Intel's Ronler Acres Plant

Pergelator

Silicon Forest
If the type is too small, Ctrl+ is your friend

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

10 Short Videos #6172

10 Short Videos #6172

'피리송' 요즘 대만 행사 자주나가는 김민지(Kim Min-ji)치어리더 - Cheerleader Kim Min-ji, who frequently performs at events in Taiwan these days, 'Flute Song'

Ron White | The Big bear story

Cut the wood into pieces. - Vertical wood lathe

This dock lets you fly your property from anywhere in the country - legally. - Drone dock

💪Modern forging shop, strength in plain sight - Giant claw

When NASCAR's aero wings ruled the track. 🇺🇸 

The Rotary Car That Won Le Mans 

Plot Twist - Mini truck hot rod

The real secret about cashews

Machining a Spiral Shaft 🔥

Funnies






Bristol Beaufighter Mk VI

Bristol Beaufighter Mk VI
Image from Tamiya scale model kit

Bristol Beaufighter TFX

The prototype flew on 17 July 1939 and the first production Beaufighters were delivered to the Royal Air Force in the following April. The type was the first high performance night fighter equipped with airborne interception radar and successfully operated against the German night raids in the winter of 1940-1941. Later the Beaufighter was introduced into Coastal Command as a strike fighter. Its original formidable gun armament was retained but rockets and torpedoes were added giving it an even greater fire power.

Not only did the Beaufighter operate with distinction in North West Europe but also a considerable reputation was earned in the Middle and Far East.

5562 Beaufighters had been produced by the time the last one was delivered in September 1945 and fifty-two operational Royal Air Force squadrons had been equipped with the type.

Bristol Beaufighter

Beaufighter crews accounted for over half of the Luftwaffe bombers shot down during the Blitz.

 

Bristol Hercules Sleeve Valve Engine

The Beaufighter was powered by a pair of Bristol Hercules 14-cylinder, air-cooled, sleeve-valve, radial piston engines, 1,600 hp each. The Hercules was followed by the Centaurus, which also used sleeve valves.


How This Underrated British Aircraft Helped Win The Pacific War
IsonzoEnjoyer


Daring Solo Beaufighter Raid - Paris 1942
Mark Felton Productions

Monday, June 22, 2026

Funnies





10 Short Videos #6171

10 Short Videos #6171

Over-Square vs Under-Square Engines

What’s the largest city with English as the official language

1998 Chevy Tahoe - Only has 1st & 3rd Gear! 

What chilli is actually doing to you...

The controversy of the Hubble Deep Field image

Inside the Lockheed Constellation - MacArthur's "Bataan"

I started out using iMovie pal - Sam Alkhatib

Raver 🐍

The reason why so may are diagnosed late - Autism

I was Today years old When I realized this song is about "menopause "😂


B-29 Superfortress & Iwo Jima

Iwo Jima: A Hard Won Haven by John Shaw

Iwo Jima as a crucial emergency landing site for crippled bombers returning from missions over Japan. It is estimated that these emergency landing strips saved the lives of nearly 25,000 American airmen during the war. - Google


A B29 Bombing Mission Is Interrupted by Japanese Fighters 💣 Air Warriors | Smithsonian Channel
Smithsonian Channel Aviation Nation

Top to Bottom: Kobe, Iwo Jima, Tinian

It is 1,500 miles from Tinian in the Mariana Islands to Kobe, Japan. Iwo Jima is right at the halfway point between them.


B-29 and P-51 : Forging Air Supremacy from Iwo Jima
After Action Report

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Index Arbitrage

Spread Networks


A stupid little video short got me started, so I did a little calculating. The cable runs from Chicago to New York or New Jersey, depending on who's telling the story. It's 700 miles as the crow flies, but that route would have to go under Lake Michigan, so it probably wasn't completely straight. Light travels slower in fiber optic cables, about two-thirds of the speed in air. To save 3 milliseconds, the route would need to be 372 miles shorter than a commercially available route. However, fiber optic lines need repeaters every so often to boost the signal. With a good cable you would need a repeater about every 80 miles, so for a 800 mile cable you would need about 10 repeaters. Good repeaters don't slow the signal down much, but who knows what kind of repeaters you would get on a commercial line.

A little more digging turned up this story from 2010:

Spread Networks Unveils Lowest Latency Ethernet Waves by Rob Powell