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So its Halloween night, and me and my bro Marc are heading up 2 Fairview to go party with our bud Brandon who's doing his Power Engineering at the NAIT campus there. As we where told by our invitee, we need costumes, I was going as Ron Burgundy from Anchorman, Marc was a lumberjack. Brandon was Jail-bait. LoL! SO we get to the On-campus town-house brandon is staying in with his roomies, and the party is in full swing! Brandon is already down a 26 and awesomely drunk. So me and Marc get into character and we head 2 the bar, and easy 10 minute walk from Brandons. So we get 2 the bar and start partying. Me a brandon hit a shot set-up of Tequila and Fire-ball, Brandon walks 2 the bathroom, pukes, and continues 2 party, what a trooper! So the party keeps going till closing time. And all three of us, $100 bucks each poorer and really drunk/danced out. Tried 2 make our way home. (This is where it gets super fuzzy. We three peiced the rest of the night together with what we could remember, and this is what we got.) So we start walking... we get 2 the campus, somewhere in the agriculture area. All of a suppen Marc wants 2 fight due to some guy back home who was say shi*t about his girlfriend. (Chris Gullet, nobody likes this guy. I even want 2 kick his ass.) So brandon says 2 him, that he'll fight him. So they hop some fences and start fighting by the riding sable and cattle pens. Me not seeing this go on or where they went, keep walking and yelling for the 2 of them wondering where the hell they are. So I yell and stumble till I hit a slight incline, and me being drunk fell right into a ditch, face first, full of water. So I am soaking wet, I get out but in the process I lose a shoe. I don't care I just keep on walking till all of a sudden a vehicle comes from behind. Its campus security! The lady inside askes "Are you ok?" I say. "Not Really" She says, "Wanna lift?" and I say, "Yes Please" I get in the back and b4 I know it. I'm right in front of the town house and I didn't even know how 2 get there! lol! SO I go inside and pass out on the coach. Mean while back 2 Marc and Brandon. They're fighting like crazy drunks. Till they stop. Marc it still pist and is kicking and punching shi*t. Meanwhile brandon takes off home ready for bed, losing a shoe also somewhere along the way. Marc is now alone, and is also lost. He calls brandons cell, doesn't pick-up. He calls my cell but I fell in the ditch thus f*cking my phone right up 2 the point that it doesn't work. So he calls his girlfriend in falher which is so worried that she wants 2 drive an hour and a half in the early morning 2 come and find him. LoL! He told her not 2 be silly. and he said he'd find his way eventually. So he gets to the town houses, goes in, up the stairs, opens the door to what he thought was Brandon's room. But he notices that the guy sleeping in Brandons room is not Brandon. Further more its not brandon's room. Its not even his townhouse! Marc went into the wrong house! Than he notices that there is a dog, and it starts barking so Marc gets out of the townhouse without the guy waking up! Lucky! And eventually finds his way 2 the right place. With me on the couch and marc in Brandons bed. Brandon decides 2 sleep on the arm chair. I wake up for a moment to see him in a U shape, from arm to arm. Awesome! But when awake in the morning he is laid out on the kitchen floor. Than I notice under my blanket, I am buck naked! I don't even remember taking them off! So we relive our night laugh about it. Than head out 2 KFC, than watch some women's volley-ball and than go looking for our lost items. The only thing 2 turn up is Marc's Rome Lumberjack Toque. But what an awesome drunk time. Well worth the hundred bucks, the lost shoe, and the broken cell phone. Good times with good friends is never a bad thing, no matter what kind of trouble you get into! LoL!
 
   Take Off, eh?


Published On: 11/17/2008
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As early as 8 a.m. on Friday, September 19, twelve PEAK 2 PEAK Gondola Sky Cabins will make the very first, epic journey across the 4.4km/2.73 mile span between Blackcomb and Whistler Mountains. With the official opening day of December 12, 2008 announced this milestone is all the more exciting.

