Your next supercar will be ugly as hitting your father with a sweaty sock, but really efficient because, as we all know, people buy supercars for their efficiency.
One day we'll know enough to build a machine that from star dust starting conditions can predict critters swimming in the sea. That's the point where we'll be able to rightfully call ourselves gods.
Where else can you build a fake submarine cave filled with cages to trap mermaids and merfolks and eventually partially drain the cave to allow your dwarves to go pick up the baby mermaids to be sold as meat and baby-mermaid-bone trinkets.
That kind of attitude will be the cause of our demise. Motivating statements are the fabric on which reposes the well being of London, and, by extension the Earth.
We were at the edge of the precipice, but this is a big step forward. A three sixty degree turn that will allow us to set foot where no one has gone before.
The hard part is always inventing the building blocks. Once you have those, there's a billions brains eager to build with whatever blocks you give them.
Actually, I may have gone too conservative there. The hard part is the prototype of the building blocks. Once the prototype works, you can release the knowledge in the human mind soup and it will reproduce and evolve on its own.
I wouldn't dare say it all rests on an idea, because I believe the ratio prototype:result to be close to 1:1 while idea:result falls way short.
The solution is to create a system that makes it profitable to generate a system with 0 deaths and the shortest travel times from random points A to B.
What the article speaks about is not the problem, it's the symptom. Just as giving the fines money to local governments shortens yellow lights, a system must be found that gives money to the best solution. Which should be easy, as we know how to identify the better solution among the existing ones.
So: 1 - Define rules of best solution. 2 - Give money in direct relation to proximity to best solution 3 - Wait.
Sorry, but I'm not going to get my pants in a bind about what a court "allows" the NSA to do. Taking into account that the law hasn't applied to the NSA in the past and I I know of no reason why it would start now.
It's a scandal that there are countries the NSA isn't allowed to spy on. What if the terrorists are hiding there?
"What if"! That's exactly what a terrorist would say! Terrorists are OBVIOUSLY hiding there:
A - Terrorists are hiding everywhere. B - Countries are a place. Ergo, by A and B, terrorists are hiding there!
This is so obvious that the only explanation that makes any sense is that the terrorists that are hiding inside the Court have make a terrorist modification of the sentence to allow this terrorist plot to go on.
I get your point, but it is pretty speculative to suggest that travel faster than the speed of light will ever be possible. No physical law of nature prevented any of the advances you've quoted - they were just engineering challenges.
No current physical law. All the advances were preceded by a new understanding of how the universe worked. All the advances that will come, will also be preceded by new understandings.
I postulate that the only constant is our own ignorance. I will not argue that we may reach a point where we know everything and thus can't advance any more. I just don't believe that point exists, but I have nothing to support that belief.
Over a span of even thousands of years I'm sure we'll be impressed with what mankind achieves with engineering.
However, I don't think anybody can make any bets either way on whether there are ways to effectively travel faster than the speed of light. There may or may not be new physics out there that we can rely on. We don't get to invent the laws of nature - we can only exploit what we discover, and there may or may not be anything useful to discover.
Oh, I see we did reason in the same direction. Ok, then I agree with you in everything but the "may not be anything useful to discover".
Your next supercar will be ugly as hitting your father with a sweaty sock, but really efficient because, as we all know, people buy supercars for their efficiency.
How much money did the people in each group have, on average, during their youth?
Otherwise they might be just testing whether richer people give a lesser value to a small amount of money than poorer people.
I'm pretty sure the average 20yo european would cheat less to get 8$ than the average south american and more than the average japanese.
Not sure if if whoosh or troll.
One day we'll know enough to build a machine that from star dust starting conditions can predict critters swimming in the sea. That's the point where we'll be able to rightfully call ourselves gods.
No bears? Then, whose arms have you the right to?
Unless you're inside a cave; both humid and dark.
This might be less-useless to maintain a small underground device, like a sensor to detect floods in a sewer system.
Here, here!
Yes. Just add more magicians.
And, as an extra bonus, for a sufficient amount of network traffic, you'd have both the analysis and the complete works of Shakespeare.
