Yeah I have and of course you can't really "simulate" it because I don't know what the world really looks like.. When they try to simulate protonomaly though (red deficiency), those pictures look the most unchanged.
Yeah I have and of course you can't really "simulate" it because I don't know what the world really looks like.. When they try to simulate protonomaly though (red deficiency), those pictures look the most unchanged.
In regards to 2, having read things before regarding irreducible complexity, it is a perfectly valid idea in a sense. If you have a system necessary for life that could not have evolved, evolution as we know it must be false. Now, as time has progressed, the list of things that you can classify as such has gone…
I've never really been sure what I am.. Everything I read online (and my own experience) seems to point towards red deficient, yet things online routinely diagnose me as green deficient (and this test as well), regardless of the monitor. Then there's the fact that when formally tested by an optometrist a while back…
Hopefully their next goal can be getting reasonably large SSD's so people aren't forced to use an external HDD for laptops or a secondary HDD for desktops (without paying exorbitant sums for larger SSD's).
They may be "best," but only when dealing with data collections so stupidly large that nothing else can even remotely handle it. Also remember that the fetch time for data on tapes can be measured in seconds, not nanoseconds.
born in 93 and I've never seen an 8-track and don't even know what came before that. Wouldn't surprise me if they don't.
Would not surprise me at all if rockets start using pieces made like this over the coming decades.
Anything that makes these things with as much ease and as little controversy as possible is a good thing. Nice job science!
that's.. that's a lot of patents...
So what's the advantage of getting this as opposed to say, the Yoga? There really doesn't seem to be anything special at all about this. I guess it's more tablet-y than the Yoga and others, but still..
This is really no different from what we have at Purdue. Now, I don't know if the whole university uses such a system, but I know the computer science department at least does and if we do, I'm assuming others are even less fortunate :P
If someone writes a scathing piece of libel in a newspaper, why would you go after the newspaper if you know the author?
Thank you for your explanation to BathAssaultz. It was very informative. If I may though, there is a situation regarding entanglement I'd like to understand..
So.. how quickly would this actually produce usable water?
In all honesty, you could probably still outrun it because with such a small different in running speed, you could likely find some sort of shelter or just wear the darn thing out. It has to move WAY more mass than you, so shortish bursts of human-like speed are basically all it's going to get.
No time dilation as for those inside the bubble, space is perfectly normal. Say you take a journey to Alpha Centauri that takes two weeks. You'll perceive it as 14 days and I back on earth will also perceive it as such.
With the current design, to my knowledge, they would get stuck at the front of the bubble and as soon as you turn the thing off, you'll have a stupidly large explosion that'll obliterate anything nearby. Longer journeys might end up being sufficient to blow up a star.
So if this is a glitch, does that mean that time travel results in a crash?
I can't help but think that there is some nice round number that everything else is just a variant of...
Despite how many times I read the same thing about FTL information causing issues with causality, I never understand it beyond something that is purely mathematical. I simply cannot get an intuitive understanding of it.