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46.111 °C
I needed to grab something from the garage. Forget about it....
If anyone needs me, I'll be asleep in the refrigerator.
Old intercity microwave tower constructed as part of the Bell System and American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) Long Lines atop the successor company Century Link building in Cedar City, Utah.
Happy Telegraph Tuesday!
After a long and busy weekend at work we were late home tonight so this really is a bit of a CBA shot inspired by what I could see while sitting on the sofa!
Strobist... Couldn't get the light to come on without turning it on so I had to cheat with the lighting and stuck a Manfrotto lumimuse light to the roof of the microwave which seemed to do a pretty good job!
Intercity microwave antennas which once provided telephone service for Price, Utah. The building is the old Mountain Bell telephone exchange and still provides space for the digital telephone switching system and internet servers. Carbon County, Utah.
Happy Telegraph Tuesday!
There where many items hidden beneath the recipe roll. This interesting note book and microwave where only some of what was hidden!
SAN JOSE, CA -- This building is part of a former AT&T microwave relay station above San Jose. The lighting was all done with a hand-held flashlight.
I know that it's squint. I'll fix it next time I go up there.
Thanks to Upshift for taking me up there.
Dear Microwave,
I'm so sad that you're broken :( You bring me sooo many years hot food, when I'm hungrieg or too lazy to cook. It was so funny so see, what you can do with foam-kisses :) Now you bring me one last time so much joy. Thank you for everything you have done for me. I miss you so much ;(
How do you know you're flickr - addicted?
Your microwave oven starts to explode and your immediate idea is "cool, where is my camera"?
One time at Benning, a PTI driver use the microwave in the yard office to "warm up" their clean sample before they were supposed to be urine tested. The container exploded inside the microwave, and the van driver took off on foot never to be seen again. And that my kids is how we got a brand new microwave at Benning years ago...
Closeup of the frazzled surface of the CD.
Shiny silver sided CDs work best for this shot . Quite a few CDs were destroyed painlessly in this experiment !!
On June 30, 2001, the Microwave Anisotropy Probe (MAP) spacecraft launched on a Boeing Delta II rocket from Cape Canaveral. The probe measured small fluctuations in the temperature of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and created the most accurate full-sky map of the CMB. In 2003 it was renamed the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) in honor of cosmologist David Todd Wilkinson, a member of the mission science team. Carrying on the Nobel Prize winning work of the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE), WMAP data has played a critical role in establishing the current standard model of cosmology. The WMAP mission team won the 2012 Gruber Cosmology Prize and the 2018 Breakthrough Prize. Designed for a 27 month mission, WMAP was decommissioned in October 2010 after nine years of operation.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: KSC-01PP-1240
Date: June 30, 2001