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New Re: A parking lot over an old baseball stadium location.
Yes, but what in particular IS it?

(The address is of something else I was looking at and is irrelevant.)
-drl
New What do you mean?
It's a parking lot. :-)

Do you mean the rectangle? That's close to where Aaron's 715 home run hit.

I'm not sure what you mean. Could you elaborate a bit?

Cheers,
Scott.
New That's it
It's the parking lot at Turner Field. The diamond and warning track from the old stadium are painted on the lot, and a monument stands where Aaron's 715th home run landed just over the outfield fence.
-drl
     What's this? - (deSitter) - (4)
         A parking lot over an old baseball stadium location. - (Another Scott) - (3)
             Re: A parking lot over an old baseball stadium location. - (deSitter) - (2)
                 What do you mean? - (Another Scott) - (1)
                     That's it - (deSitter)

You're typing on a device that stores trillions of pieces of data and makes billions of computations per second with the ability to grab data on almost anything from around the world in milliseconds, using electricity transmitted from hundreds of kilometers through wires on towers dozens of meters tall connected to megastructures that do things like burn coal as fast as entire trains can pull into the yard, or spin in the wind with blades the size of jumbo jets, or the like, which were delivered to their location by vehicles with computer-timed engines burning a fuel that was pumped up halfway around the world from up to half a dozen kilometers underground and locked into complex strata (through wells drilled by diamond-lined bores that can be remote-control steered as they go), shipped around the world in tankers with volumes the size of large city blocks and the height of apartment complexes, run through complex chemical processes in unimaginable quantities, distributed nationwide and sold to you at a corner store for $1.80 a gallon, which you then pay for with a little piece of microchipped plastic, if not a smartphone, which does all of the aforementioned computer stuff but in a box the size of your hand that tolerates getting beaten up in your pocket all day.

But technology never seems to advance...


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