You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   61-85   86-110   111-135   136-160   161-185   186-210 
 211-235   236-260   261-285   286-310   311-335   336-360   361-385   386-410   411-435 
 436-460   461-485   486-510   511-535   536-560   561-585   586-610   611-635   636-660 
 661-673          
 
Author Message
25 new of 673 responses total.
goose
response 86 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 13:53 UTC 2003

RE#84 Thanks, I did a little more research and I understand better now.
gregb
response 87 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 15:24 UTC 2003

On the show, Extreme Homes (HGTV), there was a story about a house in 
Minnisota that uses a dome to fend off the winds of Winter.  Cool 
looking place.
cmcgee
response 88 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 16:35 UTC 2003

buckyBalls
edina
response 89 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 18:04 UTC 2003

It just occurred to me that everytime I saw the sound guys at the folklife
fest last week (which was a lot, as I probably saw about 30 shows), I thought
of Eric.
gelinas
response 90 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 18:07 UTC 2003

Thanks, cmcgee; I'd just noticed that typo.
gull
response 91 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 18:15 UTC 2003

Someone put up a plywood dome near where we used to live, in the
country.  I haven't looked at the patent to see if the design looks
familiar.

A friend of mine lives in a concrete "Key dome" in Georgia.
dcat
response 92 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 19:16 UTC 2003

 for an Ann Arbor dome, head over to the north side's Jones Dr.  (btwn
Broadway and Plymouth, about a quarter mile from the Broadway Shops and former
Kroger/Arbor Drugs.)  Built about five years ago, although it took several
years.  i think it's concrete, but i'm not sure.
other
response 93 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 19:23 UTC 2003

The dome itself isn't concrete.  I saw it periodically during 
construction, as I contract for an organization based almost across the 
street from that house.
dcat
response 94 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 19:24 UTC 2003

ok.  a lot of the rest of the house is, anyway.  i was out of town for much
of its construction, so i missed a lot of what went into/on it. . . 
orinoco
response 95 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 19:56 UTC 2003

An old friend of mine has an uncle who lives in a dome.  My friend helped
build it, actually.  If I remember right, it's 5/8 of an icosahedron, all
wood, two stories.  They filled some of the triangles with glass to make
windows; the other ones, they covered with siding on the outside and
insulation in the inside.  It was quite cozy.  Since visiting, I've been
thinking I'd like to live in one myself someday.
eskarina
response 96 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 2 21:17 UTC 2003

<fakes a scowl>  This is the happy item!  Shall we start a geometry item?

Oh wait, geometry does make me happy, never mind.  :)

IHB I'll be in Ann Arbor in 24 hours or so.

Let that imply to no one that Chicago makes me unhappy... I am _quite_ happy
to be in Chicago, but dcat is in Ann Arbor...

IAHB I basically got a job offer today... the teacher in my classroom at
Dunbar and I get along quite well and she is in charge of math teacher
recruiting for the school.  She wrote down my name/cellphone number/email
address today and promised to give them to somewhat important.  This after
only teaching for about 10 minutes at the end of a period in her classroom!

That said, I feel excited but so far somewhat clueless about working in my
school... its on the south side of Chicago, 98% African American, and quite
poor.  I don't yet feel like I understand/relate to the kids at the school.
I also know that this school, and many like it, has quite the difficult time
finding good math teachers.

Ms. Lemons (the head teacher in the classroom) has a button on her desk that
says "Highly qualified math teachers, a HOT commodity", and I suspect that
that is very much true in the place where I am at.
russ
response 97 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 00:33 UTC 2003

Re #80:  It has no hexa-pent strut frame to brace it; the "struts"
are created by bends in the flat shell panels themselves.  All of
the precise cutting and fancy brackets are eliminated, and the
remaining pieces are just rectangular 4x8 sheets.

Imagine an "efficiency house kit" that fits in the back of a
pickup truck, and you'll begin to see why it's so cool.
goose
response 98 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 01:52 UTC 2003

Yeah, I'm there now, thanks.  Lots of possibilities. :-)
other
response 99 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 04:48 UTC 2003

IHB this evening, after the screening of "Wayne's World" at Top of the 
Park, a digital projection system was tested for the first time at TOP.

IAHB the test was a grand success, with brightness and clarity exceeding 
expectations all around, and as a bonus, the cost of doing digital 
projection at TOP would be less than 16mm, and the selection of available 
films would likely be greater.

The decision has not yet been made, but it looks as if the necessary 
groundwork has been laid for TOP movies to go digital next year.

Extra bonus possibility:  stereo sound!
remmers
response 100 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 13:41 UTC 2003

(Cool.  What media would you digitally project -- standard DVD, or
something else?)
other
response 101 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 15:13 UTC 2003

Probably DVD, but due to legal restrictions they would have to come from 
a distributor rather than the video store, and they might not be standard 
in all senses.  I don't know about that end of things.
tod
response 102 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 3 22:47 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

russ
response 103 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 00:48 UTC 2003

Nice bike ride, nice sit by the pool, got the crossword almost
done.
russ
response 104 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 03:22 UTC 2003

The speakers in the computer room are now hovering 7 feet up.
Where'd all this floor come from?
other
response 105 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 07:16 UTC 2003

IHB krj was hovering near the stage and quickly responded to my shouted 
request to other hovering people to clear the path between me and the 
sound shed by passing the message on in a very effective way.

sabre
response 106 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 13:19 UTC 2003

I am happy because I'm mensa certified

   ...
          .::':::'::.
        .:' .' : '. ':.
        ::--:--:--:--::
  :-._  ':. '. : .' .:'  _.-:
  :   "-._'':.:::.:''_.-"   :
  :       "-._'''_.-"       :
  :   ._      "-"      _.   :
  :   : "-._       _.-" :   :
  :   :     ":   :"     :   :
  '-.-'      :   :      '-.-'
             :   :
             '-.-'

       M   E   N   S   A

      The High IQ Society

gelinas
response 107 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 13:24 UTC 2003

So you are good at taking tests?
goose
response 108 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 13:59 UTC 2003

And at telling others about it....
jor
response 109 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 14:40 UTC 2003

        I'm a lifetime member of DENSA

        
cmcgee
response 110 of 673: Mark Unseen   Jul 4 15:08 UTC 2003

One person in fifty (2% of the population) is Mensa-eligible.  If you know
50 people it's very likely that you know at least one person who is eligible
for Mensa.

Given the self-selection on this system, I suspect that the percentage of Grex
BBSers who are eligible for Mensa is greater than 50% of the active
participants.  
 0-24   25-49   50-74   61-85   86-110   111-135   136-160   161-185   186-210 
 211-235   236-260   261-285   286-310   311-335   336-360   361-385   386-410   411-435 
 436-460   461-485   486-510   511-535   536-560   561-585   586-610   611-635   636-660 
 661-673          
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss