From this post:
In 1960, U.S. Air Force pilot Joe Kittinger flew 30km straight up into the sky using a pressurized, high-altitude balloon. This very nearly made him the first man in space.
He then jumped.
Kittinger free-fell for over twenty miles at which point he was moving so fast he broke the sound barrier.
He had all but left the earth's atmosphere; the sky around him was pitch black; he could see the outlines of entire continents; and the haiku-like abstraction of his available reference points -- earth, balloon, space -- made it impossible to tell if he was really falling.
What's really awesome, though is the film footage Kittinger shot on his way down.
I'm Stephen Van Dahm, a software developer from Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Graphic design is hard! Let's go shopping!
After reading James Bennett's latest post, I immediately tried the following Unix command....
I don't know what the folks at Apple were smoking when they decided to build that ugly, glassy fake 3D Dock into Leopard. There is no way in hell that I'm going to look at that every day for the next two years. Fortunately, there appears to be a solution.
Read every post I've ever written, because I'm such an interesting guy.