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Gagarin

On the night of April 11th 1961, 50 years ago, Lieutenant Yuri Gagarin of the Russian Air Force slept soundly.

His colleague, Gherman Titov, on ‘the reserve bench’ to take over if anything happened to Yuri, hardly slept at all.

On April 12th, Gagarin and Titoy had breakfast together, and then, dressed in his flight suit, Gagarin presented to work at Baikonur Cosmodrome’s Site 1, in Kazakhstan. Although he was an exceptional fighter pilot, he would have no control over the ship he was commanding this day. He would be sitting on top of the world’s biggest rocket, his destiny determined not by his flying skills but by the bomb that would be unleashed below him – 150 tons of highly explosive kerosene and liquid oxygen. He was bolted into the tiny Vostok space capsule, chatting calmly throughout to the engineering team and then via radio to Sergei Korolyov, the chief designer of the rocket, . Korolyov was so nervous he had to keep taking pills for his heart.

500x_gagarin-50-years

Noone knew for sure that a man could survive the acceleration forces that Gagarin was about to experience, nor that he would survive the conditions of space. Certainly, no-one could guarantee that this rocket would not explode uncontrollably as many of the test rockets had done. So Gagarin’s heart beat was monitored remotely throughout the launch.

His pulse never rose above 64. 64! My heart beat is higher than that even thinking about it.

Yuri Gagarin is the coolest person ever.

Vostok-1_launch

At launch, Gagarin was heard to say ‘oyekhali!’ – “off we go!”

Such was the power of the Vostok rocket, in just a few minutes he was the first man in space, and then the first man in orbit around the earth. In awe, he said “The Earth is blue. How wonderful. It is amazing.”

After one full orbit, retro-rockets slowed the capsule and it fell back into Russia. Gagarin ejected at a height of 7km, as planned, and parachuted to earth separated from the space craft. It is said that he scared the life out of the peasant farmer and daughter at whose farm he landed. The entire flight took 108 minutes.

There is no doubt that Yuri Gagarin had ‘the right stuff’. He was the son of a peasant farmer who rose by merit through the Russian military to be one of 20 cosmonauts.

He was assessed by the air force doctor in 1960 as follows:

“Modest; embarrasses when his humor gets a little too racy; high degree of intellectual development evident in Yuriy; fantastic memory; distinguishes himself from his colleagues by his sharp and far-ranging sense of attention to his surroundings; a well-developed imagination; quick reactions; persevering, prepares himself painstakingly for his activities and training exercises, handles celestial mechanics and mathematical formulae with ease as well as excels in higher mathematics; does not feel constrained when he has to defend his point of view if he considers himself right; appears that he understands life better than a lot of his friends.”

He was the obvious candidate to be chosen for the first space flight.

After the flight, Yuri Gagarin became the most famous man in the world. He was considered too ‘valuable’ to fly as a cosmonaut again, and retrained as a fighter pilot. Unfortunately, and somewhat ironically, he died in a crash on a routine training flight in 1968.

Gizmodo today has a special tribute to Yuri Gagarin., which includes this video of the launch.

 

 

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Apr 12 2011

Micro-apps

Top-ten-microapps

Computers are meant to make life easier, (although I would agree that it often doesn’t feel like that).

‘Power users’ often make use of small applications that enable them to handle repetitious and common tasks with much less work.

Lifehacker recently listed their top 10 micro-utilities for both Windows and Mac.

These applications might be a shortcut on your path to “Power-user-dom’.

Any other suggestions? Let us know in the comments.

What I Learnt On 12th April in other years

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Dave, my friend the muso doctor, tells me that you can play any pop song ever written if you use the 1 5 6m 4 (I V vi IV) Chord Progression. 

Of course, I dont know what this means, so he demonstrated using Garage Band on the iPad in C major using the chords C G Am F.

You can see how frequently this chord progression is used by watching this video by Benny Davis, from the band Axis of Awesome. This was first performed at the 2006 Sydney University Arts Revue: ‘The Complete History of Everything That Ever Happened Ever. On Ice. On Fire.’

Now, go and write us a pop song.

What I Learnt On 11th April in other years

11th April 2012 The End of AwesomenessThe End of Awesomeness
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It seems the characters of Pixar have always been part of our family. 

For many months Will was indistinguishable from Buzz Lightyear.

Buzz

I was very glad it was dark in the theatre as we all watched Toy Story 3 last Xmas. Andy has to leave his favourite cowboy at home when he goes off to college. This year our own little Woody sits lonely on the shelf, ‘Olly’ boldly written on the sole of his boot, waiting for his owner to return tomorrow from his first term away from home.

Woody

Pixar was established by Steve Jobs in 1986. Chef animator John Lasseter says that it takes three things to make an animated film: world, character and story. Pixar has remained true to that edict since their first short Luxo Jr – and the other 19 short films and 12 feature films they have made since.

The ground breaking Toy Story came out in 1995. Cars 2 will be released later this year.

An exhibition at the Australian Centre of the Moving Image in 1987 celebrated 20 years of Pixar animation. 

Nemo

So this year marks 25 years of Pixar. To celebrate, this video has been produced which shows key Pixar moments. 

What is your favourite Pixar movie? Let us know in the comments.

  • Toy Story (1995)
  • A Bug’s Life (1998)
  • Toy Story 2 (1999)
  • Monster’s Inc. (2001)
  • Finding Nemo (2003)
  • The Incredibles (2004)
  • Cars (2006)
  • Ratatouille (2007)
  • WALL-E (2008)
  • Up (2009)
  • Toy Story 3 (2010)
  • Cars 2 (2011)

 

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mancave n. A dedicated area of a house, such as a basement, workshop, or garage, where a man can be alone or socialize with his friends.

Social catastrophe may be just around the corner. Modern houses may have 5 bedrooms, four bedrooms, a living room, dining room, a kids room, four bathrooms, and a home theatre – but they have no backyard and therefore no backyard shed. As the great philosopher, John Williamson, says “Every man needs a shed”.

I remember the father of my friend Paul received a plaque on his retirement that read

‘Watch TV, Sleep a Lot,
Lead a Life That’s Lazy.
Mope around the House all day,
Drive your poor wife crazy”

Wives – you should insist that your husband builds his own special place before its too late.

mancavesite.org is dedicated to celebrating the ‘mancave’ in all its forms. And there sure are some interesting forms!

In my research, I have discovered some common mancave elements.(there are no surprises here)

  • A display of sporting memorablia
  • A dedicated interest in beer 
  • A collection of games – pinball, video games, darts and/or pool
  • A large screen TV

Here is a random selection of mancaves to give you some ideas.

1-028Miz-man-caveA97008_g008_7-spaceA97008_g008_5-steveMancaveBarbieCastle2CastleButterfieldFgallery_mcothy_2010_2-4Fgallery_mcothy_2010_2-6

Now that I’m inspired, “Tellembugrum”, our shed, could make a humble start. I’ll have some work on convincing the rest of the family.

Outside
Inside

Have you got a mancave? Or seen any exemplars? Let us know in the comments.

 

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