barbult's Discursion Thread

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  • barbultbarbult Posts: 27,225
    That's fine Ron. I can be scary, I suppose, but not that day. David is doing 3D stereo photography. We are at an NSA convention in Albuquerque. (National Stereoscopic Association).
  • Ron KnightsRon Knights Posts: 2,677

    You are not scarey. You're a great looking couple.

    My friends loved your picture. They also loved the parts of your ongoing story I shared with them.

    It's difficult to share the story because many of them don't have a computer or the Internet.

    So I printed some of the pictures and told them the story.

    You really look like some of those old comedies. Like Around the World in 80 days!

    You ought to star in a movie!

  • Ron KnightsRon Knights Posts: 2,677
    edited July 18

    I've decided to convert two of my computers back to dual monitors.

    I remember how nice it was to use DAZ Studio with a dual monitor setup.

    I put away two 24" monitors about 5 years ago. I wanted to reduce the clutter on my desks. So far I've pulled one 24" monitor out of the closet and dusted it off. I just need to find the proper cables to reconnect it.

    The other 24" monitor will go on a monitor arm to raise it about the desk where I deal with my "business stuff" including printing, etc.

    I'm recreating my family trees. It's so much nicer when I can have Family Tree Maker on one screen, and the Ancestry web site on the other screen.

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  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 110,867

    barbult said:

    Richard Haseltine said:

    barbult said:

    I rode in a Hot Air Balloon this morning at sunrise and then went to the Balloon Museum. In the gift shop I saw Richard Haseltine taking a rather unique balloon ride.

    Ah, air-skiing. Though I gather I should have used a speed boat, not a speed moke. 

    I had to research what a "moke" is. You Brits have a strange vocabulary - strange to me anyway.

    "Origin unknown" according to the Concise Oxford, and apparently it is used in Australia to mean a very poor horse rather than a donkey. I would have guessed it to be a US term, I can just pictue a grizzled prospector using it to describe his donkey or mule 

  • barbultbarbult Posts: 27,225

    barbult said:

    Richard Haseltine said:

    barbult said:

    I rode in a Hot Air Balloon this morning at sunrise and then went to the Balloon Museum. In the gift shop I saw Richard Haseltine taking a rather unique balloon ride.

    Ah, air-skiing. Though I gather I should have used a speed boat, not a speed moke. 

    I had to research what a "moke" is. You Brits have a strange vocabulary - strange to me anyway.

    "Origin unknown" according to the Concise Oxford, and apparently it is used in Australia to mean a very poor horse rather than a donkey. I would have guessed it to be a US term, I can just pictue a grizzled prospector using it to describe his donkey or mule 

    The Internet tells "In the United States, "moke" is a modern slang term for a mixture of cannabis and tobacco, usually smoked out of a bong or water pipe.". I've never heard of that, though.
  • WendyLuvsCatzWendyLuvsCatz Posts: 41,230

    I really wanted a Mini Moke when I was young but everyone talked me out of it saying it was unsafe

    I eventually ended up riding motorscooters even in my 50's so probably safer than that

  • 3DIO3DIO Posts: 456

    To Mini fanatics everywhere (myself included)  "Moke" is also the name of a car that can be built using a Mini as the donor vehicle.  It's called the Mini Moke (second Image).  I should stress that when I say "Mini", I'm referring strictly to the famous British original designed by Sir Alec Issigonis (first Image), not the German abomination that appeared many decades later when Bayerische Motor Works (BMW) sucked-up the name from Rover.

     

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  • 3DIO3DIO Posts: 456

    Just missed Wendy's post, but it figures since the original Mini was popular in Australia, and that will have created an interest in the Moke.
     

  • richardandtracyrichardandtracy Posts: 7,871
    The groundsman at my junior school had a mini moke. He bombed about in it in summer and used his collection of tractors in winter. Only if the weather was foul did he use his canvas topped short wheelbase Landrover. Fantastic vehicles. Regards, Richard
  • backgroundbackground Posts: 918

    I believe the Mini Moke was developed with the idea of it being a light weight military vehicle, possibly suitable for airborne troops, but it was rejected by the military because of its low ground clearance.

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