And who doesn't love the UPS? I'll bet they're the most beloved company on earth. They're like the mail, except that instead of delivering bills and subpoenas, they deliver Christmas presents year-round.
It would be nice to know why the conveyor belt system looks so complex. It appears that aircraft arrive at the left and right hand sides of this big building and then need to get routed to the correct slot to go onto another aircraft. Why all the complex belts? Why can't this be solved with a single large oval belt that kicks off packages at just the right spot to go on an aircraft?
There are three separate conveyor systems-- one for smalls (envelopes), one for parcels (boxes), and one for irregulars. Factor in the complexities with the physical layout (branching), any data cleaning that has to take place (mislabels, etc), the need for queuing/caching when planes are delayed, etc, differing priorities for sorting/routing, and it starts to look like a pretty complex system.
There are starting to be a significant number of users with a hair trigger for downmodding comments. Dealing with this is one of my top priorities for the site at the moment.
I have to say that fact that I got minus 5 from this comment is pretty indicative of the kind of community hacker news, and I mean it as a compliment. I saw the UPS thing and the first thing out of my mouth was wow, it was instinctual , as soon as I submitted it I knew some negative karma was coming my way. I forgot that I wasn't on digg.
I suggest a new tag for headlines, much like the [exe], [vid] or [pdf] how about a [spread] tag that indicates that in the end you will end up far away from hacker news (in this case around 10 back clicks)
http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/series/ultimate-factor...
Check your local listings, it's been playing recently.