 

“To finally have Sky Cabins move from one mountain to the other really crystallizes what we have accomplished here through two summers of construction,” says Rick Temple, PEAK 2 PEAK Gondola Construction Manager. “It is going to be an awesome sight for the entire PEAK 2 PEAK team, our employees and for the whole community of Whistler.”

 

Whistler Blackcomb’s PEAK 2 PEAK Gondola will officially open to the public December 12, 2008. This engineering marvel is set to become a new Canadian tourism icon, and will forever revolutionize the way visitors experience this all-season resort.



Published On: 9/19/2008
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The coming winter must be on a few peoples minds (other than those people who are experiencing it in the southern hemisphere). I turned on the tv the other night and caught two major US cable shows featuring snowboarding in Whistler. E Weekend News had a full feature on Whistler and then Gene Simmons - Family Jewels (Of KISS fame - the guy with the makeup and big tongue) started a two show feature on Whistler and one of our coaches was on the show.

Gene Simmons Family Jewels

I knew that Ryan (Rausch) had done some work with Gene during the world ski and snowboard festival here in Whistler this April. What I didn't know was just how cheesy the show was going to be. Gene is all about making $$ and he owns a label called "Money Bags". During the show they were looking for a new face for "Money Bags" and Ryan was one of their options. Ryan definitely got the best deal out of the three candidates as he scored a heli day and some snowmobile time. It he hadn't blown out his knee during the filming (a total put on - Ryan is fine) he would have been the new face of "Money Bags". Funny stuff and all scripted. You may be able to check it out this out later this week

http://www.aetv.com/genesimmonsfamilyjewels/

http://www.pro-ride.com/news.cfm

Summer Camp on the Glacier

Summer Camp has now been and gone for another year. The glacier was in really great shape this year and the half pipe was awesome, We scored some great weather with lots of blue sky days and a super fun shred was had by all.

Winter Programs

We have had lots of bookings come in already for the December and January 12 week courses. Freeride, freestyle and snowboard instructor camps and courses start the beginning of December with the first 12 week course starting on the 6th. We have an early booking discount of $350 for anyone booking a 12 week course before August 31 with a 50% payment and we have secured an extra lift ticket for anyone booking two week courses before October 31. You will get 2 extra lift tickets if you book your two week course by September 30. See the http://www.pro-ride.com/courses.cfm page for more details.

Videos

Karen has been busy working on the videos from this past winters footage. We now have a freestyle video, two freeride videos and a womens shred video all finished. Next off the press will be the Mt Baker road trip feature.

Here are the links to the latest completed videos.

http://www.pro-ride.com/videos/freeride_movie_2_08.cfm

http://www.pro-ride.com/videos/freeride_movie_08.cfm

http://www.pro-ride.com/videos/womens_movie_08.cfm

http://www.pro-ride.com/videos/freestyle_movie_08.cfm

The New Gondola

We got an up close look at the new gondola while heading up to the glacier this summer and it really is a marvel of engineering. The lift station itself is a huge building and they have already strung the guide wires across the valley for the new cable system. Check out some pictures at

http://www.pro-ride.com/diary.cfm

Well that is it for this latest newsletter - Don't forget to get your winter registrations in at http://www.pro-ride.com/register.cfm and have fun with whatever it is you are doing..

If you have any questions for us or feedback please drop us an email at snowboard@pro-ride.com

Cheers

From Anthony and the team at Pro Ride



Published On: 8/5/2008
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My Journal: Brickyard Baybee
By: Jesgirl


The Indianapolis Motor Speedway was built on 328 acres of farmland five miles northwest of Indiana's capital city in the spring of 1909. Financed by four local businessmen, Carl Fisher, James Allison, Frank Wheeler and Arthur Newby, it was planned as a year-round testing facility for the fast-growing automobile industry in Indiana. Occasional race meets would be presented at the track, featuring those very same manufacturers racing their products against each other. Spectators, it was reasoned, would be sufficiently impressed as to want to head downtown quickly to the showrooms for a closer look at one of these new-fangled contraptions.
 
