venta: (Default)
[personal profile] venta
Someone just passed me a copy of the Daily Telegraph's Guide to Almost Everything, complaining that they couldn't understand the first question on the cover.

The back cover does indeed have a few general-knowledge questions on it, presumably with the implication that you can find the answers inside. The question in, er, question was:

"What can be Big Boy, Early or Supersonic ?"

He claimed it didn't make sense as a question. Being a veteran of quizzes, I'm used to the syntax, and could explain: you're looking for some noun which can be prefixed (or occasionally suffixed) by each of the words in the question. (My rather poor off the cuff example was "What can be Wind, Dartmouth or Railway?" to which the answer is "tunnel".)

We still couldn't work it out, though. I tried to look it up, but the tome (which claims to be a compendium of general knowledge) has dispensed with such tedious pagewasters as, say, an index. So, not knowing the answer, I'm completely unable to work out what section I should look it up in. So while the book may well contain the answer, I have no way of finding it.

While various solutions were suggested, we fell to arguing over what one of the bombs dropped on Hiroshima was called - Fat Boy, or Fat Man. I tried looking it up in the Military section, but failed to find it. I remain unimpressed with the Telegraph's efforts at a usable reference book.

If anyone can tell me, without googling, what can be Big Boy, Early or Supersonic, I'd like to know.

Oh, and I'll probably post up the results of the lyrics quiz tonight, so if anyone else wants to have a guess, get on with it.

Date: 2004-10-21 07:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cardinalsin.livejournal.com
The bombs were fat man and little boy (dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki respectively, if memory serves). However the answer to the question evades me.

Date: 2004-10-21 07:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
Bah. I was wrong, then.

(A quick google suggests that your names are correct, though they were dropped the other way round. Fat Boy was the test bomb which was detonated in a desert in Mew Mexico somewhere.)

Date: 2004-10-21 07:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] panzerpenguin.livejournal.com
There's a spare casing for one of these bombs in the Imperial War Museum. It is frighteningly crude in appearance, especially next to Werner von Braun's elegant proto-ICBM the V2, which stands nearby with part of the fuselage removed so you can see the rocket engine.

Date: 2004-10-21 08:14 am (UTC)
zotz: (Default)
From: [personal profile] zotz
Apparently a problem with German military production in the period was the insistence on finishing everything very nicely, including the parts where this was superfluous. Having said that, of course, a V-2 actually had to be smooth and aerodynamic in a way that a parachute-retarded bomb didn't.

Date: 2004-10-21 08:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
Once the rockets go up, who cares where they come down ? That's not my department...

Date: 2004-10-21 08:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lanfykins.livejournal.com
In German and English I know how to count down...
And I'm learning Chinese!

Date: 2004-10-21 08:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] panzerpenguin.livejournal.com
Well quite. When you're working on the technological building blocks for space travel, such concerns are comparatively pretty small potatoes.

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