The pool depth is apparently about 3x the length of the rods, so if GP's calculation is reasonable, that's still 66 days. Some might have spilled out in the quake, but maybe there's a slow leak somewhere... Seems strange it wouldn't have been detected by now though, especially before the problems escalated.
Something serious has happened as one of them has already gone BANG, although at this point is isn't clear what caused the Big Boom or if the reactor is still in one piece...
The explosion was because of a buildup of hydrogen, and blew off some kind of outer paneling. Watching on NHK the press conference held by Edano, it seems the vessel has now (23:20 utc) been completely filled with seawater. Some people have been exposed to radiation, they apparently have some material on clothes and skin, but not enough to be a health concern. The evacuation zone does not need to be expanded at the moment.
What? "Debate being on" and results pointing both ways is a meaningless metric, there's always results pointing both ways!
The question is, how much, how strong, how reliable. I've seen this "it's still undecided"-argument used far too often by some who want to ignore studies they don't like.
That is precisely what zooming means. You'll be more interested in increasing font size, I presume. Setting minimum font size to 15 in the preferences works; more than that and some pages do start to have a little overlapping, though.
Ah, my point was that a black hole wouldn't be spread out over large distances, while dark matter would be. Except for dark matter black holes, if such things exist. AFAIR, the gravity interactions between ordinary and dark matter that I've seen described shows a spread-out cloud rather than point gravity wells.
Dark matter is not just dimly lit, it doesn't emit or interact with photons and matter at all, except through gravity (and maybe some other effects). An amount of ordinary matter spread out like a galaxy shines fairly brightly, while the same amount of dark matter would have the same mass/gravity distribution but no EM emissions.
The similar RollerMouse (a fairly old product line by now) has buttons at either end of the bar's movement slot that move the cursor at some set speed. If you hit the end, the button is pressed and the mouse cursor keeps moving. Also, pushing the bar down is the same as a left click, very nifty.
Though IANAVN, I'm not so sure. Wouldn't that mean that the apparent motion shouldn't be visible during the rocking motion? That seems so in the size-change video (even if it is the least contrasty one), but in the first one there are several groups of dots that have an apparent movement, especially the darker blue "worms". I still see that apparent motion around the donut while they're also moving for real. But most importantly, the shape-changing video doesn't seem to have any apparent motion at all while static (other than the monitor refresh), and yet the perception of change disappears.
Also, does concentrating on one group of dots really count, since you still wouldn't perceive the changes elsewhere in the donut? The participants were instructed to pay attention to all dots.
In any case, to my understanding the explanation in the paper says that the rocking motion of the dots is larger than the receptive fields of the change detectors, i.e. they move out of a field before change can be detected. Seems plausible to me.
You can make torches (with coal or redstone), you can make fires, you can get some glowing stone and place it around, you can cut a hole to the surface bringing daylight in...
Indeed. I haven't really tried the multiplayer, but the single player experience has been solid enough for selling in a shop for a while now. To me it's also the more important part of the game, the core idea, if you will.
That's a different area of security: encryption or security offered by a piece of software, as opposed to the security of the software itself, though they may be related.
Exactly. Pointing is merely a code, a visual language that has to be learned one way or another. Saying that some animals look at the finger and others don't doesn't say anything about intelligence, per se.
Strangely, I find it harder to understand but easier to write... I think it's all down to experience anyway.
The pool depth is apparently about 3x the length of the rods, so if GP's calculation is reasonable, that's still 66 days. Some might have spilled out in the quake, but maybe there's a slow leak somewhere... Seems strange it wouldn't have been detected by now though, especially before the problems escalated.
Something serious has happened as one of them has already gone BANG, although at this point is isn't clear what caused the Big Boom or if the reactor is still in one piece...
The explosion was because of a buildup of hydrogen, and blew off some kind of outer paneling. Watching on NHK the press conference held by Edano, it seems the vessel has now (23:20 utc) been completely filled with seawater. Some people have been exposed to radiation, they apparently have some material on clothes and skin, but not enough to be a health concern. The evacuation zone does not need to be expanded at the moment.
Yep, hence the baker's percentage: all the ingredients of the recipe specified as a percentage of the flour weight, including water.
Your download must be broken, it should be around 550 MB.
The "not encouraging" part seems to be regarding the "90% of desktop power" claim. Perhaps not much surprise there.
Very interesting quote, but isn't copyright about specific expressions of ideas?
Try these.
What? "Debate being on" and results pointing both ways is a meaningless metric, there's always results pointing both ways!
The question is, how much, how strong, how reliable. I've seen this "it's still undecided"-argument used far too often by some who want to ignore studies they don't like.
Ceremonial allocation of the last blocks, now a pause. There will be a press conference at 10:00 local time.
Indeed, somebody just noticed and fixed it.
It works for me..? It is terribly slow in a long thread with 1600 comments like this one though. Takes 30 seconds before the filter finishes.
That is precisely what zooming means. You'll be more interested in increasing font size, I presume. Setting minimum font size to 15 in the preferences works; more than that and some pages do start to have a little overlapping, though.
Zooming works perfectly in Opera...
Ah, my point was that a black hole wouldn't be spread out over large distances, while dark matter would be. Except for dark matter black holes, if such things exist. AFAIR, the gravity interactions between ordinary and dark matter that I've seen described shows a spread-out cloud rather than point gravity wells.
Dark matter is not just dimly lit, it doesn't emit or interact with photons and matter at all, except through gravity (and maybe some other effects). An amount of ordinary matter spread out like a galaxy shines fairly brightly, while the same amount of dark matter would have the same mass/gravity distribution but no EM emissions.
The similar RollerMouse (a fairly old product line by now) has buttons at either end of the bar's movement slot that move the cursor at some set speed. If you hit the end, the button is pressed and the mouse cursor keeps moving. Also, pushing the bar down is the same as a left click, very nifty.
Also, does concentrating on one group of dots really count, since you still wouldn't perceive the changes elsewhere in the donut? The participants were instructed to pay attention to all dots.
In any case, to my understanding the explanation in the paper says that the rocking motion of the dots is larger than the receptive fields of the change detectors, i.e. they move out of a field before change can be detected. Seems plausible to me.
I highly doubt that those sleep modes are the same. Mac hardware is not magical, so I'd assume it automatically goes into hibernation after a while.
You can make torches (with coal or redstone), you can make fires, you can get some glowing stone and place it around, you can cut a hole to the surface bringing daylight in...
Indeed. I haven't really tried the multiplayer, but the single player experience has been solid enough for selling in a shop for a while now. To me it's also the more important part of the game, the core idea, if you will.
That's a different area of security: encryption or security offered by a piece of software, as opposed to the security of the software itself, though they may be related.
You should use the component side, not the side with the joints.
To be fair, what mobile platforms aren't "one constantly evolving"?
Exactly. Pointing is merely a code, a visual language that has to be learned one way or another. Saying that some animals look at the finger and others don't doesn't say anything about intelligence, per se.