T stands for?
turtle, tortoise
turkey
tarantula
Tricerotops (sp?) it's got "trinity" in it
T Rex
Just riffing on possibilities for animal mascots.
Bill
On Tuesday 12 June 2018 21:33:45 elcaseti wrote:
This post got me thinking. since Konqui the dragon is
the KDE community's
animal mascot, has anyone given thought to Trinity DE having an animal
mascot? I nominate Corvus Corax (raven). I did get to eat alligator once,
but it was such a small piece, I didn't notice anything distinct about it.
It may very well taste like chicken, but I can't say for sure unless I get
a chance to eat a larger amount someday. Cheers
On Mon, Jun 11, 2018 at 12:01 AM, William Morder <doctor_contendo(a)zoho.com>
wrote:
> On Sunday 10 June 2018 20:36:31 dep wrote:
> > weird. as i was reading this just now, alton brown on "good eats"
was
> > speculating whether dinosaurs would have tasted like chicken. and no, i
>
> am
>
> > not making this up. the episode is entitled "a bird in the pan," and
> > the discussion is about three minutes in. amazing coincidence.
> >
> > dep
>
> Now that is funny! I am just riffing off the top of my head. I didn't see
> the
> show, and only vaguely know it. I watch a several cooking shows, but
> that's
> not one of them.
>
> Don't they say that the crocodilians (including alligators, caimans,
> etc.) are
> basically living fossils, that haven't changed much since the time of
> dinosaurs, except to get smaller on the whole? There are people, I know,
> who
> have eaten them, so maybe there is a clue.
>
> *SNIP*
>
> > > > > > > > This reminds me of a DOS game I bought (for I
think $5 at a
> > >
> > > computer > > > show) back in the late 1980s. It had a small
install
> > > routine that > > > copied the program to the hard drive and
overwrote
> > > autoexec.bat with > > > the name of the executable file. In
those
> > > days autoexec.bat could > > > run to a couple of pages, with us
all
> > > trying
>
> to
>
> > > make our machines a > > > little faster and getting use of
memory
> > > above 640k, which was a > > > delicate thing. To say nothing of
the
> > > TSR programs many of us ran. > > > Setting comspec right after
we
> > > copied
command.com to a RAM drive. > > > That kind of thing. So
> > > autoexec.bat
>
> was
>
> > > a nontrivial thing, and > > > turning a well-tuned machine into
a
> > > single-game console was > > > troublesome. > > > > I
swear, this
>
> mailing
>
> > > list is sort of like Jurassic Park: a place > > where dinosaurs
still
> > > roam the earth. > > > > Bill > > They still roam the
earth, Bill,
>
> except
>
> > > now we call them birds. :) I wonder if they tasted like chicken or
> > > turkey, or more gamey like pheasant? Bill
>
> And here I was, ready to pounce on the first person who was itching for a
> fight, who would try to say that mythological dragons, for instance, were
> some kind of dim memory of dinosaurs, or creative attempts to explain
> dinosaur fossils.
>
> Yes, in fact I do know that many dinosaurs (we now discover) had
> feathers. Also, humans and dinosaurs were never* living at the same time.
>
> [* At least, "never", as far as current science know. But then we also
> used to
> say that Homo sapiens never interbred with other humans, such as
> Neanderthals; and we now know that they did, and that all non-Africans
> (Europeans and Asians, mostly) have some Neanderthal genes; and that
> Neanderthals often had red hair.]
>
> Most attempts to explain mythological dragons by the backwards logic of
> referring to dinosaurs are, we find, unconsciously influenced by later
> literature - mostly science fiction and fantasy. Again, since humans were
> never around at the same time as dinosaurs, they could have no memory of
> them
> to feel the need to explain them away; and enormous dinosaur fossils,
> when they were discovered, were usually thought to be the bones of the
> Giants (that is, the Titans of Greek myth, the Vanir of Norse myth, and
> so on).
>
> Mythological dragons are altogether different; but if I go there, we will
> need
> to start not just a new thread, but a separate forum!
>
> It will be interesting, if we all survive long enough to witness such
> events,
> whether we can actually succeed in cloning and resurrecting extinct
> species
> from their recovered DNA. I don't know about dinosaurs as such; but I
> think
> it would be great to have woolly mammoths and some other species. And
> dodo birds would make an excellent food source, it seems.
>
> When the human race is forced to evacuate the wasteland of our future
> earth,
> and a lucky few will get to colonize other planets, maybe we can take
> some of
> our animals with us.
>
> Bill
>
>
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