The night it was 34 degrees
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Last night, at the stroke of midnight it was 34 degrees celcius in the CBD of Cape Town. No I was not drunk. No I had not been smoking anything. I had just finished watching Harry Potter II (good rollicking entertainment, but a bit scary and serious for kids IMO) but even all that magic could not have affected my brain that much. 34 was displayed on the digital thermometer in the CBD. I stuck my hand out the window and it sure felt that hot. I was actually sweating at 00:00! Even giving the thermomemter some margin of error, it could not have been less than 30 degrees celcius. What was even more amazing was the wind. It was howling in the CBD and as I drove out to the suburbs I could feel both the wind strength and temperature drop. Once I got to an outer suburb, the temperature was 22 degrees celcius. A full 12 degree temperature gradient over just 20 kilometres! Holy crap! From my hazy memories of geography in school I assume the wind was being generated by the rising hot air in the CBD which created a low pressure and the air from the higher pressures around the CBD was rushing in. All those buildings, black top and concrete must have really been storing the days heat energy and then releasing it during the night. Amazing stuff! Talk about meteorology in action. During that same day at noon time it was 39 degrees celcius, out in the suburbs. It must have been about 42 in the CBD at least. Anyway, I just thought that was an awesome experience.
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
I think it was two winters ago we had about -42 degrees celcius in north of Sweden where I live (town Boden)! That is damn cold! Rickard Andersson@Suza Computing C# and C++ programmer from SWEDEN! UIN: 50302279 E-Mail: nikado@pc.nu Speciality: I love C#, ASP.NET and C++!
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Last night, at the stroke of midnight it was 34 degrees celcius in the CBD of Cape Town. No I was not drunk. No I had not been smoking anything. I had just finished watching Harry Potter II (good rollicking entertainment, but a bit scary and serious for kids IMO) but even all that magic could not have affected my brain that much. 34 was displayed on the digital thermometer in the CBD. I stuck my hand out the window and it sure felt that hot. I was actually sweating at 00:00! Even giving the thermomemter some margin of error, it could not have been less than 30 degrees celcius. What was even more amazing was the wind. It was howling in the CBD and as I drove out to the suburbs I could feel both the wind strength and temperature drop. Once I got to an outer suburb, the temperature was 22 degrees celcius. A full 12 degree temperature gradient over just 20 kilometres! Holy crap! From my hazy memories of geography in school I assume the wind was being generated by the rising hot air in the CBD which created a low pressure and the air from the higher pressures around the CBD was rushing in. All those buildings, black top and concrete must have really been storing the days heat energy and then releasing it during the night. Amazing stuff! Talk about meteorology in action. During that same day at noon time it was 39 degrees celcius, out in the suburbs. It must have been about 42 in the CBD at least. Anyway, I just thought that was an awesome experience.
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
Paul Watson wrote: Last night, at the stroke of midnight it was 34 degrees celcius in the CBD of Cape Town. 9 days and counting! :cool: Aaah - I can't wait to get some heat! I may just blind everyone there with my skin tone of course - shorts will be a no-no until some tanning has taken place (commencing exactly 4 hours after we get into the car at JHB Int and get home :) )
I knew it would end badly when I first met Chris in a Canberra alleyway and he said 'try some - it won't hurt you'..... - Christian Graus on Code Project outages Damned nice for remote servers where using Enterprise Manager is like wadding through treacle while covered in velcro, upside down -Paul Watson on SQL Server Query Analyser
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peterchen wrote: Talk about pleasures! Let me tell you something peterchen; Trying to fall asleep in 34 degree weather with a hot, dry howling wind sweeping through your flat is not fun. I find it much easier to fall asleep in cold weather, at least then you can really snuggle up in blankets and duvets. Last night I lay for at least 30 minutes with not even a sheet over me (not even a pillow under my head because even that is too hot) trying to fall asleep. My ideal is freezing cold nights with hot summer days. During August and September you get close to that ideal here in CT and it is great :) Still I must not complain. Sitting here in my swimming costume with a beautiful summers day outside. I spent the whole morning reading by the pool and just soaking up all that vitamin D, or is it A? Whatever it is it feels great :-D
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
Paul Watson wrote: Sitting here in my swimming costume with a beautiful summers day outside. Swimming costume??!! :~ What the hell is a swimming costume? Mike Mullikin :beer:
It is really hard to be a professional and do things right, in a company full of monkeys. - Michael P. Butler, The Soapbox
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Last night, at the stroke of midnight it was 34 degrees celcius in the CBD of Cape Town. No I was not drunk. No I had not been smoking anything. I had just finished watching Harry Potter II (good rollicking entertainment, but a bit scary and serious for kids IMO) but even all that magic could not have affected my brain that much. 34 was displayed on the digital thermometer in the CBD. I stuck my hand out the window and it sure felt that hot. I was actually sweating at 00:00! Even giving the thermomemter some margin of error, it could not have been less than 30 degrees celcius. What was even more amazing was the wind. It was howling in the CBD and as I drove out to the suburbs I could feel both the wind strength and temperature drop. Once I got to an outer suburb, the temperature was 22 degrees celcius. A full 12 degree temperature gradient over just 20 kilometres! Holy crap! From my hazy memories of geography in school I assume the wind was being generated by the rising hot air in the CBD which created a low pressure and the air from the higher pressures around the CBD was rushing in. All those buildings, black top and concrete must have really been storing the days heat energy and then releasing it during the night. Amazing stuff! Talk about meteorology in action. During that same day at noon time it was 39 degrees celcius, out in the suburbs. It must have been about 42 in the CBD at least. Anyway, I just thought that was an awesome experience.
