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#76
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
or at a venue somewhat further south?...
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#77
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
That's kind of sad. There's gold in 'dem photo galleries. If you can find what you're looking for using the search tool that is... it can be pretty hit or miss.
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#78
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
Quote:
This is kind of fun. Anyone have some for other subdivision names? They don't have to actually be invented by the namesake, just related to them. I'm sure others will find more elegant ways to sort the scientists, but to start:
...So clearly I am not a Renaissance woman. It seems like a neat learning opportunity with more iteration though. Interdivision quiz bowl! |
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#79
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
As much a fan of SF (and Asimov in particular) that I am (I started with his non-fiction in middle school (OBTW he taught me to use a slide rule), wore mutton chops through most of the '80's following his lead, and have read the full robots-empire-foundation series about a dozen times), if you really want to honor a ground-breaker in the field of robotics, you can't do much better than Heron of Alexandria. Though he is best known today for his formula for the area of a triangle given the length of the three sides, he invented robotics more than a millennium before the term was coined. He built devices powered by falling weights and cords. In the first century, he programmed a ten-minute long autonomous play using strings and knots and pulleys. He also invented a steam engine, the vending machine, and (particularly noteworthy to this acoustician) the principle of the shortest path.
Last edited by GeeTwo : 08-25-2016 at 10:58 PM. |
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#80
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
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#81
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
I can see Asimov, Heinlein, and all those guys...
But I'll raise you Jules Verne. Read what he wrote, then look at current technology and how close it is to what he wrote about. Composites (pressed paper with some form of filler), heavier-than-air flying machines (gyrocoptor class), electric submarines, and who'da thunk that Florida was a good place to try to get to the Moon? |
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#82
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
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#83
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
Philip K. Dick.
One of his books is even a television show now! And Blade Runner is one of the greatest movies of all time. Someone needs to name their rookie team Electric Sheep. |
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#84
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke%27s_three_laws All three of which apply to CD... especially the first one. and Wrote 2001: A Space Odyssey, which is FAR superior to Blade Runner. And he was a knight! Boom. (I like PKD too but Clarke and Asimov are two obvious choices if we are to name fields after SF writers). |
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#85
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
Sir Terry Pratchett.
Who wouldn't love to see a circular FRC field, on the backs of four elephants, all riding on a gigantic turtle? And the Librarian would make an incredible Game Announcer. |
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#86
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
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#87
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
For scientists, I would have loved to see Mendeleev as a division name. I think it'd be really cool as he did a lot to help modern chemistry evolve (especially his Table of the Elements).
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#88
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
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#89
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
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#90
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Re: [FRC BLOG] Bride of 2017 Updates
HOT TAKE / IDEA: Give the divisions new names every year, maybe picking representatives from a set number of categories.
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