Specs for Thunderbird 3.
When I was a kid it was always a toss-up between wanting to be the pilot of this or Thunderbird 1
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Austria

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
Specs for Thunderbird 3.
When I was a kid it was always a toss-up between wanting to be the pilot of this or Thunderbird 1
Space Launch System in its Block 1 configuration
Pagani: The Art of Speed and Perfection
When it comes to hypercars, few names stir the soul like Pagani. Founded by visionary designer Horacio Pagani, this Italian marque builds more than machines — it creates rolling masterpieces where engineering meets art.
Pagani cars are known for their breathtaking design, precision craftsmanship, and extreme performance. Every detail, from lightweight carbon-fiber bodies to handcrafted interiors, is thoughtfully engineered. These aren’t just vehicles — they’re automotive sculptures built in limited numbers, cherished by collectors and car lovers worldwide.
Two of Pagani’s most iconic legends are the Zonda and the Huayra. These hypercars showcase cutting-edge aerodynamics, race-bred powertrains, and a purity of driving experience that few brands can match.
For anyone who lives and breathes cars, Pagani evokes emotion — speed, beauty, engineering excellence, and a passion for perfection.
If you’re passionate about Pagani and want to explore more — stunning photos, specs, and stories — check out my dedicated page: 👉 https://paganizonda-r.vercel.app
Pagani isn’t just a car brand — it’s the art of speed and emotion brought to life.
I don't like how prominent Windows and MacOS are because they make people need to get new hardware all the time.
my daily driver laptop is literally almost 15 years old. it has a first generation, dual core Intel i3 at 2.4GHz with 4GB of RAM, integrated graphics and a 128GB SSD. and it's perfectly usable for daily activities. I can browse the web, watch YouTube, I can even play some games.
and then I look at people saying that they're surprised that companies still sell laptops with 4GB of RAM. 4GB is perfectly usable! with like 10 tabs open in Firefox I'm using only 3GB.
I got this laptop for free because somebody was going to throw it away like 8 years ago or something, because it was getting slow. it ran windows 10 and was definitely slowing down, but by changing some settings on windows it ran a lot better but still not great.
but by putting Linux on it, it suddenly became perfectly powerful enough. even a heavy distro like Ubuntu ran like a breeze on it. I could play games on it again, I could run a bunch of programs at the same time again, I could watch YouTube at 1080p again.
and to this day it's still perfectly usable with modern software. I switched to Debian, and used a more lightweight DE, and it still runs great. it does have hiccups every now and then, namely Firefox no longer uses hardware video decoding on the GPU which makes it a little jittery with 1080p60 YouTube, but other than that, it's perfectly fine.
and installing and using Linux isn't nearly as advanced as people say it is. with just a little bit of knowledge you can easily install and use Ubuntu, Linux Mint, and others, and bring life to computers again.
it's windows that's making your computer slow. stop buying new computers and contributing to e-waste.
and if you don't want to switch, I'm more than happy to take your computer off your hands when it inevitably becomes too slow to use.
where can I read employee documentation?
does anyone know any ways I can find/explore employee documentation? Nothing too specific, but as some examples. Training books, cyberamic animatronic manuals, costume procedure, things of that nature.
If there are places that archive scans, or videos I can watch, do leave them here. I'd really enjoy going through those. Especially through and detailed documentation pretaining to the schematics, upkeep, maintenance, and operations of the animatronics. I was considering going into electronical/mechanical engineering as a possible career path, so I figure reading manuals like that would be a fun and practical way to learn more on the subject.
All possible related material is appreciated, and thank you for your time and consideration