Who knows, maybe 99% of women have died by the year 2035.
Who knows, maybe 99% of women have died by the year 2035.
I’m no expert in biology but the way I understand it our brains all work in roughly the same way, so I don’t think that would be possible.
I assume the censorship was probably done by the original poster of the image. Not much point un-censoring it in that case.
Reading thoughts remotely is a no-go, you need very precise measurements of the brain’s electrical activity and that just can’t be done with distant sensors.
Make sure to unscrew the water hose from the back and hang it on the machine so people can still get water!
Does this have any benefit over just using friction to convert the rotation into heat? I suppose it would suffer less wear, but it also seems way more expensive.
Joke’s on you, I’ve won the game.
I’m not sure what you’re talking about in that case, could you clarify?
I’m not sure about that, plutonium-239 has a half-life of 24k years and uranium-235’s is far longer.
Then again, theres about 13 undiscovered, lost, still armed nuclear bombs that the Americans lost in test drops. Mostly dropped into oceans, they’ve been deteriorating away for 70ish years. Wherever they are an earthquake could set them off. Maybe an aggressive shark. The point is, there are 13 points which we KNOW at some point, will set off a WWII era atomic bomb. This will have an unknown outcome, 13 different times. Any one of which might end Earth. Or maybe it causes some tidal waves. No one knows.
This is completely wrong. Lost nuclear bombs are not going to be functional in the slightest after decades, as they require very precisely timed detonation of explosive charges to actually trigger the main fission reaction. They’re not like chemical bombs, which will explode with enough heat or pressure. And after decades the circuitry to control the explosive charges will be long dead.
That’s what you get when you train an AI that can’t tell the difference between fact and fiction to give “correct” information from the internet. It’s also pulling from Reddit and telling people to jump off a bridge.
Did you mean to leak your email in that screenshot?
I hear WebP can often offer much better compression than PNG in lossless mode so that could be an alternative.
This isn’t a graph, it’s a phylogenetic tree. It doesn’t need units or labeled axes (and they wouldn’t make much sense anyways).
According to this Stack Exchange answer, glass reflects around 4-100% of the UV in sunlight depending on the angle of incidence. So you could probably get a sunburn if the angle is low enough (like if the Sun is almost directly overhead and reflecting off a vertical window).
This is really amazing technology.
From what I know that is somewhat true, the current will disperse through the water relatively uniformly. But it’ll still create voltage gradients that will probably kill any fish nearby.
To be fair to them, that is pretty close to how immunity actually works. Not quite there though.
Better than eating a full sized SD card, at least.
The source for that seems to be this. This is what it says: