Couple of my buds who are PS guys ran out to get the older ones because they are cheaper. I prefer my Elite for it's curves and matte black. The noticeable dust on a Slim would drive me nuts.
Couple of my buds who are PS guys ran out to get the older ones because they are cheaper. I prefer my Elite for it's curves and matte black. The noticeable dust on a Slim would drive me nuts.
I hope everyone gets a boat, else you might be on an inverted-island prison.
@comrade_leviathan: (As an aside, stars are from Gawker. Sign into Gizmodo with your io9 credentials, and bingbangboom, you are starred.)
@Kaiser-Machead v.2.1.1: I kicked my desk over and threw my monitor at the wall because she's so hott.
Alex Trebek: "This encryption code written by mathematician McEliece does not use factorization..."
Where can I get one of those shirts? Gimme one of those giant pink ones, I don't care.
@lldsandsFLll: Ironically, that is about half of what you should be getting let about 20%, so I guess you're lucky. Don't forget to convert your bits to bytes.
@Pininfarina: jepzilla makes a good point about this. Probabilistic solutions can still give you deterministic results, if the results are within the boundaries of your confidence.
@El Guano: @triplenine above me gave a very good response, check it out. I like this video a lot, that's a neat simulation to run. And it makes a great point against my chicken-egg attack. +1 to fancy non-self-aware set of blueprints. Thanks for finding that.
@triplenine: This is a great response. What I had meant be my previous response was that what he said sounded more true. I suppose the codons in the amino acids do not necessarily need to have be yes or no answer to describe what happens in a chemical gradient. Nature is fk'ing my mind right now.
@El Guano: That's a good point. I considered that the instructions for "baking the cake" are inherently included in the cake / genome lunch box recipe.
If he's a crackpot, then Mr. PZ Meyers must also consider that a slew of other scientists are crackpots. As Carl Sagan (most notably) pointed out, the genome is obviously comparable to bits and bytes in the sense that it is a switch. He used the analogy for the genome being a large game of 20 Questions. How is that…
@Kaiser-Machead v.2.1.1: I was being facetious, of course. The patent office gives me a headache. I'm hoping that their (Apple) justification offers more than "Move sideways and unlocked." Which is what I picture in my mind, being quickly scribbled on a cocktail napkin with a crayon over a pancake breakfast. Syrup…
Oh yeh that is a new idea that Apple should definitely get to own. Every time you use the restroom in a public place, give Apple a nickel.
@Pessimippopotamus: Just build one. There. Done.
@YardanCabaret: Infuriating. At least the guy, or his supervisor panned back and zoomed in to get a glimpse of the kid's pureed face.
@Lord_Data ∞: That's a great example of a joke in which the punchline is the joke itself.
@j14: He's got the electrolytes you crave.
@Gann: Agreed, I cannot for the life of me think of why I ran straight to Tokyo's applicable codes :/ durrrr.
@Gann: This building is not under construction based on information from the architects website: [www.big.dk]