these are from the March 2003 issue of Wired
fastest man on earth (running) -- Tim Montgomery -- 2002 -- 100 meters in 9.78 seconds
fastest men in the air -- Al Joersz and George Morgan (SR-71 Blackbird) -- 1976 -- 2,193 mph
fastest man on land -- Andy Green (Thrust SSC) -- 1997 -- 763.03 mph
fastest man on water -- Ken Warby (Spirit of Australia) -- 1978 -- 317.60 mph
fastest men in space -- Tom Stafford, John Young, and Gene Ceran (Apollo 10) -- 1969 -- 28,547 mph
fastest RC car -- RC 10L30 -- 2001 -- 111 mph
fastest man-made object -- Voyager 1 -- 38,518 mph
fastest particle accelerator -- CERN's Large Hadron Collider -- to be completed in 2005 -- will accelerate hydrogen particles to 14,500miles per second (52,200,000 mph)
fastest computer -- Earth Simulator -- 5,120 CPUs linked by 1,700 miles of cable -- turned on in 2002 -- 35,800,000,000,000 (35.8 trillion) floating point operations per second
most of you probly dont give a fuck... but i thought some of them were kinda cool
fastest man on earth (running) -- Tim Montgomery -- 2002 -- 100 meters in 9.78 seconds
fastest men in the air -- Al Joersz and George Morgan (SR-71 Blackbird) -- 1976 -- 2,193 mph
fastest man on land -- Andy Green (Thrust SSC) -- 1997 -- 763.03 mph
fastest man on water -- Ken Warby (Spirit of Australia) -- 1978 -- 317.60 mph
fastest men in space -- Tom Stafford, John Young, and Gene Ceran (Apollo 10) -- 1969 -- 28,547 mph
fastest RC car -- RC 10L30 -- 2001 -- 111 mph
fastest man-made object -- Voyager 1 -- 38,518 mph
fastest particle accelerator -- CERN's Large Hadron Collider -- to be completed in 2005 -- will accelerate hydrogen particles to 14,500miles per second (52,200,000 mph)
fastest computer -- Earth Simulator -- 5,120 CPUs linked by 1,700 miles of cable -- turned on in 2002 -- 35,800,000,000,000 (35.8 trillion) floating point operations per second
most of you probly dont give a fuck... but i thought some of them were kinda cool