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utterly useless pieces of info,please add yours.

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Michelle

Michelle Report 25 Feb 2012 08:10

On average there are eight peas in a pod

Dermot

Dermot Report 27 Feb 2012 08:12

Fat free is the total opposite of free fat.

Michelle

Michelle Report 27 Feb 2012 09:31

Barbie got her first car in 1962

Dermot

Dermot Report 28 Feb 2012 14:02

Jedward to represent Ireland again in the Eurovision. I hope they remember to have a haircut.

Merlin

Merlin Report 28 Feb 2012 14:14

I,ve been told that when I Burp its about force 8 on the richter scale. and trhats from the top. :-D :-D :-D

Bobtanian

Bobtanian Report 1 Mar 2012 09:27

you might need to be ""sitting down"" when reading this........

.a small insight to space travel...........copied from a NASA Email......

Don Pettits' blog from space

Our Fancy Coffee Machine

During the flight of STS-126 in 2008, we carried up three refrigerator-sized pieces of equipment. One was a toilet for the NASA side of space station. There was already one on the Russian side, so this one gave us redundancy. In the past, when the toilet broke, all work had halted until we fixed it. No other single piece of equipment fell into this category of importance. The oxygen generator could break, and maybe in a day or two we would fix it; same with the carbon dioxide scrubber. But when the toilet broke—now that was serious.

The second piece of equipment we carried up was a small chemical plant. It contained a distillation apparatus, catalytic reactors, pumps, filters, and plumbing. It was a chemical engineer’s dream. The liquid effluent from the toilet was plumbed to the inlet of this machine.

The third piece of equipment was a new galley. It sported an injection port for filling our drink bags and rehydrating freeze-dried food with our choice of hot or room-temperature water. It also had a hot box for warming thermally stabilized meat pouches (canned meat without the can) and a small refrigerator—not for science samples, but for the crew’s food. The inlet to the galley was plumbed into the outlet of the chemical plant. This completed what we call our regenerative life support system. Simply put, what goes out one end is processed, reworked, and put back in the other end.

Water is an essential ingredient not just for us, but for all life forms that we recognize. And water is always in short supply on a spacecraft. There may be water shortages in some places on Earth, but spaceflight redefines the meaning of the word “desert.” Closing the water loop will therefore be essential technology when humans venture away from Earth for long periods of time. If the toilet fails on a mission to Mars, the crew will run out of water and die. Earth orbit, where spare parts and engineering knowledge are close by, is the ideal place to refine this technology and produce equipment that is truly robust. I call this engineering research; it is complementary to scientific research, and is one of the more important activities that we conduct on space station.

Nowhere on Earth do we recycle urine using portable machinery. Not in Antarctica, not on ships at sea, not in our driest deserts. We choose to let Earth do the recycling, not a machine. Our recycling system on space station is not a one-time demonstration, nor a test of astronauts’ ability to handle the “yuck factor.” It’s a day-in, day-out operation, designed as an integral part of the overall spacecraft water balance. With this technology, we are truly on the frontier, and we have serial number 001 of a complex machine. Of course it breaks down—constantly. And of course, we are always fixing it. Of course there is a steady stream of spare parts arriving from Earth. Any new technology is like this. The first crews arriving at Mars will thank us for our urine-stained hands.

Morning is a time for comfortable habits, and so it is on space station. Each morning I float out (“getting up” is obviously a gravity-centric expression) and do my daily routine. I can hear the rumbles of the chemical plant. It vibrates the deck rails and gives your feet a massage at the same time. Then I float over to the galley and make a bag of coffee. Kona is one of my favorites; I can feel the caffeine race to my brain and stimulate my thoughts. It occurs to me that our regenerative life support equipment is really just a fancy coffee machine. It makes yesterday’s coffee into today’s coffee.

Don's blog also appears at airspacemag.com.

Dermot

Dermot Report 9 Mar 2012 08:36

Batchelors' wives & old maids' children are always perfect.

Bobtanian

Bobtanian Report 9 Mar 2012 14:22

contradiction in terms there, methinks, Dermo

which hurts most, do you think/?

childbirth or a kick in the nuts?

I think childbirth is easy because women will often go for another child......whereas you dont often hear a bloke ask for another kicking!

Dermot

Dermot Report 13 Mar 2012 21:42

Qwerty is the key.

Suzanne

Suzanne Report 13 Mar 2012 21:55


if men had babys the human race would have stopped with Adam.ha :-D

Dermot

Dermot Report 13 Mar 2012 23:14

If men had babies, then it would have been Adam & Steve in the Garden of Eden scrumping apples - not Adam & Eve.

LadyScozz

LadyScozz Report 13 Mar 2012 23:26

Humphrey Bogart was related to Princess Diana. (They were seventh cousins)



Allan

Allan Report 14 Mar 2012 00:06

An uncircumsied Jewish baby is called a girl

TheBlackKnight

TheBlackKnight Report 14 Mar 2012 00:26

Xia Aifeng, 36, a Chinese woman from Shangrao, in eastern China's Jiangxi province, has not cut her hair for 16 years, since she was 20. Her hair has grown to 2.42 meters (8 ft) long,
while she is just 1.6 m tall!


The longest words in Oxford Dictionaries Online are:
antidisestablishmentarianism opposition to the disestablishment of the Church of England - 28 letters
floccinaucinihilipilification the estimation of something as worthless - 29 letters
pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis a supposed lung disease - 45 letters

LadyScozz

LadyScozz Report 14 Mar 2012 08:41

In Germany qwertz is the key

Persephone

Persephone Report 14 Mar 2012 09:07

Arachibutyrophobia is the fear of peanut butter sticking to the roof of the mouth.

Persephone

Persephone Report 14 Mar 2012 09:13

and for 5EXY


Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia- thefear of long words.

Dermot

Dermot Report 14 Mar 2012 18:10

The only one I allow to look down on me is The Man on the Moon.

Suzanne

Suzanne Report 14 Mar 2012 20:39

on average sharks kill 10 humans every year.
in contrast around 100 people a year are trampled to death by cows. :-D :-D

Bobtanian

Bobtanian Report 14 Mar 2012 21:23

according to mythbusters............you CAN pee on a live rail.........and get away with it!!
providing you are standing, and not crouching!