A phone or nearby computer will be hacked and the secrets will be extracted by recording with the mic the relative sounds of the typewriter keys.
I would like your opinon on the game of Go.
Where else can you build a fake submarine cave filled with cages to trap mermaids and merfolks and eventually partially drain the cave to allow your dwarves to go pick up the baby mermaids to be sold as meat and baby-mermaid-bone trinkets.
There's quite a margin between "worthwhile" and "A victory for common sense, technology, innovation - and above all, London.".
Disliking the hysteria and sensationalization of day to day legal decisions is not bitterness but maturity.
That kind of attitude will be the cause of our demise. Motivating statements are the fabric on which reposes the well being of London, and, by extension the Earth.
We were at the edge of the precipice, but this is a big step forward. A three sixty degree turn that will allow us to set foot where no one has gone before.
The hard part is always inventing the building blocks. Once you have those, there's a billions brains eager to build with whatever blocks you give them.
Actually, I may have gone too conservative there. The hard part is the prototype of the building blocks. Once the prototype works, you can release the knowledge in the human mind soup and it will reproduce and evolve on its own.
I wouldn't dare say it all rests on an idea, because I believe the ratio prototype:result to be close to 1:1 while idea:result falls way short.
Indeed! Because before patents nothing useful was ever invented.
The order is as follows:
1 - Fire making. (useless)
2 - Patents.
3 - The wheel.
The two dreams are:
- A 3D printer that takes its ink from the atmospheric carbon.
- A solar panel that produces lipids, sugars and proteins.
So... a tree.
The solution is to create a system that makes it profitable to generate a system with 0 deaths and the shortest travel times from random points A to B.
What the article speaks about is not the problem, it's the symptom. Just as giving the fines money to local governments shortens yellow lights, a system must be found that gives money to the best solution. Which should be easy, as we know how to identify the better solution among the existing ones.
So:
1 - Define rules of best solution.
2 - Give money in direct relation to proximity to best solution
3 - Wait.
UFOs, Bigfoot, Ghosts!
You would think the modern age of cameras in everyone's phones would produce evidence-a-plenty of these kinds of things.
But reality is far less interesting than we want it to be ...
No magic, no supernatural stuff --- and sadly no bigfoots or aliens that bother to come here and snatch cows.
Can I add divinities to your list? Or being invisible protects them from being proven just as fake.
In other news, a court disallows crime and corruption. The US becomes a crime free country.
Sorry, but I'm not going to get my pants in a bind about what a court "allows" the NSA to do. Taking into account that the law hasn't applied to the NSA in the past and I I know of no reason why it would start now.
It's a scandal that there are countries the NSA isn't allowed to spy on. What if the terrorists are hiding there?
"What if"! That's exactly what a terrorist would say! Terrorists are OBVIOUSLY hiding there:
A - Terrorists are hiding everywhere.
B - Countries are a place.
Ergo, by A and B, terrorists are hiding there!
This is so obvious that the only explanation that makes any sense is that the terrorists that are hiding inside the Court have make a terrorist modification of the sentence to allow this terrorist plot to go on.
Clearly none of the deer lived to tell the tale.
We should change the definition of Legal to "Backed by much money".
I get your point, but it is pretty speculative to suggest that travel faster than the speed of light will ever be possible. No physical law of nature prevented any of the advances you've quoted - they were just engineering challenges.
No current physical law. All the advances were preceded by a new understanding of how the universe worked. All the advances that will come, will also be preceded by new understandings.
I postulate that the only constant is our own ignorance. I will not argue that we may reach a point where we know everything and thus can't advance any more. I just don't believe that point exists, but I have nothing to support that belief.
Over a span of even thousands of years I'm sure we'll be impressed with what mankind achieves with engineering.
However, I don't think anybody can make any bets either way on whether there are ways to effectively travel faster than the speed of light. There may or may not be new physics out there that we can rely on. We don't get to invent the laws of nature - we can only exploit what we discover, and there may or may not be anything useful to discover.
Oh, I see we did reason in the same direction. Ok, then I agree with you in everything but the "may not be anything useful to discover".
Ok, you're right. In automobile technology, in the last century, there have been no fundamental scotsmen. ... I mean... changes.