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Out of Sync

Happy New Year, BMR.

May your 2024 successes continue through 2025, and may your 2024 failures serve as lessons from which to leverage success in 2025.

Best of writing to you all.
 
Here's another "Australia hates the world" clip...and this post in the comments just made me laugh:

Okay, let me get this straight:
There's spiders that can one shot you
There's fish that can one shot you
There's kangaroos (born with the ult ability to one shot you)
There's cassowarys (a bird with a blade as a mouth)
There's emus that can tank literal gunfire
And now there's plants that just wanna spite your existence
You guys must've lost a bet thousands of years ago



View: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/7yuNp5YBY1Q
 
In general, men are not emotional creatures. Sure, we have them, but we don't share them as readily as women do. It's just not our way.

Some can argue nature vs nurture, and that will play a small part in the scheme of things, but by and large, it's in a man's nature to not expose himself, to not make himself vulnerable.

Which is why this clip hits hard. I've seen it a number of times, and it still gets me. The man is opening up, being vulnerable, sharing something that's important to him...and is quickly shown why he shouldn't have bothered.


View: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ylJZ-2BsGC4
 
So...a very long, draining...and disappointing day at work today.

We're in the process of replacing our entire IT ticketing system (which includes the user front-end portal, and many other back-end IT-oriented modules). I'm a part of this process, and have engaged in a few workshops that are aimed at seeing what the new tool can offer and how we can either configure the tool to meet our needs or change our needs to meet the tool.

On top of that, our Change Manager is on leave, so I'm filling in that role in addition to my regular duties.

This on top of being involved in setting up a new out-sourced partner to help take on the overflow and backlog of calls and queries from our external customers.

So today saw a couple of workshops for the replacement IT tool, and these are pretty conversation and thought heavy. While I'm taking part in these workshops I'm also trying to juggle Change Manager duties. My lunch break is shot, and I'm falling behind in getting things ready for new starters while being the hands and feet for a colleague who's temporarily house-bound.

In short I didn't spend a lot of time at my desk through most of today.

And when I walk into a team meeting this afternoon, another colleague looks at me and says "Well at least one of us is not having a cushy day"...as if I've been slack.

I resisted the urge to rip him a new one...but that is really pissing me off right now.
 
On September 5, 1977, the Voyager-1 probe was launched (2 weeks after the launch of Voyager-2). The immediate mission of the two craft was to fly by and investigate Jupiter and Saturn, although the trajectory of Voyager-2 allowed it to also then visit Uranus and Neptune.

In January 1979 Voyager-1 encountered Jupiter and its inner moons, sending back a wealth of data about the largest planet in our solar system. In November 1980 Voyager-1 encountered Saturn and its inner moons. Its trajectory was such that the Saturn encounter sent the tiny probe away from the orbital plane and in the direction of interstellar space.

While most of the craft's systems have now been shut down in an effort to conserve power - not to mention hardware failure - the little craft is still operating.

In February 1998 Voyager-1 officially became the furthest man-made object in the Solar System when it "overtook" Pioneer-10.

In December 2004 Voyager-1 crossed the Termination Shock and entered the heliosheath - the point at which our Sun's solar wind and influence balances with the interstellar gasses of the galaxy - at a distance of 94 AU (94 times the Earth-Sun distance of 150 million km).

In August 2008 Voyager-1 exited the heliopause and entered interstellar space, becoming the first man-made object to leave our solar system entirely - a distance of 121 AU.

And the probe is still going. It is currently over 15.46 billion miles (166 AU) from Earth, travelling at an estimated speed of a little over 38,000 mph

It is a testament to human ingenuity and science. While there will be future space projects that overshadow the Voyager missions in complexity and achievement, there will be few that are, or will be, so profound as these two little craft.
 
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