Is anyone else really fighting the urge to climb up to the roof of really tall buildings and just hang out?
Is anyone else really fighting the urge to climb up to the roof of really tall buildings and just hang out?
The foam is actually an accumulation of retired eldritch horror dandruff.
Oh damn, I think that could be misinterpreted as human voice with the right distance and interference.
That game was so good.
Tanks for teh sawce (☞ ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)☞
Are you complaining that a scientific paper isn’t entertaining enough? :s
Some poor whale has a pro-lapse. ;_;
Direct link to picture. It’s really amazing what a new pair of glasses can do. ᕕ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)ᕗ
big if scalable
deleted by creator
Figures lol. Thanks for the heads up. (☞ ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)☞
As expected, pretty sure blue light filters are about sleep quality, not eye strain. Not that they matter much, with most devices having programmed in light filters now days.
*I am spreading misinformation on the internet
[…] the same edge of the sample seemed to stick to the magnet, and it seemed delicately balanced. By contrast, superconductors that levitate over magnets can be spun and even held upside-down.
[…] more likely the result of ferromagnetism. So he constructed a pellet of compressed graphite shavings with iron filings glued to it […] his disc — made of non-superconducting, ferromagnetic materials — mimicked LK-99’s behaviour.
[…] 104ºC as the temperature at which Cu2S undergoes a phase transition. Below that temperature, the resistivity of air-exposed Cu2S drops dramatically — a signal almost identical to LK-99’s purported superconducting phase transition.
[…] Separated from [Cu2S] impurities, LK-99 is not a superconductor, but an insulator with a resistance in the millions of ohms — too high to run a standard conductivity test. It shows minor ferromagnetism and diamagnetism, but not enough for even partial levitation. “We therefore rule out the presence of superconductivity,” the team concluded.
[…] old, often overlooked data — the crucial measurements that he relied on for the resistivity of Cu2S were published in 1951.
Maybe like veneer intelligence.
Cool shit, thanks for posting!
One of my favourite scenes of all time is when he’s in the church with all those ‘dead’ bodies and it takes you a second or so to realize they all just moved.
*Just rewatched it, and I misremembered. More like two bodies… would’ve been a great scene though IMO.
Woohoo! Pandemic 2.0 here we come! I wonder if there’ll be a covid DLC with this update?