You might take a look at [SciTE](https://scintilla.org/SciTE.html), a light weight wrapper around Scintilla, with lua scripting support. It’s been my non-IDE editor for years on Windows and Linux…
If I'm on a trip somewhere, I usually have a couple of small USB-C SanDisk 2TB drives for photo and video storage. I'm a photographer, and don't always have sufficient bandwidth to upload all of the photos I take via Lightroom - plus, I want a physical copy "just in case".
Even in Upper Michigan near Lake Superior we sometimes had stunn, colorful Northern Lights. Sometimes it seemed like they were flying overhead within your grasp
I almost always find it too verbose and unnaturally mimicy when bouncing the question back. It doesn't paraphrase my request. It's more like restating it.
What I notice most is that almost always repeats verbatim unnaturally long parts of my requests.
This might be more useful to people that do lazy prompting. My nature compels me to be clear and specific in all written text.
In answer to your first question, in the field that would be the primary blast door, a penetration that went through the capsule to a chamber with another larger blast door out to the elevator. At the other end of this chamber is the passage to the generator room. We were obviously equipped to go quite some time “off-grid”.
I am assuming the view is from one of the training simulators which are used exact, suspended control centers with a viewing window.
We had no maps in the capsule. Any targeting we did was normal 3-d coordinates, technically we really did not have a “need to know” where the coordinates were located.
Thanks! If you look to the left, from the hallway, then go to the very left corner and look right there's a paper map on the wall with circles all over it. Was curious what that was. In my absolute ignorance it looks like one of those "nukes will explode this far" sort of maps but I can't tell if it's actually a map of land or a system design thing.
Actually the chairs were pretty comfortable. They were locked down to survive (in theory) the shaking resulting from nudets. The deputy launch commander’s was on a long track so he could slide back and forth to gather the redundant messages and reset alarms. The commander sat facing the missile light board.
Indeed it can be. There was a lot of action in the O club in one’s off days. We oftentimes thought however that these a-launch crews probably had it worse, except at least it would be more quiet without all the active comm systems. And since we were always “alert” we took part in many, many global military exercises…