Periodic Table Table
Ed Pegg Jr writes "Theo Gray, a co-creator of Mathematica, was originally a chemist. Needing a conference table, he created a Periodic Table using a variety of woods." It seems Theo is missing some elements for the table, in case you have any spare europium (in a proper container, of course) lying about. This isn't Theo's first piece of furniture. It looks like he has left a few spots for new elements, and it is nicely modular, in the event an element is found not to exist.
"I'm sure in 1985 Plutonium can be bought in every corner drug store, but in 1955, it's a little hard to come by."
am constructing a Periodic Table, and i am just short of a few elemnets, Au and Ag, so if anybody has any spare, can they send them to me. Perferably in an appropriate conatiner, say a large truck.
Here we can see Theo Gray hard at work.
If you put your plate on highly radioactive elements, your food will stay warm.
I tried making a mandelbrot set table once.
I gave up because it seemed like there was always an endless amount of detail work left to do.
But then again, I could be wrong.
...gets the "uranium seat" (it's just a name son, don't worry about it)
when some other esteemed editor reposts this, it'll be the Periodic Periodic Table Table story, and I will be even happier. ;^)
main(O){10<putchar(4^--O?77-(15&5128 >>4*O):10)&&main(2+O);}
"Hey, nice table!"
"Thanks, it took me several w... OH JESUS CHRIST NO, DON'T OPEN THAT!"
(screaming and choking as they both inhale florine gas)
(dying breath): "Just...wanted...to...be...thorough.."
I'm not sure which time stamps you're looking at, but actually the log was cut over a year before being worked, and it was dried at least semi-properly. Also, that log was maple used only for the noble gas element tiles, not for the body of the table. The body of the table is walnut that was sawn in 1993 and actually kiln dried twice at the yard before I got it at auction. (Oh and by the way, the Wood-Mizer isn't mine, but I wish it were....)