Glows under UV, AND is Fluorescent? Remarkable.
Glows under UV, AND is Fluorescent? Remarkable.
Imagine Software had made a name for itself, too. It was reasonable to see that name and expect some quality.
Ooh, I’ve thought of one: a helium balloon. Imagine the tension as he occasionally forgets to hold the string!
Can I just suggest that to mix things up a bit, this one should be set on a peninsula.
Nutrition information based on unrealistic serving sizes.
I’ve seen an individually wrapped muffin “servings per pack: 2”.
Then there’s that Tom Scott video on how “zero calory” sweetener can be 4 calories.
You see, wire telegraph is a kind of a very, very long cat. You pull his tail in New York and his head is meowing in Los Angeles. Do you understand this? And radio operates exactly the same way: you send signals here, they receive them there. The only difference is that there is no cat.
I told you to remember where you parked it.
You can use it as a webcam if you suddenly need to work from home and there’s a shortage of webcams.
Originally I had to install an app for that, but it shows up as a standard USB option on my Pixel now.
Oh that’s a good idea. In fact with more measurements, it would become harder and harder to ignore them corresponding to a spherical model.
Every degree of latitude would be a degree of shadow angle.
For flat earth, it would be on an inverse tangent curve. Even if it was argued that the air somehow bent the light to distort results, what are the odds that it would do so in a way that exactly matched a sphere?
Someone should set this up as a world-wide science project. It would be easy to coordinate measuring at the same time.
To play devil’s advocate, wouldn’t you get the same result on a flat earth, if the sun was closer enough for rays not to be parallel?
I can use a computer mouse with either hand (including using 3d editors, when you might need to do something like alt-middle+left button drag).
I was getting pain in my right hand from working, so I just tried switching until I got used to it.
Someone called me ambi-mousetrous.
A LOT of people see a mouse on the left of the keyboard and ask what should be a rhetorical question: “are you left-handed”, to which I’d reply “no”.