Did you know that? (Surprising trivia)

Did you know that, according to Wikipedia, in the 1844 democratic convention:

Someone MUST have done this on purpose.

Rev. Al Sharpton’s father (Al Sr.) left Al Jr.‘s mom for Al Jr.s’ half-sister, Al Jr.'s mom’s daughter from a previous marriage.

You’d be amazed at how much open reel mag tape is still in use for shipping bulk data, especially to government agencies like the IRS. The IRS stopped accepting 9-track tapes in 2003, but there are still other formats that endure.

Aside from that, we have vast near-line tape “silos” where robots retrieve tapes when people need data, and off-line storage vaults crammed with all sorts of tapes - some on reels, but mostly cartridges now.

[QUOTE=TreacherousCretin]
The piano industry has been settling for subpar spruce for at least twenty years now.
[/QUOTE]

What are their options? Stop making pianos?

Are they settling for poor quality or tolerating it as their only means of survival?

I’ve probably posted about this before, but I just find it so utterly astounding:

The singer, Julio Iglesias, was 61 years old when his father, (also named Julio Iglesias, a doctor) had the first of two more children.

Yes, Julio Iglesias’ dad had a baby boy when he was 89 years old. His wife was 40. They conceived a second child when Dr. Iglesias was 90 (NINETY!!) but she was born 7 months after Dr. Iglesias died.

So, to sum up: Julio Iglesias is 68 years old and has a half-brother and sister that are 8 and 7 years old, respectively.

His son, 37-year old Enrique Iglesias, has an uncle and an aunt that are 30 years younger than himself.

That’s got to make for some interesting family reunions.

I just found this out this week:

In 1965, what is believed to be the first singles bar opened on the Upper East Side in Manhattan. It was also the first TGI Friday’s.

Yeah, it’s a joke. Note all the references to P.T. Barnum, especially:

He’s just having fun telling a story. And someone in the comments posted a link to the original image for the “Springfield [Mass.] Gazette”, which he doctored.

I just learned that humans are unable to synthesize ascorbic acid due to a defective protein.

The root cause of scurvy is a genetically defective protein that affects the entire human race and some great ape species. Other mammals can make their own vitamin C and don’t get sick if they fail to get it from outside sources

…and the only other mammal that can’t make their own Vitamin C is the guinea pig!

What is your data for this? I am NOT saying you’re wrong - it is more that I am saying it is complicated and would appreciate to know more context on your comment. There is a lot of noise going on right now where Gibson got raided and other folks are up in arms about tonewoods like Rosewood from Madagascar being harvested and acquired for instruments.

As for spruce, I have heard that there are some issues with old-growth spruce, but that some forestry management in some regions has helped with this - and also that other cedars and redwoods have the potential to augment supplies for topwood - same with considering non-endangered woods like cherry, ovangkol and sycamore for body and side woods…

What am I missing here?

In 1950, an elephant fell out of a monorail in Germany.

http://io9.com/5903042/in-1950-an-elephant-fell-out-of-a-monorail-in-germany

I didn’t get it either.

It’s a song lyric, believe it or not. It’s factually correct but someone used the exact song lyric in the Wiki text. I’m not sure why it’s “surprising trivia” though.

Later-to-be General George S. Patton represented the US in Modern Pentathlon in the 1912 Stockholm Olympics.

He placed 6th in the showjumping, and 20th of 36 overall.

He also invented the drive-by shooting in (IIRC) 1916.

Actually if that’s the wiki quote, it isn’t the exact song lyric, which is:
Martin van Buren, a former president and an abolitionist

Oops. My mistake but I still think that that’s what Ludovic was going for there.

Will this be true for much longer? With the dropping prices in flash memory, in a few years, I can see that taking over. Magnetic tape still has the problem of being magnetic. It degrades over time, even if you take steps to reduce it.

Yes. Settling for lower quality than they would have in years gone by.

Forgot to mention one obvious alternative they have: substitute materials.

Interesting you bring this up. I’m working 12 hours overtime today on my day off to change tapes when the computer tells me to for the company I work for. Evidently the robot that does this is broken.