I Find My Lack of Faith Disturbing

ThinkGeek has a page showing a Tauntaun sleeping bag

Use the glowing lightsaber zipper pull on the Tauntaun sleeping bag to illustrate how Han Solo saved Luke Skywalker from certain death in the freezing climate of Hoth by slitting open the belly of a dead Tauntaun and placing Luke inside the stinking (but warm) carcass. If your kids don’t change their tune on which Star Wars film is the greatest ever, you can do your best Jar Jar impression until they repent.

… and it’s an April Fool’s Day joke! Nooo! You’re not my father!

Due to an overwhelming tsunami of requests from YOU THE PEOPLE, we have decided to TRY and bring this to life. We have no clue if the suits at Lucasfilms will grant little ThinkGeek a license, nor do we know how much it would ultimately retail for. But if you are interested in ever owning one of these, click the link below and we’ll try!

What a geek tease!

Self Deprecation

My blog host folks have a good sense of humor.

pfn

Pseudoscience Forums. Heh.

Last year they did a word swap. IIRC, if you wrote “science” it came out as “religion” after you posted, along with a couple of others.

More Foolishness

Missed opportunities for other people.

A few weeks ago, there was a version of “musical towels” going on at the gym. Several people keep their towels on hangers outside their lockers, and apparently somebody forgot to bring their towel in — so they borrowed one (which is pretty gross — this is the guys’ locker room. How often do these get washed?). Then that person finished their workout and discovered that their towel was wet, so they borrowed a towel. And so on …

I thought it would be a great prank to just grab them all and soak them in the shower. But nobody took my suggestion.

And yesterday, some furniture came in for a new employee, but was delivered after he had gone home. Colleagues moved it from the loading dock to his office, but then neglected to stack the boxes to prevent access to his desk. What were they thinking?

One Giant Measurement for Schoolkids

School kids measure distance to the Moon

The students analysed an mp3 recording of the conversation between Neil Armstrong on the surface and ground control in Houston in which he utters his famous “one small step” speech. The recording is available on the NASA website.

They noticed an echo on this recording in which sentences from Earth are retransmitted via Armstrong’s helmet speaker through his microphone and back to Earth. They used the open source audio editing program Audacity to measure the echo’s delay

It Only Seems Like an April Fool's Post

But it ran in the Mar 31 issue. Report: cosmonaut grumbles about space bureaucracy

Squabbles on Earth over how cosmonauts and astronauts divide up the space station’s food, water, toilets and other facilities are hurting the crew’s morale and complicating work in space, a veteran Russian cosmonaut said, according to an interview published Monday.

Gennady Padalka told the Novaya Gazeta newspaper as saying space officials from Russia, the United States and other countries require cosmonauts and astronauts to eat their own food and follow stringent rules on access to other facilities, like toilets.

Chain of Fools

I don’t really partake of April Fool’s Day; I find it too confining. It’s always open season, as far as I’m concerned.

Here’s one from my days in khaki, with me on the giving end (I was the recipient of several good ones, too). One of my shipmates, let’s call him Brian, was teaching Chemistry, Materials and Radiological fundamentals (CMR), and I was teaching Reactor Principles (RP), and one class section I was teaching was near the CMR office, so it wasn’t at unusual for me to drop in to say hi to him or his better-looking and (more importantly to me, single and female) colleagues. But I digress … Brian hails from Idaho, and one of his classes had given him a Mr. Potato Head, which he proudly displayed on his desk. So I swiped it one day, and an unidentified co-conspirator hid it in a security locker (teaching notes were classified and had to be locked up when not in use or in any way unsupervised, so there several security lockers in the office). Brian came back during the short break between classes (we usually taught two consecutive 50-minute periods, with a 5 or 10-minute break between them, to each section, and taught two sections), freaked out when he noticed his pet spud was missing, searched frantically, but had to go back to teach. He made a huge error at that point, as I recall — he asked me if I had his Mr. Potato Head, and since I didn’t (it was in the locker) I was able to truthfully tell him “no,” rather than give him a sarcastic (but also truthful) “Yeah, right, I took it,” had he asked me the appropriate question*. I came back later and collected the booty, so when Brian had time to search the lockers, the tuber toy was gone.

In Phase II I procured my own Mr. Potato Head and baked him briefly

mrpotato

After about a week of the empty spot being on the desk (but before there was time for any “Have You Seen Me” posters showing up in the produce section of the local Publix markets) I put Mr. Baked Potato on his desk. Brian was devastated. We played bridge pretty regularly, and I remember him repeatedly bemoaning his damaged Mr. Potato head at some game; I’m sure it was partly because he suspected me and wanted me to feel guilty. But I have a guideline for pranks: no actual damage — that crosses the line into vandalism. (Though that would have been ironic, because his alma mater’s nickname was the Vandals) So I was reveling in his torment, because I knew the original was safe and sound.

I think I let his anguish simmer for a few weeks before I returned the original to him.

*As I recall, for my major pranks, I never lied about doing it when confronted. I sometimes was able to avoid answering or be very pedantic about the answer when the question was poorly worded. I don’t have an ethical problem with loopholes in this area.