It's comes very close but not close enough to show whether or not there's a neck. So frustrating.
It's comes very close but not close enough to show whether or not there's a neck. So frustrating.
It has 2 wheels, each hemispherical. Could also have internal masses to act as counterbalance, or gyroscopes.
Also I wonder how the ball droids stays still.
Note the way the saber crackles, sputters and flickers as it's switched on—this is a sign of shoddy workmanship.
Olly Moss makes an interesting point...
Well, if increasing bandwidth doesn't increase the power requirement, then higher bandwidth will mean less time actively downloading which means longer battery life.
This somehow forces Dawn into ordering Carol be taken off her meds, which she somehow blames on Beth, but then she gives Beth the key to the drug cabinet so she can try to save Carol. Dawn says Beth can't get caught because… I don't even know.
MOAB: Mother Of All Boners.
That's Doritos flavored marmalade.
You are technically correct, the best kind of correct.
Yeah, I hope they can take more than one image every 30 minutes. I'd love to see a higher frame rate on this.
This is a robot chicken sketch waiting to happen.
They weren't just testing the lightbulbs and appliances, they were testing the construction of the homes as well.
There's no escaping universe destroying strangelets, the destruction approaches at the speed of light, you can't see it coming.
Obviously the ones who were claiming the LHC would create black holes that would swallow the Earth.
I've never broken a phone. And I've never used a case or a screen protector. Go ahead and hate me if you need.
Actually they made Gargantua big enough (100 million solar masses) that he could have survived falling past the event horizon.
Heating water and spinning turbines is a pretty efficient way to turn heat into electricity.
Or if we have two object moving toward each other at .55 the speed of light, relative to each other they are going faster than the speed of light.
Yes, it is. Detecting signs of life gets harder with distance.