ivanthemute

ivanthemute t1_ix6rzdj wrote

Not surprising in the least. 120 format was first introduced in 1901 and is still around and available, and the common 35mm format is coming up on a century (first released in 1934.) And that's if you just look at Kodak. Fujitsu still makes limited runs of 101, which Kodak discontinued in the 1950's for use in medium format cameras.

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ivanthemute t1_iwo4x4w wrote

Not just that, but his unit was given orders to stand fast, don't advance, don't retreat, repel any attacks but don't attack further.

He disobeyed a legal order and could have caught a court martial (NJP didn't exist back then) had he survived.

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ivanthemute t1_iwo4m9k wrote

Gunther was a suicidal moron. He was ready to die, or kill someone , against orders to stand fast, for no tactical or strategic gain. He shouldn't have "been remembered" except as an object lesson in what a stupid, incompetent, and overall worthless soldier is. The fact that he was awarded the DSC for pulling this stunt is even more abhorrent.

I saw action in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq. Yes, different world than the trenches of WWI, but not that different.

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ivanthemute t1_iufu66v wrote

I go panning 2 or 3 times a year for fun. Biggest nugget I've found was a whopping 3 gram piece (actually considered large.) For mines, ore that produces 1 ozt (31.1 grams) per ton (1000kg) is considered high yield ore.

Hell, it's estimated that all the gold mined in all of human existence, if put in a single place, wouldn't fill an Olympic sized swimming pool.

To Op's statement, that's a great reference size!

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