 


Four turns, each banked at nine degrees and 12 minutes and measuring exactly 440 yards from entrance to exit, were linked together by a pair of long straights and, at the north and south ends of the property, by a pair of short straights to form a rectangular-shaped 2 ½ mile track as dictated by the confines of the available land.

With the original surface of crushed rock and tar proving to be disastrous at the opening motorcycle and automobile racing events in August of 1909, 3,200,000 paving bricks were imported by rail from the western part of the state in the fall, laid on their sides in a bed of sand and fixed with mortar, this inspiring the nickname "The Brickyard".

Poor attendance at a trio of three-day meets on the revamped surface in 1910 caused the owners to rethink their plans and focus instead on a single event for 1911. They envisioned it as an event of gigantic proportions offering a huge purse. On May 30 - Memorial Day - a grueling 500-Mile race paying $14,250 to win took place, enjoying instant success and attracting universal recognition…and making history as the inaugural Indianapolis 500.

With the exception of an additional program of racing on a single day in September 1916, no race other than the Indianapolis 500 was to be held at the Speedway until a tremendously successful NASCAR stock car event, the Brickyard 400, debuted in 1994. The 500 was suspended during America's involvement in the two world wars, 1917-1918 and 1942-1945, but held in all other years.

Asphalt was first applied to the rougher portions of the track in 1936, and by 1941 all but the greater part of the mainstraight had become blacktop. The remainder of the bricks were finally covered over in the fall of 1961. Most of the original paving bricks are still in place underneath the modern asphalt surface, with only the famous "yard of bricks" still exposed at the start/finish line as a nostalgic reminder of the past.

The track has changed ownership only twice. With Carl Fisher heavily involved in the development of Miami Beach and Jim Allison's nearby engineering company growing rapidly, the foursome sold IMS in 1927 to a group headed up by WWI flying ace Eddie Rickenbacker. Rickenbacker had actually driven in several 500s before he ever knew how to fly. One of Rickenbacker's first actions was to install an 18-hole golf course on the grounds in 1929, now known as Brickyard Crossing and home of a Senior PGA Tour golf tournament, the Brickyard Crossing Championship, in September.

Allowed to fall into a terrible state of disrepair as a result of four years of neglect during WWII, the Speedway was purchased in 1945 by Terre Haute, Indiana, businessman Anton "Tony" Hulman, Jr. He immediately embarked on a phenomenal rejuvenation program that began the transformation of the facility into what it is today. Hulman passed away in October 1977, but to this day members of his family perpetuate the traditions of the Speedway - now encompassing 559 acres - while continuing to transform it beyond the wildest imaginations of its founders.

The Hulman-George family continues to own and operate the Indianapolis Motor Speedway with Mari Hulman George serving as Chairman of the Board and Anton "Tony" George serving as President and Chief Executive Officer.
 
 
http://www.indianapolismotorspeedway.com/history/


Published On: 5/23/2007
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There has never been a greater need for inquisitive and determined young minds to develop the solutions needed for the 21st Century
 
 
"My message to any young person today mulling over their future career path is this: there has never been a better time to consider a future in scientific discovery; or in engineering to bring innovative technologies to real world application."

The environmental problems facing the world in the 21st Century are the legacy of human activities, argues Sir David King. But he says, in this week's Green Room, we also hold the key to solving these problems by attracting the brightest young minds into the world of science.

Woman covering her mouth in polluted street (Image: AFP)
It is easy in our day-to-day lives to believe we are detached from the wider environment, but that is an illusion

Mankind has never had a greater need for science, and for the spark of human ingenuity to apply this to tackling today's great global challenges.

Built on centuries of tradition and endeavour, the UK is second to none in the diversity and excellence of its scientific heritage.

Our nation punches well above its weight in the quality and number of academic papers and citations, above Germany, France and Japan, and trailing only the far bigger economy of the US.

It is vital therefore that we pay equal regard to ensuring that the UK's outstanding scientific outputs flow through to enhance the quality of life and prosperity for people in the UK, and beyond.

The challenges facing science, and humanity, as we move through the 21st Century are manifold. I would place none higher than the test we face in our stewardship of planet Earth.

