Wednesday, December 31, 2014

1 Left In 14













The last post of 2014, Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Sky High













Between birthday and Christmas Payton got just a few Skylanders to go with his new game.

Christmas Carnage




















Christmas is officially celebrated, many a brave wrapping paper gave it's life on this day.

Friday, December 26, 2014

Birthday Has Landed




















Payton turns 7 and the Skylanders theme begins.

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Greer Family XMas Night




















The best way to spend Christmas is of course, with friends and family. A close second is having everyone in the computer room, Tara and Mystic sleeping on the beds their Grandparents bought them, Mad sleeping with her new favorite squeaky toy thanks to Casie and John, and Mari and I playing Dragon Age: Inquisition back to back.

A Wood Too Far


Lonnie had to work today so he and Payton won't be arriving until late evening. So to fill the day besides watching the traditional films we went to see Into the Woods. It wasn't bad, but far too long, they could have cut out the entire end and made it a better movie. Definitely more a TV experience than a movie pick.

Traditions













Must be upheld. That is watching It's a Wonderful Life, Elf, and of course A Christmas Story. Check.

Christmas 14




















Christmas 2014 is here.

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

I Mist You Deer













I was walking the dogs through the common area which had a shroud of mist going on, when suddenly a herd of deer came out of the fog and broke around us to either side. It was one of those amazing moments. Taken completely by surprise I scrambled to get my phone out...then Tara went nuts, so this is the picture I got. Really captures the magic right? You try holding a camera in one hand and controlling three dogs in the other, one of them a gnashing 70 pound German Shepard. Oh well, some things can only be experienced, not photographed.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Popporn





















Every year since our trip to Chicago Mari gets me a tin of Garrett's Chicago Style popcorn (called Garrett Mix officially.) I'm not a huge fan of popcorn in general, it's OK but not something I'd go looking for. Garrett's is so obscenely good it's on some other level than popcorn, until you have some it's impossible to explain. So, so good.

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Decorlated













We finally finished decorating the house, a little late this year but looks as good as ever.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Newsworthy


This is a still image from a News Channel 5 report on La Hacienda Mexican Restaurant, and that happens to be me and my coworkers! I'm the one in the hooded jacket with my back to camera.

 

Edit: That link doesn't work anymore. Here's a direct link to the video. We're just a blip about 57 seconds in.

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Tacocare













President Obama visited Nashville yesterday and made a surprise visit to an old favorite restaurant of mine, La Hacienda. So of course we went and had lunch there today. There were two news crews doing follow ups, but the most important thing...the food is still awesome.

Saturday, December 6, 2014

Scooped


Here is the Orion capsule being recovered by the USS Anchorage. The first test was a complete success.

Friday, December 5, 2014

NASA's O'Flyin'


The Orion is so important because it's the first craft in a long, long time built to explore beyond LEO. This is what will take us back to the moon and to Mars.

Here's the rundown, stolen shamelessly from Gizmodo.

Officially dubbed the Orion MPCV (Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle), this craft is specifically built to travel far, far beyond Low Earth Orbit—like the Moon, Mars, or even deep space—then return safely home. NASA plans to use a fleet of these spacecraft for just about everything, from routine supply runs to the ISS to dropping a crew on a passing asteroid.

Launch Abort System
NASA is dead serious about preventing another Challenger disaster. As such, the uppermost section of the Orion is dedicated to the launch abort system (LAS). This tower is designed to instantly detach and rocket the crew capsule to safety if something goes awry during liftoff. It also helps shield the crew from heat and pressure changes during the rise to orbit before popping off and falling back to Earth once the MPCV reaches altitude.

Crew Module
The crew module sits between the LAS and the Service Module (aka the engine and life-support). Constructed of an aluminum-lithium alloy, it can hold up to six crew members along with all their equipment.

It offers a range of improvements over previous capsules including a better-designed cockpit, more-powerful computers, indoor plumbing, and an emergency auto-docking feature. It takes over the repetitive monitoring tasks that Apollo crews used to have to continually check themselves. Once in orbit, the on-board computers will autonomously rendezvous with other spacecraft rather than rely on humans to do it. However, the most exciting new feature—for the astronauts at least—is the inclusion of a "relief tube" in the capsule. Rather than crap in a plastic bag, as the Apollo guys did, the Orion will use a more discreet and sanitary system originally developed aboard Skylab.

Opposed to the Space Shuttles, with were each used over and over, the Orion crew module is only slightly reusable. Each one is expected to withstand ten flights before being retired. And, interestingly, the crew module has no landing gear—it is a water landing or nothing for the Orion.

Service Module
The service module is where the magic happens. Magic, meaning, the technologies that keep astronauts from freezing/exploding in the dark void. The service module is built of the same aluminum-lithium alloy as the Crew Module. It controls in-flight propulsion—generated by a "7500-pound thrust, pressure-fed, regeneratively cooled, storable bi-propellant, rocket engine made by Aerojet" according to NASA—and provides water and breathable air for the crew as well as prevents the control systems from freezing. It even has unpressurized cargo space for equipment and unlucky stowaways. And, while the LAS pops off just after liftoff, the Service Module remains connected to the Crew Module until the orbiter is ready to begin reentry.

In another American first, the Service Module will incorporate deployable solar panels to capture solar energy while in flight, much like the Mars Landers' UltraFlex wings. This integration eliminates the need to carry heavy, unreliable fuel cells and all the necessary bits and pieces to use the fuel, which makes the Orion lighter and more agile.

NASA's Orion


Here we see the United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket, with the Orion spacecraft on top, awaiting liftoff from Space Launch Complex-37 this morning. Not only is it a cool picture, the Orion is really, really exciting. It shows NASA isn't out of the fight when it comes to future plans for manned space travel, handing it off to private industry.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

WOTM













Christmas edition.