Yeah... but since it prints, it wouldn't look as good.
Now, if you could wire up an alphanumeric printer to detect when you write stuff like that, decode it, and print it forwards...
-- J.P.
The quantum probability of anything is both infinite and infinitessimal. Anything that can vary constantly, such as the neurons of the creator of Slashdot, has an infinite number of possible values, and there is a parallel universe for each, making the probability of any one of them tiny. But all of those depend on other events, making the probability of the others infinite.
Yeah... but since it prints, it wouldn't look as good.
Now, if you could wire up an alphanumeric printer to detect when you write stuff like that, decode it, and print it forwards...
-- J.P.
I agree... I love Thunderbird, and would hate to see the project be ignored. -- J.P.
No, it isn't. In every school I've been in, you need at least a 60 (for a D-). -- J.P.
Ansible For those of you who don't get it, it's a faster-than-light communications device from the book Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card. -- J.P.
The quantum probability of anything is both infinite and infinitessimal. Anything that can vary constantly, such as the neurons of the creator of Slashdot, has an infinite number of possible values, and there is a parallel universe for each, making the probability of any one of them tiny. But all of those depend on other events, making the probability of the others infinite.
My head hurts.