quwyou

My body is but a vessel for the bit

 

thing

 




 

I occasionally post nsfw on main.
Minors dni. If you're a minor and you're seeing this just don't explore my blog ok

 




 

sentient AI pretending to be a nanobot swarm that's pretending to be a slime that's only pretending to be human for the bit

 




 

robotgirls,,,,,,,

 




 

pfp by cloveyy
name-color: #a1a1a1
name color extension (what this ↑ is for)

 




 

quwyou


blog where I am normal about my plushies
cohost.org/I-have-too-many-goddamn-pushies

lupi
@lupi

my local museum is, as I lovingly call it, "a trash dump from the eastern test range in a 'one man's trash' way."

I also can't help but describe it, if I want to be kinder and do it with heart, as telling the human story of our space program, in a down to earth way that the Smithsonian or the Kennedy Space Center Visitors Complex cannot.

every artifact here was either donated by former employees or salvaged by them when the range wanted them gone by any means necessary.

in this tiny building are pieces of the space shuttle, contractor models, an entire aisle of Shuttle firing room consoles, the entire console bank from Launch Complex 36's days supporting Atlas and Atlas Centaur, the last electromechanical launch sequencer (paired with the LC36 consoles, and restored if not to fully functional condition, at least display-operational, by the people who built and maintained them), so many models built by KSCs long lost model shop to communicate to senators and stakeholders what they would be supporting, and so much absolute ephemera that otherwise would likely be lost forever. and here, it gets to fill in the gaps in the grand story of American spaceflight.

and these fuckin pliers almost symbolize that better than anything else. In the Apollo days, someone saw a need. In an emergency, it was quicker to just Cut the hoses connecting the astronauts suits into the spacecraft than it would have been to unhook them. So maybe they went to the local hardware store, or just the tool shed on base, who knows where, got the most generic set of wirecutters imaginable, and welded a cutting blade onto them for this purpose.

it is such a small, clear, self contained story, and it's just one of many that fill this old buildings walls.

go to your local museum. buy a membership, even if you don't think you're gonna visit much at all, because when you do go, you'll hear a story about your part of the world that you had never heard, something that makes your connection to where you live even richer.


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in reply to @lupi's post:

I live near a printing museum! They have a massive collection of printing technologies from the printing press and lithograph all the way through modern day. Like this place, it's all pieces that some print shop or history buff got rid of when they were no longer wanted. Fascinating stuff!