Monday, June 06, 2005

 

Natalie Portman's character

Natalie Portman's character

Star Wars trivia


Item:

On the drive to work this morning, one of the radio stations had a contest to give away tickets to a charity pre-screening of the upcoming third Star Wars prequel. In order to win, the twenty-fifth caller had to identify Natalie Portman's character in the movie series, which he did: Padmé Naberrie.

"It says here the character's name was Padmé Amidala," the deejay replied.

"Amidala was her title after she became Queen of Naboo," the caller clarified. "Padmé Naberrie was her birth name."

And the deejay went off on the poor guy, calling him a freak and asking how many times he'd worn fake ears to a sci-fi convention.

 

AN/TPQ-37 Firefinder Weapon Locating System

style='font-size:24.0pt'>Aging Radar Useless Against Resistance Mortars



 



October 25, 2004 By Megan Scully, Special to the Army Times



 



Before the Army deployed its 20-year-old AN/TPQ-37
Firefinder Weapon Locating System to Iraq, the service developed new software
to bring the system up to date. But at least one operational unit said the
upgraded system failed to do what it was intended to do: detect mortar rounds.



 





For soldiers in 1st
Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, the TPQ-37 was more of a problem than
an asset. The unit came under mortar fire 40 times in Iraq, but the system detected rounds only three times. The squadron suffered between 10
and 15 injuries from mortars.





 



We stopped, we moved the radar around, the technical guys
around worked the [software] programming, said Lt. Col. Gregory Reilly, the
squadrons leader. We tried everything humanly possible.



 



The unit even fired its own mortars at the system in an
attempt to work out the bugs.
[Which is about all its good for: target
practice.]
Even under the best circumstances, the radar detected only
one out of five rounds.
I just dont think there was fidelity in the
system, Reilly said.



 



Thales Raytheon Systems Q-37 Firefinder radar, which can be
transported on a 2.5-ton truck, was first fielded in the 1980s to detect rounds
from long-range Soviet artillery up to 30 miles away.



 



The enemy also has adapted their tactics to defeat the
radars, using nontraditional trajectories and nonstandard launchers, Bowman
said.



 





Moreover, the Q-37 was
built to protect division-size units. Five apiece would cover an entire front
line. But in Iraq, the friendly units are smaller and the enemies more mobile.
The Firefinders have been parceled out to brigades, typically one each. Offering
only 90-degree coverage, the Q-37 leaves part of the battlefield uncovered,
Bowman said.





 



The Armys teams also are working on software problems with
the TPQ-36, which has been picking up too much clutter, or interference.





 





AN/TPQ-37 Firefinder Weapon Locating System

 

star wars trivia blog

star wars trivia blog

 

star wars lego

star wars lego

 

Who Is Killing The Star Wars Scientists?

Saw this yahoo creative commons search in under star wars. To do: read.

Who Is Killing The Star Wars Scientists?

 

mic killing soldiers

I am not thrilled about the anti american whining of so called anti war types. They are only anti war when it suits there destruction of usa. However they do take a better? more critical? more frequent? look at the US Military Industrial Complex. Here is bad helmet design:

army in-duh-stry killing soldiers with bad helmet design

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