jonos
jonos
jonos

You can never have too many monitors. Even if a few of them are just dedicated to 10-hour youtube videos or tail -f log. Never too many.

My personal Cyber Gibson does 50 kilonewtons by the hour. It's got a hertz range of 19.34 kilo-FLoPs with an inbuilt octave-responder for on-the-flux gigamacros. It's pretty rad.

Cybermocha

You are quite mistaken. I think you will find that this is a commercial for a Braun® Lawn Sprinkler.

Why yes, I was thinking about Carbon Based Lifeform

I'm from a country with pretty much zero-tolerance on smokabilities beyond tobacco. We're forced to unaided ruminations

Panspermia is hypothetical. It is not a likely thing to happen, only a possible one. Lack of evidence of panspermia within our solar system would not tell us anything about life elsewhere in the galaxy, only about panspermia.

Why on earth would you expect life to spread from planet to planet within a solar system without a highly advanced technological civilization? And what kind of relevance would that have to how common it is in the rest of the galaxy? How does interplanetary travel affect the chances of abiogenesis? Nobody expects life

Them and their descendants, no doubt. We all think the marshmallow man was just there to crush some buildings and trample some people. Its real purpose was to infect the human gene pool, making us powerless at Gozer's return

Exactly, you'd need to act fast too, to get some of the top layer before it was all mushed into the street. And you'd be standing there with hands full of runny marshmallow, how would you get it home? You'd have to make your mind up right there on the spot

It's one of the big questions of my life, whether I would have eaten of the Marshmallow Man if I had been there when he exploded.

Unfortunately, the speed of light is a pretty hard limit on transmission time. One we're not likely to ever overcome, let alone in our lifetimes. A network of communications satellites would just slow it down :/

Game tip: Quantum Conundrum. Gives you a glove that can change the speed, weight, density and gravity of the levels. Designed by Kim Swift who was lead on Portal and Portal 2.

They didn't say the gun conserved momentum, they said it couldn't take it away (or "you can't stop it" but w/e). Would have been cool if they'd kept with a conservation angle but they never explicitly said they did so :/

By that line of reasoning there is basically no difference between science and fantasy

I gotta ask, how do you mean that gmail is super hackable?

It wouldn't be hard to cook up a backstory to explain that. Half-elves in 3rd ed D&D (Neverwinter Night's rules) reached middle age at 60, depending on the backstory it wouldn't be hard to justify a character retiring a bit early. The rules are just there to provide structure, not to tell you how your character must

:I

B|

Couldn't tell you where the exact line would be drawn, but if the only error in an article is a single to / too miss, I think it's in the clear. And that it isn't entirely appropriate to question whether the writer has only a grade-school level knowledge of the English language over something that is, as you say, an