Morning PDT Amber Witherspoon,

No apologies are really needed on your behalf, however on my side of the fence from a military background being called Rux usually met I was on someone's wrong side or being volunteered for a working party. Now that you have cleared that up I can accept Rux.

In my opinion we are both providing viable suggests to replace "General Aviation" and I appear to be, as usual, unclear and slow to catch on.

Being an Air Force brat one of my best memories of spending time with my Dad was when I went with him to the electronic maintenance shop and helped him out there. Of course my least favorite part of the time was sweeping and mopping the floors.

Thank you for the clarification.

Tom Rux


From: "Amber Witherspoon" <xxxxxx@gmail.com>
To: "TML" <xxxxxx@simplelists.com>
Sent: Monday, August 28, 2017 1:35:27 AM
Subject: Re: [TML] Looking for a word to replace "General Aviation"

Apologies Tom, I have a hard time not trying to attach unique
identifiers to every Tom I know (along with Dick and Harry, but I
strangely know very few of those). And most of my coworkers, since it
wastes time to yell for the guy in charge of lighting and get the
forklift and the supervisor... (speaking of which, Jeff who shares a
name with one of my supervisors, coworkers, and a random lighting
designer with... I can't remember which tour - that article on
stagehands is being written. Slowly.)

Stationary orbit is usually taken to mean geosynch. Beanstalks kind of
require being very near or directly on the equator (which can be kind
of hard).

Most of my experience comes from a highschool I spent a short time at,
which focused entirely on preparation for airport ground crew training
(and was literally right next door to an active airport). General
Aviation was the technical term (and they were lucky to get a
maintenance shop with their hanger space if they paid for it), and -
as such - was never used by the people on the ground. It was
Public/General, Passenger, and Freight/Cargo. So there's that, and I
don't know what perspective Peter is writing his story from.
So I was kind of serious when I said General Parking. We already know
that ships are docked in Parkbays at the downport, it does kind of
make sense....

On 8/28/17, B Kruger <xxxxxx@gmail.com> wrote:
> What about "non-primary down port"?
>
> Brett
>
> On 28 Aug 2017 05:43, "Peter L. Berghold" <xxxxxx@berghold.net> wrote:
>
>> In some writing I was doing I am describing a portion of star port
>> where instead of large corporation berthing this area is where non-
>> corporate ships craft and smaller starships capable of making landfall
>> would be berthed.  This would be every type of berthing from a piece of
>> tarmack to a walled off area with a lockable gate (hatch?) registered
>> to the craft's owner.
>>
>> In today's terms that would be (at least in my mind) the General
>> Aviation section of an airport.
>>
>> Anybody have a word that is an equivalent that they use for such?
>>  Right now in the story I'm writing I'm using General Aviation as a
>> placehodler until I find a better term.
>>
>> --
>>
>>
>> Peter L. Berghold                                 <xxxxxx@berghold.net>
>> Professonally: IT Professional (DevOps, Puppet, Perl...)
>> Advocations: Dog Training, Beer Brewing, BBQ, Cooking
>>
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