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I learned how to program by working on a modest simulation for one of the PIs involved with IceCube. I ended up leaving academia but I really enjoy keeping up with the project over the years.
Today was a good day for gigaton neutrino detectors.
His movies have really gone downhill since Next Friday-- I guess melting 2m/minute of snowpack has a different audience?

Kidding aside, https://brr.fyi/ is a fascinating site that details "less exciting" daily life at the much larger coastal McMurdo Station.

Amundsen-Scott itself is neat to read about, particularly the strategies they employ against becoming buried in snow. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amundsen%E2%80%93Scott_South_P...

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I bet they laugh at the radio astronomers. "Square kilometer array? That's ... cute."
> On December 18, 2010, just after 6 pm New Zealand time, the last of IceCube’s 86 strings was lowered into the Antarctic ice.

Huh, did it use NZ time for everyone else? Or is it cleverly localised?

I would've thought that the South Pole base would be on a US timezone.

Christchurch is the logistics hub and support base for the US presence in Antarctica, so I believe all US facilities on the continent conduct their work in that time zone.
Well, not Palmer, since that's supported by a research vessel from Chile.

It's also amusing because the tourist camp less than a km from Amundsen-Scott also goes by Chilean time. The tourist camp staff invited us over for Christmas when I was down at Pole, but it was like 3 am for them...

Oh, that's cool! I've been watching the Deep Freeze planes take off since I was a kid, so I'm kinda chuffed.