casimir Posted November 26 Posted November 26 How about some Thanksgiving Eve surfing on Lake Erie, dudes? Quote
Deleterious Posted November 26 Posted November 26 When my partner and I opened our first restaurant my girlfriend was talking to some employees and a few mentioned they didn't have anywhere to go for Thanksgiving. She invited them over for dinner and I think 7 people ended up coming. That morphed into an annual dinner hosted by my girlfriend and my partners wife. We're expecting over 200 people tomorrow. 5 Quote
oblong Posted December 2 Posted December 2 Pushed out by new landlords bringing in something else. I hope whoever is behind the “concept” didn’t sign any papers because community resentment will run high with this situation and I don’t predict success Plymouth has plenty of options to dine Quote
chasfh Posted Friday at 03:37 PM Posted Friday at 03:37 PM On 12/9/2025 at 1:00 PM, CMRivdogs said: Voyager I launched on September 5, 1977 at 7:56 AM CDT. The story says it has traveled 15,800,000,000 miles since then. So, I wanted to calculate how many miles per hours Voyager has averaged since then. Here's how Google Gemini breaks it down after a search: ****** Me: how many hours has it been since September 5, 1977 at 7:56 AM CDT Gemini: As of December 12, 2025, at 7:56 AM CDT, it has been approximately 418,013 hours since September 5, 1977, at 7:56 AM CDT, which is exactly 48 years, 3 months, and 7 days (or about 17,417 days) of continuous time. Here's the breakdown: Years: 2025 - 1977 = 48 years. Days in 48 Years (including leap years): 48 years * 365 days/year + 12 leap days (1980, '84, '88, '92, '96, 2000, '04, '08, '12, '16, '20, '24) = 17520 + 12 = 17,532 days. Days from Sept 5 to Dec 12: September (25 days left) + October (31) + November (30) + December (12) = 98 days. Total Days: 17,532 + 98 = 17,630 days. Total Hours: 17,630 days * 24 hours/day = 423,120 hours. Note: This calculation accounts for all full years and days, and since the start and end times are the same (7:56 AM), the calculation is straightforward. Using a precise date calculator confirms this duration ***** So, it's been approximately 418,013 hours, which is exactly 17,417 days, or, in other words, precisely 423,120 hours, which calculates out to 17,630 days. Something like that. So the average speed since then is 37,342 miles per hour. Or 37,798 miles per hour. Something like that. Although, according to Gemini: ***** Me: how many miles is one light day, use commas and not exponents Gemini: One light-day is approximately 16,094,455,343 miles. This is often rounded to about 16.1 billion miles. ***** Approximately. Or 15,800,000,000 miles. Something like that. Quote
oblong Posted Friday at 04:43 PM Posted Friday at 04:43 PM True.... once it escaped Earth's gravitation pull and into solar orbit it went faster, then as it went by Jupiter and Saturn it got a boost from them. Quote
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