A former coworker wrote a whole library of code around showing some of our options to customers. But he was driving them with AJAX. As such, he chose to use URL fragments with weird delimiters to put the data in the URL
New pages use PHP and nowhere near so many weird conventions. But fragments aren't passed to the server so I couldn't just parse it on the server end either
My fantasy is a PG13 Deadpool movie, where he knows that it's a PG13 movie, and he knows he only has 1 F-bomb, so he keeps almost slipping but catches himself. Then, at the end of the movie, the moment arrives and someone else beats him to it.
I want more "fringe" super hero movies. no DC no Marvel. start looking at classic games / TV shows for inspiration (but don't copy) - can you imagine a super hero movie (done well) with the story of something like EarthWorm Jim?
the batman vs superman was was so bad... Like batman having flashbacks when superman mentioned his mom's name... like could you even have worse writing?
You have the glove, and the 6 stones, you claim that the universe is finite and that its resources are finite and that killing half the universe is the only way to save it. You can literally reverse entropy with that gauntlet. You can literally create more resources out of nothing.
@SterlingArcher Also, wanna talk about laws? The half-killing wave or whatever from the snap, can't travel faster than light, because nothing travels faster than light
So how come the folks on the remote planet also died instantly?
I mean. if you wanna get anal about it, who says it 'exists' in this universe following laws. our universe is a 'fabric'. he applied it to the entire thing at once.
also in the realm of blue people with flying arrows and talking raccoons, the speed of light as a universal constant seems like an odd thing to be concerned about
Magic in almost any creation out there seems to operate based on how the creator/author thinks that physics works, but not based on how physics actually work
I got really unsober the other day and watched like a 15 minute video on youtube that walks you through the life and death of the universe, and it was really entertaining
The most glaring example is magic that causes lightning bolts. It would take much less energy to make the electricity travel through the ground, rather than the air :)
The universe is expanding faster than the speed of light, and galaxies are moving past us at that same speed. So either the laws of physics stop working at the size of galaxies, or they're not actually moving, and the space between objects is expanding instead
@SterlingArcher If you went back 500 years and told people that you could communicate with people in that other village without having to go there or send someone over, that'd definitely look like magic to them.
Here's some nice brainfart material: If I move to one direction at .75 the speed of light, and @SterlingArcher moves to the other direction at .75 the speed of light, we get further away from each other at a speed of less than 1 speed of light.
So let's assume you're going twice the speed of light, you'll end up in the future. If you go the opposite way, are you going into the past or just the future of the direction you're going?
@Allenph There's a principle called "causality" (which is being challenged by various things in quantum mechanics, for sure) that basically states that "what's true is already so", that is, that there's always a cause and effect relationship behind an observable effect.
I'm struggling with one right now. it's more of a social behaviour theory - the one where there is open parking spots in the parking lot directly adjacent to a store, but people still leave the car running with the hazards on in the fire lane. It baffles me to this day
Even if you don't know what causes a thing (for example, a lightning storm), you can assume that there's some other phenomenon (friction, electric potential, etc) which can explain how it happens when it happens
Many people will describe quantum mechanics as "strange" or "weird", but they are not. They simply are. It is our understanding of them which is lacking.
@Allenph An excellent experiment that shows that our way of looking at causality and locality is at the very least problematic is the the one with the polarized filters
I read a story a while ago about a guy who was in a coma for a while.. lived a fucking lifetime in that coma. like the TNG ep where picard gets sucked into that thing and gets his flute. anyways this dude was in a coma - found a wife, had two kids. lived a life - then one day he noticed the geometry on a lamp or a table or something was not right.. and it all unravelled. he woke up - lost that coma life and still misses his made up wife and kids - that story stuck with me.
@MadaraUchiha Yeah but referring to quantum entanglement as "insufficiently defined and understood action at a distance" doesn't quite have the same ring to it
@SterlingArcher If you have two filters, and they block some amount of light, you can, in some configuration, add a third filter in the middle, and the three combined would block less light than just the two.