What do superheroes and subnets have in common? Their masks!
and a brief explanation of the logical AND operation.
What do superheroes and subnets have in common? Their masks!
and a brief explanation of the logical AND operation.
It's never too late to rewrite your Adventure Book. Happy 10th anniversary to Up. pic.twitter.com/hKMCKrghMz
— Pixar (@Pixar) May 29, 2019
My students were testing out some new video streaming gear called Sling Studio, so we made this video of me talking about some antique computer stuff we have in the computer lab.
I don’t pay a lot of mind to Grammarly stats, but evidently I used more unique words than 96% of Grammarly users (of course I am mostly being compared to high school and college students) but I was more productive than 92% of Grammarly users by writing 10,549 words in the past week. I have a ten-week writing streak.
I’m not exactly sure where Grammarly is working on my behalf. I think it is only looking at things I am writing in a web browser.
Won the chili cookoff “Warm and Fuzzy” division yesterday. My chili was called “El Professor” and it was definitely warm and fuzzy!
The annual Student Support Services and Student Life Chili Cook-Off was a tasty success! With 13 chili entries and 140+ participants that range from students, faculty, staff and community members, the Chili Cook-Off is one of the best traditions on campus.#kstatepolytechnic pic.twitter.com/psLu9jt0CM
— K-State Salina (@KSU_Salina) February 7, 2020
My daughter won as winter Homecoming Queen at her school.
https://www.facebook.com/usd224cliftonclyde/photos/a.678056328886250/3729448327080353/?type=3&theater
Wow, what an unforgettable day!
Lynda Barry. I got to meet her last November. She encouraged me to keep drawing and writing, and I have. She is so awesome. Below is another great Lynda Barry interview.
A couple of weeks ago, Lynda Barry posted about doing a series of twelve images of the same scene. I set out to do just that, not knowing how long it would actually take me or what the result would look like. This week, I finally finished this difficult but gratifying challenge.
The scene was after the ground war had begun in February 1991. The Iraqis had already bugged out of Kuwait, and though we didn’t realize it at the time, the Battleship Missouri had already completed her final fire mission for all time. Something happened, and I never heard exactly what, but the magazine sprinkler system was activated in Turret 2 and everything got doused with salt water. The wiring that came from our computer system in the plotting room to control the guns also got wet, which might not have been a huge deal if not for the fact that this was WWII technology and plastic was not widely in use yet. All of the insulation on the wires were made of a fabric material that soaked the salt water right up. The salt water, being an excellent conductor, shorted everything out. We had to go down to the 7th deck, all the way to the bottom of the ship, and literally crawl into this wiring space with our heat guns to dry everything out. The room was not big enough to stand in. It was dark, cold, and damp. We had to bring our own lighting. The “megger,” a piece of test equipment designed to test the insulation of wires, generated a current of electricity to get the wires to short circuit on purpose. We were making electricity through wet wires, inside of a damp metal crawl space, on purpose!