scrappy lad: Once I zap this spider in the microwave, he'll be good and radioactive! Then I just let it bite me, and bam! instant super powers!! Vmmm vmmm vmmm *ding!* scrappy lad: Mmm, maybe I should just let it lick me...
Microwave radiation is “non-ionizing,” same as visible light, radio waves… and deadly gamma radiation from a nuclear bomb. All just a matter of frequency and wavelength… Looks like Dr. Negato’s been fooling around with the magnetron in this oven…
One time at work I tried to use one of the cafeteria microwaves, but a fly went in and I couldn’t shoo it out. So I shut the door and turned it on. It flew around in tight little circles then dropped dead. I then brushed it away and warmed my sandwich.
Lewreader, the first commercial microwave oven was built in 1947. It was almost 1.8 metres (5 ft 11 in) tall, weighed 340 kilograms (750 lb) and cost about US$5000 each. (US$49,500 in 2011).
Here’s more, Chikuku - that fiorst commercial microwave was installed on the first commercial nuclear-powered cargo/passenger ship and it’s still there and still in use. They just don’t make ‘em like that any more.
Runar, I doubt that it gets much use since the NS Savannah ( the ship referenced) has been mothballed for many years, unless the skeleton crew onboard uses it at lunchtime :-)
BTW NS Savannah is mothballed along with many other cargo ships at the Army’s base at Fort Eustis in Virginia. The U.S. Army actually has more ships/boats than the U.S. Navy does.
x_Tech over 13 years ago
I’ll just select the Super Power setting
person918 over 13 years ago
well, to be fair, the microwave does emit microwave (radio wave) radiation, the same way a light bulb emits visible light radiation
lewisbower over 13 years ago
Why oh Lord, WHY weren’t there microwaves when I was 12.
puddleglum1066 over 13 years ago
Microwave radiation is “non-ionizing,” same as visible light, radio waves… and deadly gamma radiation from a nuclear bomb. All just a matter of frequency and wavelength… Looks like Dr. Negato’s been fooling around with the magnetron in this oven…
runar over 13 years ago
One time at work I tried to use one of the cafeteria microwaves, but a fly went in and I couldn’t shoo it out. So I shut the door and turned it on. It flew around in tight little circles then dropped dead. I then brushed it away and warmed my sandwich.
Lewreader, the first commercial microwave oven was built in 1947. It was almost 1.8 metres (5 ft 11 in) tall, weighed 340 kilograms (750 lb) and cost about US$5000 each. (US$49,500 in 2011).
runar over 13 years ago
Here’s more, Chikuku - that fiorst commercial microwave was installed on the first commercial nuclear-powered cargo/passenger ship and it’s still there and still in use. They just don’t make ‘em like that any more.
Coyoty Premium Member over 13 years ago
baslim_the_begger said, Good thing Superman only has X-ray vision…or so he claims…
”’Micro-vision’?” “…It’s my super-power, I can call it anything I want.”
MisngNOLA over 13 years ago
Runar, I doubt that it gets much use since the NS Savannah ( the ship referenced) has been mothballed for many years, unless the skeleton crew onboard uses it at lunchtime :-)
BTW NS Savannah is mothballed along with many other cargo ships at the Army’s base at Fort Eustis in Virginia. The U.S. Army actually has more ships/boats than the U.S. Navy does.