Comment Re: What did you expect.. (Score 1) 144
Recent prank:
"What happens when you serve Mc Donald's food to some experts and pretend it's a new organic meal?"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Recent prank:
"What happens when you serve Mc Donald's food to some experts and pretend it's a new organic meal?"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Same experience for me with Borderlands 2. Linux version drops FPS a bit at some points but it has never frozen entirely as I saw happen on Win 7.
Wikipedia's webmail list:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
https://safe-mail.net/ isn't on that list but is worth mentioning.
Opera uses Blink just as Chrome does.
On 12 February 2013, Opera announced it would drop its own Presto engine in favour of WebKit as implemented by Google's Chrome browser, using code from the Chromium project. Opera Software also planned to contribute code to WebKit. On 3 April 2013, Google announced that it would fork components from WebKit to form a new rendering engine known as Blink; the same day, Opera confirmed that it would follow Google in implementing Blink.
Pre-Pentium IV hardware is useless for desktop usage today when considering the requirement of the modern web. Additionally, very old hardware is often weaker than you might expect on Linux because the graphics drivers are hacked together. Pre-open source Intel drivers really blow on Linux.
Every pre-Core destkop should be retired at this point. Early Core computer can be found for literally free on Craigslist.
ugh... "without butchering"
Most websites allow one to copy/paste text with butchering, but Slashdot is not such a site. Negative sign was removed from the 238 C figure.
A quasi-moon is more like an object trapped in an orbital resonance
And are you still pining for 9 planets? Forget about Pluto, there's much more interesting possibilities out there!
What we learned in elementary school is not the be-all, end-all of information.
Quote triple play.
It can be either all dark or all light at certain locations...
The Moon's axial tilt with respect to the ecliptic is only 1.5424 degrees, much less than the 23.44 degrees of Earth. Because of this, the Moon's solar illumination varies much less with season, and topographical details play a crucial role in seasonal effects. From images taken by Clementine in 1994, it appears that four mountainous regions on the rim of Peary crater at the Moon's north pole may remain illuminated for the entire lunar day, creating peaks of eternal light. No such regions exist at the south pole. Similarly, there are places that remain in permanent shadow at the bottoms of many polar craters, and these dark craters are extremely cold: Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter measured the lowest summer temperatures in craters at the southern pole at 35 K (238 C) and just 26 K close to the winter solstice in north polar Hermite Crater. This is the coldest temperature in the Solar System ever measured by a spacecraft, colder even than the surface of Pluto.
I am intrigued by your ideas and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
Moons of planetary moons would be subject to tidal forces that would cause their orbits to decay over time periods that are short by astronomical standards.
Even just considering the Solar System we can already foresee some hard time limits. Many people might point to the Sun going red giant in ~4.5 billion years as a limit, but the Sun's energy output increases over time even while it is on the main sequence and within a billion years will likely already be enough to boil the Earth's oceans. The time of life on Earth is already mostly past to the best of our knowledge.
A billion years is of course an extremely long time in the context of human evolution, so who knows what we might be able to accomplish in that timespan.
Titan is tidally locked to Saturn and does not experience tides like Earth's. Liquid bodies there would only be disturbed by weather or tectonics AFAIK.
No need to Pan his finely tuned sense of humor!
Humans have much lower genetic diversity than any of our fellow great apes, despite having a far larger population count.
This could be evidence for a population bottleneck in our past. We already seem to be relatively inbred as a species.
"If I do not want others to quote me, I do not speak." -- Phil Wayne