Which isn't to say that what you do isn't extremely skilled, difficult work, of course. Indeed, at this point it's probably more skilled than aeronautical engineering is. But something merely being skilled doesn't make it rocket science. I mean, my alcohol consumption far exceeds that of the average person. I'm not sure I'm a professional (at least, Revenue Canada doesn't seem to think I am) at it, but there is surely a great deal of skill and training behind it. There's the matter of pre-eating, with all of its nutritional requirements to think about, and careful choice of beverage (which often, complicating, changes as the night wears on), and speed control (which requires modeling as a non-linear system). This says nothing of the complex field of Hangover Management, which is an entire sub-discipline. But despite this, sir, I make no pretense toward being a rocket scientist."What woman wouldn't love a guy in WW2 aviator glasses eating their ass?" -- dest[ Parent ]
I have been involved in three projects now that were launched on the Space Shuttle; two attached payloads (operated from the ground while the shuttle was in orbit) and one deployable one (still up there, doing science, though controlled from the ground).
"And this ... is a piece of Synergy." --Kellnerin[ Parent ]