Even with our best efforts, we must be prepared for further global temperature rise as a result of past emissions

It is a stern test, as demonstrated by a few stark facts. From around three billion people on the planet in 1950, global population has risen to over six billion today. By the middle of this century, it will exceed nine billion.

Most future population growth will be in the developing world, where people quite reasonably aspire to the living standards enjoyed today by "western societies", such as our own.

Yet it is estimated that, even with today's population, we would need the resources of three planets for people across the world to imitate western lifestyles.

Climate signals

I do not advocate a hairshirt future, but clearly we need to find new ways to develop both our lifestyles and the planet we share.

A flooded road (Image: AFP)
Negative impacts will dominate in all regions, says Sir David

It is easy in our day-to-day lives to believe we are detached from the wider environment, but that is an illusion.

Climate change presents us with a particular stringent test, which unmitigated will magnify many of the existing scourges of mankind: famine, drought, flood, disease and conflict.

The scientific evidence is compelling beyond any reasonable doubt that unless we very radically transform our economies to reduce greenhouse emissions to a fraction of current levels then future generations will reap a heavy price.

Indeed, the signals are already with us of the sort of changes that we can expect to continue and accelerate, as land ice melts, sea levels rise and extreme weather events become more severe.

Even with our best efforts, we must be prepared for further global temperature rise as a result of past emissions, and the climate impacts associated with this. The outcome will initially be mixed, with positive and negative effects depending where in the world you live and on other factors.

But in time the negative impacts will dominate in all regions, and will fall earliest and heaviest on the poorest countries, which are least able to adapt and which have contributed least to the problem.

Car exhaust pipe (Image: PA)
Carbon levels in the atmosphere continue to rise

It will take an unprecedented international effort if we are to avoid the most dangerous climate changes that are predicted, and for individual countries to adapt to those impacts it is already too late for us to avoid.

From climate change I move to another linked challenge - energy. Since the industrial revolution, fossil fuels have powered our economies and brought new levels of prosperity.

But by releasing into the atmosphere carbon, as carbon dioxide, that has been naturally sequestered underground over tens to hundreds of millions of years, we have raised concentration levels in the atmosphere in just 150 years beyond anything seen for at least one million years, and probably far longer.

At the same time, world energy demand is expected to rise by half as much again by 2030.

Even with a major push on energy efficiency, there is a critical need for step changes in the pace at which we deploy current low-carbon technologies in developed and developing countries alike; and we must quickly advance the more innovative technologies such as carbon capture and storage, wave and tidal power, and solar photovoltaics.

No quick fix

There are no simple solutions and there is certainly no single "silver bullet" technological fix. The pathway for advancing new energy technologies to technical and economic viability at scale is complex, difficult and inevitably takes time, even with major efforts to accelerate progress.

The £1bn public/private Energy Technology Institute, launched by the UK Government, is an important new initiative in this area, providing good starting levels of investment, focus and ambition, and I hope in time will develop as part of a global network of similar centres of excellence.

Students in a laboratory (Image: Science Photo Library)
There has never been a greater need for inquisitive and determined young minds to develop the solutions needed for the 21st Century

Nor can we tackle the problem by focusing on one sector alone. It is not a question of whether we should reduce emissions from our vehicles, or our houses, or industry, or in aviation or shipping, or through curbing deforestation.

The scale of the challenge is such that we must do all of these things, whilst using our actions as a stimulus to galvanise the wider international response.

And we must continue to prosper, not just for our own sakes but because those we seek to influence will not follow our lead if they perceive that environmental sustainability means economic decline.

It is a powerful demonstration that in the UK we have been able to grow our economy in real terms by around half since 1990, whilst greenhouse gas emissions have fallen by 15%. Action is affordable and is the pro-growth strategy. It is inaction that we cannot afford.

Returning to where I began, science and technological innovation must be at the heart of the UK's approach as we tackle these and other of the great national and global challenges we face in the century ahead. But science does need to be redirected to meet these challenges.

