"Different bits do matter differently. We need to ensure that we have a system that allows this to occur."
Translation:
"Different bits do matter differently. We SELL systems that allows this to occur."
> ISS-Above has an advantage or two over those apps
But the advantages it supposedly has have nothing to do with it being a dedicted piece of hardware, and could be implemented better and cheaper in an app...
"The thinking is that about 100 million years after the Big Bang, this supermassive object attracted the gas and dust that eventually became the Milky Way. But there is a problem with this theory--100 million years is not long enough for a black hole to grow so big. The alternative explanation is that Sagittarius A* is a wormhole..."
No, the widely accepted alternative (aka, the actual mainstream consensus) is that the supermassive black hole and the galaxy grew together, not that the black hole came first and was supermassive before the galaxy existed. This wormhole theory is an answer to a question no one is asking.
It's both, they radiate very slow and the CMB will be warmer than them for a long time. I just looked it up, a stellar mass black hole will take 10^67 years to evaporate. I was way off when I said trillions.:)
The cool thing is, as they get smaller, they radiate faster. So they get smaller and hotter exponentially, and finally die (in theory...) in a massive burst of gamma rays. In the last second, they emit as much energy as a 5000000 megaton nuke. Would be a hell of a show (from a safe distance).
Yes, this is completely different, but it's not exactly the black hole emitting anything. The jets are from material that hasn't fallen into the black hole yet, being accelerated along the axis of rotation by the twisted magnetic fields outside the black hole.
Well my even lower 4 digit uid says that all you need is some sort of eyeball motion tracking built in, and you can shift the image on the display in the opposite direction of the eye movement. So the image would appear in a fixed position relative to your head rather than your eye, and you can simply look to the side to read off-center test.
If a large piece breaks loose inside the net, the wind catching it at hundreds or even thousands of MPH will suddenly put a massive pull on the net. That net would then abuse the hell out of the rest of the foam on the tank. For containment like that to work it would have to cover the whole tank and not have holes like a net for wind to pass through. Think saran wrap or a giant nylon sock or something.
There are something like 70 sextillion stars out there. I'm sure for every new type of planet we find, there are trillions of examples out there. Probably thousands if not millions just within our own galaxy. The point isn't that it's a unique planet or anything, just that it's the first of it's kind that we've found. It expands our knowledge of solar system formation and will help us to find the earthlike worlds that you seem to think are the only important ones.
This is about deorbiting small debris, not whole satellites.
How would you make a list of what are supposed to be private keys?
Maybe, but kerbals don't wear parachutes.
Who said it had to be quietly?
and a lever-arm on the parachute rig to angle the capsule on the descent (not sure why, I guess for a better landing).
Wild guess: to make splashdown less impactful by avoiding a "belly flop" and hitting the water edge-first.
Unlimited data plans on cell phones are not very common these days. I think people have a right to be upset if 100M gets sent to them unexpectedly.
I'd suspect that the energy is released as a near perfect black-body spectrum.
"Different bits do matter differently. We need to ensure that we have a system that allows this to occur."
Translation:
"Different bits do matter differently. We SELL systems that allows this to occur."
> ISS-Above has an advantage or two over those apps
But the advantages it supposedly has have nothing to do with it being a dedicted piece of hardware, and could be implemented better and cheaper in an app...
"The thinking is that about 100 million years after the Big Bang, this supermassive object attracted the gas and dust that eventually became the Milky Way. But there is a problem with this theory--100 million years is not long enough for a black hole to grow so big. The alternative explanation is that Sagittarius A* is a wormhole..."
No, the widely accepted alternative (aka, the actual mainstream consensus) is that the supermassive black hole and the galaxy grew together, not that the black hole came first and was supermassive before the galaxy existed. This wormhole theory is an answer to a question no one is asking.
They said the web, not the internet.
Because it's not just about the toilet, but what happens to the waste after that. They need to extract and reuse the water...
I'm pretty sure that's exactly what they're planing, just not in suit form.
You must be new here
The idea behind steganography is not just to encrypt the data, but to hide the fact that you're sending it in the first place.
No actually a billion gigs is an exabyte. A billion terabytes would be a zettabyte.
It's both, they radiate very slow and the CMB will be warmer than them for a long time. I just looked it up, a stellar mass black hole will take 10^67 years to evaporate. I was way off when I said trillions. :)
The cool thing is, as they get smaller, they radiate faster. So they get smaller and hotter exponentially, and finally die (in theory...) in a massive burst of gamma rays. In the last second, they emit as much energy as a 5000000 megaton nuke. Would be a hell of a show (from a safe distance).
Large ones will start to evaporate... in a few trillion years once the CMB cools down enough.
Yes, this is completely different, but it's not exactly the black hole emitting anything. The jets are from material that hasn't fallen into the black hole yet, being accelerated along the axis of rotation by the twisted magnetic fields outside the black hole.
Well my even lower 4 digit uid says that all you need is some sort of eyeball motion tracking built in, and you can shift the image on the display in the opposite direction of the eye movement. So the image would appear in a fixed position relative to your head rather than your eye, and you can simply look to the side to read off-center test.
I believe this is the first sign of the apocalypse.
Wouldn't an atom with an odd number of electrons have 2 possible states?
If a large piece breaks loose inside the net, the wind catching it at hundreds or even thousands of MPH will suddenly put a massive pull on the net. That net would then abuse the hell out of the rest of the foam on the tank. For containment like that to work it would have to cover the whole tank and not have holes like a net for wind to pass through. Think saran wrap or a giant nylon sock or something.
Hundreds of others like this one, lol.
There are something like 70 sextillion stars out there. I'm sure for every new type of planet we find, there are trillions of examples out there. Probably thousands if not millions just within our own galaxy. The point isn't that it's a unique planet or anything, just that it's the first of it's kind that we've found. It expands our knowledge of solar system formation and will help us to find the earthlike worlds that you seem to think are the only important ones.
You forgot 'life, the universe, and everything', the third book.