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
CBD? Central B.. D..? -- This space for rent.
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CBD? Central B.. D..? -- This space for rent.
Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote: CBD? Central B.. D..? Central Business District. City center IOT.
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
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I think it was two winters ago we had about -42 degrees celcius in north of Sweden where I live (town Boden)! That is damn cold! Rickard Andersson@Suza Computing C# and C++ programmer from SWEDEN! UIN: 50302279 E-Mail: nikado@pc.nu Speciality: I love C#, ASP.NET and C++!
Rickard Andersson wrote: -42 degrees celcius :omg: That is unimaginably cold. I assume you gathered your husky dogs around you and used them as a living blanket? Oh wait... damned stereotypes! :)
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
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Rickard Andersson wrote: -42 degrees celcius :omg: That is unimaginably cold. I assume you gathered your husky dogs around you and used them as a living blanket? Oh wait... damned stereotypes! :)
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
Paul Watson wrote: I assume you gathered your husky dogs around you and used them as a living blanket? ROTFLMAO :laugh: Rickard Andersson@Suza Computing C# and C++ programmer from SWEDEN! UIN: 50302279 E-Mail: nikado@pc.nu Speciality: I love C#, ASP.NET and C++!
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Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote: CBD? Central B.. D..? Central Business District. City center IOT.
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
Paul Watson wrote: IOT Another TLA.. thanks! ;P So what does this one mean? -- This space for rent.
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Paul Watson wrote: IOT Another TLA.. thanks! ;P So what does this one mean? -- This space for rent.
Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote: So what does this one mean? IOT = In Other Words :)
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
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brianwelsch wrote: 42 damn thats hot!! Is that normal during the summer? 42 is pretty hot for CT. December and January are CT's hottest months, averaging about 35 degrees celcius. Up north in SA some places get a whole week of 48 degrees celcius, which is pretty damned unbearable IYAM. And to to boot my office does not have aircon. The fan just pushes hot air around. So most of the time we are sitting here in just our shorts and running outside every 30 minutes to jump in the pool. Not good for productivity!
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
Paul Watson wrote: ...most of the time we are sitting here in just our shorts and running outside every 30 minutes to jump in the pool shorts?!? pool?!? :omg:
Software Zen:
delete this;
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Paul Watson wrote: Sitting here in my swimming costume with a beautiful summers day outside. Swimming costume??!! :~ What the hell is a swimming costume? Mike Mullikin :beer:
It is really hard to be a professional and do things right, in a company full of monkeys. - Michael P. Butler, The Soapbox
Mike Mullikin wrote: What the hell is a swimming costume? You don't know what a swimming costume is? Errr, for guys it is a pair of shorts you swim in. Or a speedo, though only certain types of guys wear speedos. For girls it is either a bikini or a full-body costume. Basically any type of clothing you swim in is a swimming costume. We call them cosies (not pronounced like cozy.) What do you call what you swim in?
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
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Paul Watson wrote: ...most of the time we are sitting here in just our shorts and running outside every 30 minutes to jump in the pool shorts?!? pool?!? :omg:
Software Zen:
delete this;
Gary R. Wheeler wrote: shorts?!? pool?!? hehe. We work in shorts and t-shirts. Plus we have a pool outside and a mountain behind the offices... and in front of us. PRetty nice place to work :) The beach is about 10 minutes away as well.
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
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Mike Mullikin wrote: What the hell is a swimming costume? You don't know what a swimming costume is? Errr, for guys it is a pair of shorts you swim in. Or a speedo, though only certain types of guys wear speedos. For girls it is either a bikini or a full-body costume. Basically any type of clothing you swim in is a swimming costume. We call them cosies (not pronounced like cozy.) What do you call what you swim in?
Paul Watson
Bluegrass
Cape Town, South AfricaChristopher Duncan wrote: Which explains why when Santa asked, "And what do you want for Christmas, little boy?" I said, "A life." (Accesories sold separately)
Paul Watson wrote: What do you call what you swim in? Men: Swim suit or swim trunks Women: Swim suit or bikini Here in the states the term costume is usually saved for Halloween parties when one might dress up as something unusual (pirate, monster, alien...). Mike Mullikin :beer:
It is really hard to be a professional and do things right, in a company full of monkeys. - Michael P. Butler, The Soapbox