Sir David King is the UK Government's chief scientific adviser and author of this opinion piece running in THE GREEN ROOM, a BBC News website.
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6596427.stm


Published On: 5/3/2007
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This just goes to show you, you should never let any engineer explain anything Happy, fantastic, or traditional to you, like Santa, the Tooth Fairy or Easter Bunny.

There are approximately two billion children (persons under 18) in the world. However, since Santa does not visit children of Muslim, Hindu, Jewish or Buddhist (except maybe in Japan ) religions, this reduces the workload for Christmas night to 15% of the total, or 378 million (According to the Population Reference Bureau).

At an average (census) rate of 3.5 children per household, which comes to 108 million homes, presuming that there is at least one good child in each.

Santa has about 31 hours of Christmas to work with, thanks to the different time zones and the rotation of the earth, assuming he travels east to west (which seems logical). This works out to 967.7 visits per second.

This is to say that for each Christian household with a good child, Santa has around 1/1000th of a second to park the sleigh, hop out, jump down the chimney, fill the stockings, distribute the remaining presents under the tree, eat whatever snacks have been left for him, get back up the chimney, jump into the sleigh and get onto the next house.

Assuming that each of these 108 million stops is evenly distributed around the earth (which, of course, we know to be false, but will accept for the purposes of our calculations), we are now talking about 0.78 miles per household; a total trip of  75.5 million miles, not counting bathroom stops or breaks.

This means Santa's sleigh is moving at 650 miles per second--3,000 times the speed of sound.

For purposes of comparison, the fastest man-made vehicle, the Ulysses space probe, moves at a poky 27.4 miles per second, and a conventional reindeer can run (at best) 15 miles per hour.

The payload of the sleigh adds another interesting element. Assuming that each child gets nothing more than a medium sized Lego set (two pounds), the sleigh is carrying over 500 thousand tons, not counting Santa himself. On land, a conventional reindeer can pull no more than 300 pounds.

Even granting that the "flying" reindeer could pull ten times the normal amount, the job can't be done with eight or even nine of them-Santa would need 360,000 of them.

This increases the payload, not counting the weight of the sleigh, another 54,000 tons, or roughly seven times the weight of the Queen Elizabeth (the ship, not the monarch). 600,000 tons traveling at 650 miles per second creates enormous air resistance. This would heat up the reindeer in the same fashion as a spacecraft re-entering the earth's atmosphere. The lead pair of reindeer would absorb 14.3 quintillion joules of energy per second each.

In short, they would burst into flames almost instantaneously, exposing the reindeer behind them and creating deafening sonic booms in their wake. The entire reindeer team would be vaporized within 4.26 thousandths of a second, or right about the time Santa reached the fifth house on his trip.

Not that it matters, however, since Santa, as a result of accelerating from a dead stop to 650 m.p.s. in .001 seconds, would be subjected to acceleration forces of 17,500 g's.

A 250 pound Santa (which seems ludicrously slim) would be pinned to the back of the sleigh by 4,315,015 pounds of force, instantly crushing his bones and organs and reducing him to a quivering blob of pink goo

 

Therefore, if Santa did exist, he's dead now

Merry Christmas!



Published On: 1/8/2007
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I got kind of bored at work so I designed a simple funbox...
Overall dims 96"x24"x18" tall.  2"x2"x3/16" HSS steel tube construction with 2" pipe coping.  The legs are gussetted with sheared mild steel doublers.  Top sheet is made of 1/4" thick puckboard mounted to plywood with counter-sunk self-tapping screws.  The playwood is bolted to tabs at critical corners and spacings.  Overwall weight is ~135lb without side sheeting.
 
Maybe I should start engineering jibs instead of rig chassis...hmmmmmm


Published On: 12/13/2006
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My Journal: BOO
By: Swin


So here I am at work, being the fantastic receptionist that I am, and who walks in for a meeting? Some guy I went to uni with. Oh yes, he has the same degree as I do, but instead of filing and typing shi*t for my bosses, he is meeting with them, actually using his degree! (geography degree, engineering/construction office)
 
What a piss off. I suck!


