@Abyx Literally this has been answered a million times on the internet. I work with a few undergrads each year, nobody ever got stuck on building libtiff.
Would be fun if the supreme court rules in favor of mothers as both male and female children carry more genetic material from the mother. For example, mitochondrial DNA comes exclusivity from the mother. Or maybe use some other dystonian metric like energy investment in kilograms.
Alligator meat is the meat from alligators that is for consumption. It has been used both historically and in contemporary times in various cuisines of the Southern United States. Alligator eggs are also for consumption. Alligator meat has been described as a healthy meat source for humans due to its high protein and low fat composition. It has been described as being mild flavored and firm in texture.
In the United States, it can only be legally sourced from alligator farms, and is available for consumer purchase in specialty food stores, some grocery stores, and can also be mail ordered. Some...
> Rather, a system with a negative temperature is hotter than any system with a positive temperature, in the sense that if a negative-temperature system and a positive-temperature system come in contact, heat flows from the negative to the positive-temperature system
wtf
so if you place objects at -5 degrees and 5 together, the energy will first flow from -5 to 5, so that -5 gets to 0, and then back?
What people don't get about physics is that the laws and theories are not how nature really works. They are just better ways to calculate observed phenomena.
I also take a dim view of the weasel words 'just' and 'basically' which only purpose seems to be to badger the reader. or possibly I wanted to put 'weasel' and 'badger' in the same sentence
Newton's first law states that every object will remain at rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless compelled to change its state by the action of an external force.
The second law explains how the velocity of an object changes when it is subjected to an external force.
@BartekBanachewicz A reason that it seems weird is because of how we define the temperature T. If the "temperature" is defined as 1/T then it seems make sense.
At the physically impossible-to-reach temperature of zero kelvin, or minus 459.67 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 273.15 degrees Celsius), atoms would stop moving. As such, nothing can be colder than absolute zero on the Kelvin scale.
@wilx especially at the end of the video where she just walks and all the dolls are laid in towels like dead bodies with a sticker attached to their legs.
It's sad we can't have really accurate science fiction movies. For example, the death start couldn't have been blown up that easily. The guy driving that deathstar could have just moved it a bit so the X-Wing crash into it. It's not like the deathstar had an athmosphere or something.
to be honest it makes me think about our traditional weapons... Instead of making a tank that can be shot down. 10 stair sphere that will just roll hover your enemies
just make the armor really thick and roll on
Imagine a hamster ball the size of an aircraft carrier.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I'm pretty sure that moving a death star is a slow endeavor. Like using an aircraft carrier to ram a life boat next to it. The life boat wouldn't even notice.
Rationalizing movie logic is better than finding flaws in it because it leads to more enjoyment.
@Morwenn int has always been defined as the fastest arithmetic type on the platform, reasonably speaking for compatibility reasons this has placed restrictions
people can craft swords and armor with various metals. If you wanted to build electric engines and computers, you'd need electric generators. Those can be made of wire and some iron to shape the field, but you need a magnet to bootstrap them
@BartekBanachewicz but you used magnets to get it in the first place. It's like saying "You can get a car to drive with out fuel by first accelerating it up to speed then turn of the engine and take your measurement, look driving without fuel use!!!"
@BartekBanachewicz that's using magnets though as the boot strap, and then coils help complement it... I guess it's helping lower the voltage to boost the current... kinda a generator and transformer in one go?
I think getting big enough magnets becomes a challenge at some point though, and in cases where you can't readily control the shaft speed, it's hard to control the output
setting aside that "extremely overrepresented" is different from "Only", both of those are unbased assumptions most likely based on anecdotal experience
> In California, where the study was conducted, state law requires motorists to stop at crosswalks when pedestrians are present, allowing them to cross the road. Mr. Piff said his team selected a specific crosswalk to observe, then had a pedestrian appear on the edge of the curb as a car approached. As the pedestrian stepped into the road, a researcher marked down the driver’s reaction to the pedestrian. This was done with 152 drivers.
> The team also watched a four-way-stop intersection over a week, noting how likely drivers were to cut in front of others when it was not their turn to go. In their observation of 274 cars, the researchers found that the more expensive ones were more likely to jump their turns in the four-way rotation, Mr. Piff said.
> The study also found that male drivers were less likely to stop for pedestrians than were women, and that drivers of both sexes were more likely to stop for a female pedestrian than a male one.
@BartekBanachewicz Nobody is saying that the car itself is the problem. It's just that we can easily observe a car's brand, but we can't really go into someone's head.
> In the San Francisco Bay Area, where the hybrid gas-and-electric-powered Toyota Prius is considered a status symbol among the environmentally conscious, the researchers classified it as a premium model. “In our higher-status vehicle category, Prius drivers had a higher tendency to commit infractions than most,” Mr. Piff said.
Sure, cyclists might go on sidewalks and against traffic and don't give a shit about red lights, but every fucking driver out there is out to kill them, so, meh.
As an eternal pedestrian I stopped counting the amount of times I had to expertly read the intentions of a driver who couldn't use their fucking flashers. Almost got run over a few times. Really, drivers only seem to care about other cars. Or, rather, they only care about things that can deal real damage to their cars. Squishy beings are not armor piercing and therefore unimportant.