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| From a Slate article about Chili's Restaurants of all things. |
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| From Swtorista. |
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| From a Slate article about Chili's Restaurants of all things. |
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| From Swtorista. |
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| It was SO out of place compared to all of the rest of the cars in the parking lot. Fun Fact: I looked up the price online and it costs close to what our current house cost back in 2002. |
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| These were made locally until mid-1987. |
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| Such as this Pioneer SX-780, made in 1980 (the manufacturing run was 1978-1980). From Oleg's Vintage Audio. |
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| Such as module S3: Expedition to the Barrier Peaks. From eBay. |
On Thursday, Jim Lovell passed away at the age of 97. And with him went a critical part of our connection to the Space Race of the 1960s.
People now remember Jim Lovell courtesy of Tom Hanks' portrayal of him in the movie Apollo 13, but he was already famous in the aeronautics and science community for his participation in Gemini 7, Gemini 12, and Apollo 8, the latter of which became the first manned spacecraft to orbit the Moon.
Jim was more than those NASA missions; he was a Navy pilot, a test pilot, and an Eagle Scout.
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| From Tom Hanks' post on Instagram. |
I think that Buzz Aldrin is one of the few remaining astronauts still alive from that era; when he passes a door will have truly shut.
Godspeed, Jim Lovell. You'll be missed.
#Blaugust2025
I still remember the day we got our first color television.
It wasn't all that long ago --okay, it was 44 years ago, so sue me-- but it was also long after most of my peers had a color television in their house.
We'd always had a television as long as I could remember, but they'd all been black and white. Given the lack of money my parents had, I understand the economics of the situation --black and white TVs were much cheaper than color televisions-- and I suspect my parents got a hand-me-down TV or two over the years. The television circuitry were vacuum tube based**, and looking back on it I wonder just what my parents were thinking when they left said TVs on rickety carts that looked like were going to collapse at any time.
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| It looked a bit like this, although this TV cart is a lot sturdier than ours was. From AtariAge. |
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| From hulk.fandom.wiki. |
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| No, it's not our house. Do you know how hard it is to find a "generic" looking house with a modern television inside? So many of them look like homes for people much wealthier than myself. From Tom's Guide review for the Sony Bravia 3. |
*Ironically enough, we did have a neighbor in our old neighborhood --prior to our move in 1976 to my parents' current home-- with a last name of Jones. Sometimes you can't make this stuff up.
**When I was little, I used to warm my hands on cold days in winter by putting them over the vents in the back of the set by bringing a chair over and standing on top of it to reach the back of the TV. If you've ever been in the vicinity of a vacuum tube radio or television, you know that they get pretty warm over time.
#Blaugust2025
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| Yeah, I need to work on getting Cardwyn a Robe of Power. It should take me an evening to accumulate the materials. This is the status as of August 7, 2025. |