Published On: 11/17/2006
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My Blog: Learning
By: Ry_Snow


I love to learn, and want to learn more after im done colege.  Maybe an architect or design engineer or something like that.  Gimme a Tell about your career or study, I'd love to hear.

:P
 
-Ry


Published On: 10/17/2006
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It’s already a week since I moved to Madrid. I can’t believe it!! It seems it was yesterday that I was carrying all my stuff in big cartons… I didn’t imagine my first few days were going to be as they’ve been, but that’s something good, I’m really happy here. You know, I really needed a change on my life, I was fed up about talking about the same bullshi*t time and again with people I didn’t mind, going to the same dull parties where I didn’t fix at all, studying subjects I found pretty boring… Meeting all these new people, the city and studying subjects I should enjoy (3hours of maths a day is too much even for me!!), has brought me back to life.

At the hall of residence there’re around 100 students currently living, though next week other 180 more are coming. We’re basically cub students on entering courses and a few other students on their September exams… The place is fantastic: there’re no rules at all (well, there ARE some, but the residents decide which they are) and we are absolutely free to do anything we want (even booze and get wasted inside the building), so if anyone has some free days and want to visit me, you can sleep at my room, be off the hook!!

Guys here are extremely outgoing, so I got to know most of the cubs in just a couple of days. However, I have little problems to remember names, birthplaces and degree they’re about to study. Luckily we have gathered together in a huge group, so we spend the whole day together, just chilling or having fun out at night.

You know I promised myself I wouldn’t go out at night much, cos if I wanna go riding during the winter to my home resort, so I will have to do a great job from now on. I mean, if I go riding a weekend to Cauterets, that means three days in which I won’t be studying, so I should have done all that work during the week. Well pals, it’s high time I confessed I broke my word on the second night I was here: I did go partying Tuesday night and so I did on Wednesday night. On Thursday we spent half of the night playing poker and the other half on a bee sitting at the lobby. On Friday we got drunk before going out, but the party turned out to be dull so I went to bed pretty early. And yesterday… We went out to the city centre since there’re were some cultural performances and shows at the theatres, but we eventually got lost and we found ourselves surrounded by 4000 people and 200 buses (our bus was among them, but as we didn’t know which one it was, we had to look for it one bye one…). In the end, we arrived home at 5am extremely exhausted.

The uni is also great. Before I had thought that the other student were going to be some kind of super intelligent freaky students, but surprisingly they’re perfectly normal. They wanna have fun and love partying as well, which is sooooo good!!!! We spend (literally) half of the lesson laughing and joking. The boys behind me are such a great laugh… Among girls is slightly different. Some of them (the ones I hang around with) are nice girls, not as much party-lovers as me, but amusing girls. But the others are rather posh, those who have to wake up an hour earlier than usual to make up and “get on” their high heels. Come on!! It’s uni, not Cibeles catwalk.

About subjects there’s not much to say. I’m currently doing an entering course to see what level is required in maths, so I have 3.5 hours maths a day. It shouldn’t be hard, cos we are supposed to know everything we’re working on right know, but it actually is. Some days I arrived at the hall of residence so frustrated that I don’t feel like beginning even the first course. But it’s all right. I know from now on I’ll have to study about 4h a day on my own and the worst thing is that, all this effort may not be enough to pass all the subjects!! It is said that naval engineering is one of the hardest degrees of all… I bet it is, cos yesterday I was told that 90% of the students give up… Hope I’m not one of them, please encourage me to keep struggling with maths.

I’ll let you know about coming crazy parties and 100% yaiza-made silly stuff

 

PS: I´m really tempted with so many hot guys in class and at the hall…


Published On: 9/24/2006
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My Blog: Oulu
By: Skow


This is me in the city of Oulu. I'll stay here till the end of May (or maybe longer, we'll see). I'm studying at Oulun Yliopisto at the Department of Electrical & Informational Engineering. I haven't been skating or snowboarding yet, but I hope to do it soon.





Published On: 9/15/2006
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Okay, so what's been goin on with me you ask (well, some of you anyways!)? 

