« first day (1955 days earlier)   

01:22
@VLAZ So... I realized that how I wrote that was ambiguous. What I meant is that we, here, assembled, are experts in trash [content]. But it could also mean that you, specifically, are an expert in trash [content]. Either way works.
What "question"? There is no question in that post. — philipxy 24 hours ago
Sigh. The question is, how do I make my code work. Does that really need to be spelled out? Was it really unclear? Does that kind of thing really make the site better?
@Feeds I suppose I need a British person to tell me what's wrong with microwaving a mug.
 
6 hours later…
07:28
@CodyGray If you're interested:
in C#, 20 hours ago, by Captain Obvious
@Feeds As a person from the United Kingdom, I can confirm the accuracy of this
in C#, 20 hours ago, by Captain Obvious
who the hell microwaves water
in C#, 20 hours ago, by Captain Obvious
just buy a kettle
The messages are very fragmented, so I picked the most relevant ones. But that should assure you - it is a British person, and what their suggestion is.
TBH, I have a kettle at home. I don't have a microwave. But my parents just use the microwave for making tea.
They also use the coffee maker - it doubles as a hot water dispenser (when you don't put any coffee pods in it). It's suitable for making one cup of tea.
I've heard that in the US electric kettles are worse because of the 110V power lines. Apparently, it means kettles are literally boiling water slower over there than the 220V ones in Europe. And I've never used the non-powered kettles that go on the hob. My grandmother used to have that but IIRC, they were clumsy and also slow.
08:02
@VLAZ what is a kettle
*googles
ohhh. I have an electric one
08:56
0
Q: Don't show deleted answers in "Other answers" in the Late answers review queue

bfontaineI frequently look at the other answers when reviewing the Late answers queue to search for duplicates, but showing deleted answers here just wastes my time. On a recent case I clicked on "Other answer (1)" just to see that the other answer has been deleted 10 months ago: Is there some case in wh...

 
2 hours later…
10:36
@starball It's a small furry animal, native to South America. It has evolved to require heat, so you either put it on the stove or directly plug it into the electric outlet. The other peculiar evolutionary trait it has that it is very good at making tea. It can even do a full tea ceremony. Sadly, it's endangered species. The microwave oven preys on it. Microwave ovens are invasive species in South America.
It is possible some of this is made up.
 
6 hours later…
16:12
@starball how do you have an electric kettle and not know it is called a kettle? What do you call it?
water boily pitcher
16:35
I used to microwave my tea water at work before we got a kettle
same at home, when I was too lazy to heat it on the stove. I liked the electric kettle at work so much, I asked for one for Christmas last year
@aynber don't tell that to Brits
they'll explode on ya
16:56
sweet, I can use the explosion to heat my tea!
hopefully you have a containment apparatus
otherwise there will be a lot of wasted energy
Might I recommend you get in touch with folks in the nuclear fusion field; they have several different offerings you might be interested in: inertial electrostatic confinement chambers, tokamak chambers, toroidal chambers, and more!
Just don't ask them about net positive outflows... they get a bit touchy about that.
@TylerH the water boiler
/ the water boiling thingy
@VLAZ this was very close
Hmm, good point
17:25
@VLAZ the_more_you_know.mp4
17:38
@aynber Fun fact, it's possible to explode water by microwaving it. Well, it's hard but it can become superheated (over the boiling point but doesn't boil because it can't form bubbles). This is very dangerous - disturbing the water in this state will instantly turn parts of it into steam and will shoot extremely hot vapour and liquid around. See video demonstration
This time, none of this is made up. However, it's also very rare that it would happen. The water probably has to be very pure to not form bubbles (they form around impurities like specks of sediment in harder water) and put in a special container free of sharp angles and stuff.
Also, there is the opposite phenomenon of supercooling. Same idea but with ice - if you have very pure water in a good enough container, you can cool it below freezing temperature. Since ice crystals also need to form around something, the water will stay liquid. Then if you disturb it, like shake the container, it instantly freezes in front of your eyes. You might have seen videos of this of water freezing in a bottle. It was supercooled.
17:59
@VLAZ This I can semi-regularly reproduce just by putting stock bottles of water in one of the freezers we have.
@VLAZ While it is very rare, it happens often enough, given the large quantity of times water is heated in a microwave in the overall population, such that it's a notable danger, which one should keep in mind and take steps to avoid.
0
Q: How do I retract an erroneous duplicate vote in Staging Ground?

esqewEarlier today I reviewed a question in the Staging Ground by voting as duplicate. Shortly after that, I realized that I'd made a mistake and had missed critical context already in the question that made it not actually a duplicate (at least, not of the dupe target I chose). It was not immediately...

18:26
@VLAZ Oooh... the kid in me goes "That looks AWESOME! Let's try it!" and the adult is going "Are you kidding? Take that outside!"
I've done the freezing bottle many times. It doesn't happen every time, but I've done it often enough with bottled water
Please release both the kid and the adult in you. They have been locked in there far too long.
Yes. yes, they have

« first day (1955 days earlier)