all my creations has gotten behind, seeing as I buy at least 1 thing each week, only get much work done on my weekend, and I rarely have the time to update it.
Anyways, I gave up after this last trip to hobbyhouse. I brought $50.00, and left with $2.50, and (as it turns out) not enough modelling glue. Enough said.

Friday, April 1, 2011

800mm Schwerer Gustav and Dora

Shortly before the Second World War, France had one of the strongest defences ever built the Maginot line. To deal with this, the Germans built the biggest gun ever fired on enemy forces: the 80cm K(E), or the more creative name, Schwerer Gustav (Schwerer also spelled Schwere, and Gustav also spelled Gustaf), and its sister gun, called Dora (Dora the Exploder!). Although the Germans ended up just going around the Maginot line, through Poland, the Gustav was still used against some French fortifications, and against Sevastopol, another well-defended area.

In one of the places it bombarded, it achieved a massive feat: with nine (9) shells, it disabled an ammunition bunker 30m under water, with at least 10 meters of concrete protecting it, as well as destroying a French ship.

In testing, 800mm high-explosive shells (which weigh 4.8 tonnes) made craters 10m wide and deep.

The Gustav fired nearly 300 rounds, but 250 of those were for testing and development.

Hitler was so pleased with it that he ordered a second one be made, Dora.
Dora saw no combat.

In the end, the Gustav was destroyed by the Germans to keep it out of Russian hands, and the Dora was discovered broken up a while after the war.