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The "Anything Goes" thread

Bob Maxey said:
Kangaroo meat McRibs, spaghetti from dog food . . . either some of you (and you know who you are :p) either make this stuff up, find it on the web or make it up from something you find on the web.

Facts: Bob does not care if the McRib is made from cat food and assembled in a large chemical factory. Do not screw with the McRib. It is better than grandmas McRib and it is just about the bestest sammy created by man.

And what's wrong with dog food? It is properly seasoned fat, grease, various chemical adjuncts, ground bones, innards from bovine and swine alike; vegetables from third worlds countries all mixed into a delightful slurry and canned. The Dollar Store brands beat the national brands hands down.

They often add meat from dead cats and horses, so what's not to love? Just add some bottled barbecue sauce and boil some pasta. It is all good.

Well howdy there Bob! Nice to see you're in fine form! :D

It's true I say....all true!

Nothing wrong with dog food.....if you happen to be a dog! ;)
 
[FONT=&quot]A Soyuz space craft carrying Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield has just blasted off from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

Hadfield is 53 years old.

He'll spend several months aboard the International Space Station and will be the first Canadian to command the station later in the mission.

[/FONT]
 
AdmiralAdama said:
A Soyuz space craft carrying Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield has just blasted off from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

Hadfield is 53 years old.

He'll spend several months aboard the International Space Station and will be the first Canadian to command the station later in the mission.

One of my professors, Norm Thagard, was on a couple of missions. I had him for a microprocessor class, Intel processors and machine language, he was an engineer and medical doctor (FSU medical building was named after him). He used to say "I wouldn't strap that on my back and take into space" if someone came up with a really off the wall answer.
 
zstairlessone said:
One of my professors, Norm Thagard, was on a couple of missions. I had him for a microprocessor class, Intel processors and machine language, he was an engineer and medical doctor (FSU medical building was named after him). He used to say "I wouldn't strap that on my back and take into space" if someone came up with a really off the wall answer.

Edit: space shuttle missions and stayed aboard the station
 
zstairlessone said:
One of my professors, Norm Thagard, was on a couple of missions. I had him for a microprocessor class, Intel processors and machine language, he was an engineer and medical doctor (FSU medical building was named after him). He used to say "I wouldn't strap that on my back and take into space" if someone came up with a really off the wall answer.
zstairlessone said:
Edit: space shuttle missions and stayed aboard the station

What an honour to have been taught by him. He must have added so much interest to your course. :)

Sent from my iPad using iPF
 
How a squirrel copes with deep snow.



image-1835722643.webp



image-4217654596.webp

All the lumps are caused by tunneling through the snow.
 
Czevski said:
How a squirrel copes with deep snow.

<img src="http://www.ipadforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=31849"/>

<img src="http://www.ipadforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=31850"/>

All the lumps are caused by tunneling through the snow.

Great pictures.....that squirrel should have it's Santa hat on!

The Archangel
 
Czevski said:
How a squirrel copes with deep snow.

<img src="http://www.ipadforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=31849"/>

<img src="http://www.ipadforums.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=31850"/>

All the lumps are caused by tunneling through the snow.

Those squirrels must be members of the USMWA; United Squirrel Mine Workers of America.;)
 

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