Pizza Cognition Theory

From Serious Eats comes the Pizza Cognition Theory which stems from how people learn what something is -- which is that they first must learn what that thing is *not*:
The first slice of pizza a child sees and tastes (and somehow appreciates on something more than a childlike, mmmgoood, thanks-mom level), becomes, for him, pizza. He relegates all subsequent slices, if they are different in some manner from that first triangle of dough and cheese and tomato and oil and herbs and spices, to a status that we can characterize as not pizza.
What you first recognize as Pizza will forever be Pizza to you, everything else will be "not pizza" or "another kind of pizza".  For me (for better or worse) it's the Little Caesar's standard pizza.  Everything else substantially different gets described with a qualifier (i.e. Buddy's pizza).

An Oldie But a Goodie

This is back from 2000.  I still think about this every now and then and thought I'd post it (or re-post it):

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Postal Experiments from the Annals of Improbable Research.  Experiments include trying to send all sorts of objects (including a $20 bill in a clear envelope, to a ski, to a deer tibia) through the US Postal Service to see what gets delivered and what doesn't.

Time Traveler's Crib Sheet

Just in case you're sent back in time 1,000 years, here's all the basics you need to know.  Like heavier-than-air flight and the basics of fighting infections.  Just hang this up in your time machine. Time Traveler's Crib Sheet. (from BoingBoing) (P.S. Apparently, I'm just a transparent proxy for BoingBoing.  Go read that site, they have more content :))

"Sometimes doing nothing is the best option"

Great post by NASA's Wayne Hale on his blog regarding conjuctions, or close encounters between the Space Shuttle and space junk.  When a conjunction is going to occur during the crew sleep period and there is sufficient reason to believe there will not be a collision, mission controllers will set a timer to expire at the Time of Closest Approach and everyone would hope they did their math correctly.  This happened three times during Wayne's tenure in Mission Control.  His quote:
So as we waited for the clock to count to zero, there was plenty of time to contemplate metaphysical topics:  life, death, courage, risk, achievement, probability, dishonor.  They are all fellow travelers, intimately bound together.  No great accomplishment comes without difficulty or risk.  Miscalculation or failure results in death and dishonor.  But it is what it is; you do the best you can, make the best rational choice you can given what you know, and then wait for the result. Going to Las Vegas holds no enticement for me.
I follow Wayne Hale on twitter (@waynehale) and I am always impressed with his insights and thoughts on the space program.

Ares I-X Rollout

I tried to stay up to watch the start of the rollout live - scheduled for 12:01AM this morning, but it got delayed about an hour, so I'm glad I didn't.  The last bit of the rollout is happening right now. Someone on the nasaspaceflight.com forum this morning noted that the last rocked to rollout from the VAB that wasn't the shuttle was ASTP (on a Saturn 1B), which rolled to pad 39B on March 24 1975.  It was an interesting sense of scale.  And it's neat to finally see something new.
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Spaceflightnow.com Gallery

Spaceflight, Helicopters, and Nomads

Before launches at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, Helicopters search the downrange path of rockets to find any nomads in the vast grasslands of Kazakhstan.  If any are found they are warned of the upcoming launches. Link This picture of this activity was particularly interesting:
(image from russianspaceweb.com, copyright noted) The americans launch with ocean downrange. and a similar search is performed for boats that are in the wrong spot.