Work, work, and some more work!  Some people would say that's a bad thing, but when you love what you do, it's awsome!  I recently started this job, right out of grad school, back in November and I LOVE it!  Normaly, people don't have an awsome job right out of school (like exactly two months to the day I was done with my degree I had my first day of work!).  The best part about this job is that it's what I went to school for!  So what did I go to school for?  The answer is Glass, well, in a general sense anway. 

I got my B.S. degre in Materials Science and Engineering with a minor in Glass Science and Engineering.  After that I went to England and did my M.S.c (ENG) in Waste Immobilisation.  WTF is Waste Immobilisation?  It's where I studied how to put nuclear waste in glass for storage purposes. 

So now that I started my job as a Melting Development Engineer (isn't that an awsome title?) I'm pretty busy.  Basically what I do is melt the glass used in your LCD displays.  I do a lot of projects concering the development of different ideas in the melting of the glass to make better glass for your displays.  Yes, there is such thing as different glass.  The glass in your car is completely different than that on your TV's (interesting fact huh?). 

Well, I think I've bored you long enough if you're still reading this, so I'll let you meander along.  Have a wonderfull day and don't do anything I wouldn't do... ;-)

Published On: 2/26/2006
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My Journal: cha-ching
By: powderlust


A few friends and I went to the casino randomly tonight, I won 40 bucks on the slots.  If I can't get into engineering, I think I'll just make a career as a slot jockey. oh yes.



Published On: 1/14/2006
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My Journal: 17/11/2004
By: tamsbond


Well i've nearly recovered from my tonsils... still having a bit of difficulty swallowing... but supposedly i still will for the next week. On Monday I start my new job with an engineering firm as a marketing executive. It's pretty funny when I think about it... me... being all corporate? But they offered me a really good position, I'm pretty much my own boss, and i'm starting the program from the ground up as they've never really done much marketing before. It's exciting. But i'm keeping my bartending job going on the weekends just to keep me sane!!

Published On: 11/17/2004
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My Journal: 7/3/2004
By: SpencerX


Hey all. I honestly have no idea why anyone would want to read this, but I figure, why not just put my thoughts out there. Hopefully my twisted mind won't have too adverse an effect on anybody. Anyway, I put a mugshot on my profile finally, that is I finally have a picture of myself. I think it's a funny picture, and should be taken as such. If you're wondering who I am, well, I'm not really sure. I live in Boulder, Colorado, a really cool place to be if you ignore all the hippies and homeless people (and the homeless hippies). I was in school at the University of Colorado where I was studying aerospace engineering, but that was really hard and now I'm taking a year off. At least thats what I tell people. I'm actually on Academic Suspension for a year. Sounds scary, doesn't it? So, I work for Gart Sports which is cool in that I get to sell snowboards and guns and I can check out their season passes to Eldora, Winter Park and Copper, so I get to ride for free. Yay! What's not so cool is that I don't get along with my manager. I sort of have a problem with authority and corporate bullsh*t. So yeah, that's pretty much me. I think I may start updating this kinda regularly, so stay tuned. My life's a thrill a minute.

Published On: 3/7/2004
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My Journal: 15/5/2004
By: MN_ripper


Well I'm back from college(NDSU). I got accepted to Colorado Mountain College for Ski Area Operations. Now I have to decide if I want to move out to Colorado next fal or go back to North Dakota State for civil engineering. What do yall think?

Published On: 5/15/2004
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My Journal: 31/1/2005
By: maabel


Wow... second semester begins... britain i hate you and your depressing rain. i don't know who cares about this, but for the friends back home that do??? oh where have you gone. the single course that i pretty much chose to come over here for started today. Infrastructure in Developing Countries. It seems like it's gonna be awesome. Puts in perspective what the world lacks and makes me feel good about the bloodsucking engineering industry that i have grown to hate... or maybe i hated it since day one... maybe i'm in it because i once wanted to be one of those bloodsuckers instead of some artsy which i was perhaps a bit more destined for. This way i can still do my music... doodle on my pages... and maybe i could help someone out. So thoughts of moving to thailand went through my mind today. You know, help a brother out... just random thoughts while i waste away in britain for only 6 more months. it's times like these i dream of you joel... not in that fudge packing i love you man kinda way...but i can't wait for barcelona and eastern europe... the skate tour adventures that will ensue... oh yeah and lets not forget the long nights of poaching what we can find in manchester... it's fun by yourself and searching,but so much better with a crew i think...can't wait till you get here! but then again maybe i'll see you in april

