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Everything posted by fafalone
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June 6th it's going to be out on IMAX, anyone else anxiously anticipating this?
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I don't know what "lollyroffle" is, I thought it might be some British sci-fi series.
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The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. More users would be inconvenienced by having to highlight it.
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As for giving free care to illegal aliens... we need to be doing more to keep them out of the country. If they're here and need medical treatment, it should be provided, but they should not be here to begin with.
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In Florida, we have a newly established standardized test that is given several times throughout K-12 education. The 10th grade test must be passed in order for a student to graduate. This has been met with protest, obviously from the people who cannot graduate only because of this. The test itself is a rather rudimentry assessment which covers very basic reading comprehension and math from basic addition and graph-reading through pre-algebra, making passing it trivial for all but the bottom 10% in the state. What does everyone think of making this test a requirement to graduate from high school? I think the protests are completely off-base, because their lead argument is that people who fail teh FCAT have succeeded as far as meeting credit and GPA requirements; however I feel this speaks towards grade inflation in order to expedite unqualified individuals through the system, and not racial bias in the test. Anyone who cannot pass a test as simple as the FCAT does not possess the intellectual facilities to deserve a diploma; and if this occurs more often in minorities, then the education system is at fault, not the test itself... or perhaps people should find something other than imaginary racial bias to blame for their shortcomings.
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That's too much effort considering anyone really trying to avoid it would be quite dumb top read a forum thread on it that was started after the release date.
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Thats why there's "other".. I'm sure theres dozens of other sci-fi series, can't list them all :/
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Absolutely terrific. That guys big speech at the end was a bit confusing... !SPOILER WARNING! If they had been through that exact situation 5 times before, is Zion just part of the program?
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What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Nah, even online translators can't be that incoherent. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
I have no idea what you're talking about. Either learn English better, or post in your native language and I'll translate it myself, since online translators would be alot more accurate. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Who can define what is it you of talking. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
The entropy of a system is expressed as a number, which is constant for a system. S = k log w, where k is Boltzmann's constant, and w is the number of possible states of a system, which is also constant. Hence the absolute entropy for a particular system is equal to a scalar number; and whether this number is changing or not, the cause of the change is not part of the equation, and hence the derivative is zero. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Completely incoherent babble. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
No. A black hole is not at absolute zero. and you said: "TC=constant", so your equation is always zero. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
But the derivative of a constant is zero... not 1 and we can't even know absolute entropy... only change in entropy. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
since C is constant that's 1. -
I still don't seem to have access to it :/
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Season 5 was better than Season 1... 1 was rather boring. Overall, B5 was the best show ever. I've got every episode recorded.
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What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
Absolute zero is a theoretical condition, it does not actually exist anywhere in the known universe. The limit of "time" is not infinity if you're approaching zero; it's a planck time. d(TC - Entropy) /d T = Evolution What are you talking about!? Not that your equation makes any sense whatsoever, but entropy (S) is a scalar value so the derivative in of that with respect to T is 1. Evolution is not "1", this makes no sense whatsoever. -
What infinity is realized in universe?
fafalone replied to Michael F. D.'s topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
From what I can gather he's saying lim x^2|x->:inf: is illusory and lim 1/x|x->:inf: is real. But the post if far to incoherent to figure out how he's applying this to the universe. -
Things like spectrometers are NOT subjective.
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The root of pseudoscience is ignorance. The reason we strongly accept current theories is because their derivation is extensive. Some guy didn't just think up our theories, a bunch of people spent a whole lot of time exhaustively working through mathematics and experimental data to arrive at a conclusion. Anyone who has had formal education in physics appreciates this process, hence why the only theories come from people with no education who blame our education for not accepting their models that lack the entire lengthy process of an accepted theory.
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I'm around whenever... i usually sleep until around 1-2pm, and usually go out 10pm-3am. but other than that works for me. (all times are EST)
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Being familiar with those theories, I can safely agree with Radical Edward on this one. None of those theories contradict Maxwell's equations. "than you explain the appearance of new theory if old one allows to solve all a questions? " The previous theories do not answer all questions, but they do answer some.. such as why colors exist. That question is equivalent to asking why we needed relativity when we had Newtonian mechanics.