Published On: 1/31/2005
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My Journal: 23/2/2005
By: maabel


mr v, mr redbull, ms stella.... why must you torment me. my life is bliss without you, but with you it is but an old friend remedied by alotta java. it's been a while since i "journaled" on here, so i thought i'd just type some randomness.... a bit of chaos theory if you know what i mean;) got a job interview teachin kids how to drum... wonder how that will work out...it would be steller if i got it, but how jobs work in this country... you never know. conor oberst saranades me...the digital ash in a digital urn album at the moment. and endless static sea.
classes are alright, i find myself doodling or writing in my sketchbook more than learning about this engineering shiznit i have grown to hate. Just goes to show kids... do something you love, not something you think will be something to fall back on when your music career doesn't take off haha! maybe architecture can be in my future... who knows where life will lead...ps if anyone hears of good flights between here and the motherland in april, i'd love to party with y'all and a quicky to the rockies is just what the doctor ordered! booo... yah! well peace out
matty

Published On: 2/23/2005
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My Journal: 5/10/2005
By: Bryce_A


I AM THE TRAVEL AGENT

I have advanced degrees in accounting, public relations, marketing, business, computer science, civil engineering, and Swahili. I can also read minds.

Of course, I still have the package reservation you put on hold six years ago, even though you never came in to purchase it.

Its not a problem to give you seven connecting, non-smoking, waterfront suites with two king beds in each, four rollaways, and yes, I can install a wet bar. I know it's my fault the hotel does not have a helicopter landing pad.

I am the travel agent.

I am expected to speak all languages. It is obvious to me that when you booked your flight for Friday, you really meant Saturday.

I am the travel agent.

I understand that the McGillicotty Widget Mfg. Co. is a vast empire that will make or break our agency. Yes, I am lying when I say that the $100 flight for tomorrow is sold out. But it is not a problem for me to quickly construct several more 747's. Its my fault that everyone else wanted to fly tomorrow, too. I should have known you were coming in.

I am the travel agent.

I am quite capable of checking all the flights in September to see which one is the cheapest, answering 12 incoming phone calls, putting together 8 documents while finding out why Holland America cruises won't give you a refund even though you refused the insurance.

I am the travel agent.

I always know which airline serves the best vegetarian meal. I know exactly what to see and do in every city without spending any money. I take personal blame for airline delays, traffic jams, rental car flat tires, bad weather, lost luggage and the national economy.

I am the travel agent.

I realize you meant to book your reservations at the Hilton, people confuse it with the Galaxy Delight Motel. Of course I can get you a cheap rate because you've been a member of AAA for 30 years.

I am the travel agent.

I am expected to smile, empathize, console, up sell, perform, sing, dance, fix the printer, and know exactly where Opossum Trot Lane is....because...

I AM THE TRAVEL AGENT!!!!!!!!!!!


Published On: 10/5/2005
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My Journal: 24/3/2004
By: iceCarveR


Ahh, and here we are. Last day of finals coming and graduation within arm's reach. In 2 days I'll have attained an Associate of Science in Audio Engineering. Then, in 2 months I'll have to focus on my Bachelor's in Entertainment Business...bleh, I don't even wanna think about that right now. GRADUATION BABY! THAT'S ALL THAT MATTERS!

Oh yeah, I got a new car. It's a white '96 Nissan Sentra. It came with tints, power windows, power locks and in very nice condition (with title and plate included) for $3500. The dealer obviously didn't know what he was selling, because the blue book price is close to $2000 more than that. I had a good mechanic inspect it and it runs fine. The road is mine again bitches.


Published On: 3/24/2004
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