Comment The AES string looks promising? Why? (Score 5, Insightful) 41
However, the "AES string" looks promising.
For the uninitiated... why?
However, the "AES string" looks promising.
For the uninitiated... why?
What's he going to get to do in 120 years that he - with all his money - can't do in 80?
Aim for digital immortality.
Not only is this a dupe, it's an out-of-date dupe:
what does this tell us about the real terrorist threat level in Europe?
Why, that government intrusion into communications is what's really stopping the terrorists, before they even get to the airport. Duh.
26 Foot Long Boat
No, it's a 26 foot long sculpture.
the next one caught on my quickly
That must've stung.
Let's say a tree is 1m direct to sun. In nighttime
Ah, but who said anything about nighttime?
Yes, but if there's a guy standing in the next half-acre, you know you're not the only person the planet.
And she gets her terms wrong.
Knowing that we are not alone in the universe would be a profound realization, and contact with an alien civilization could produce amazing technological innovations and cultural insights.
The universe includes all the galaxies. Our sun will probably burn out before we get a message from another galaxy. Stick to your own galaxy. That is difficult enough.
How has she "got her terms wrong" there? If we find out we're not alone in the galaxy, we'll also know we're not alone in the universe.
Disabled Access is a Dalek conspiracy.
What's news is that
an international team of researchers has proved
etc.
If I simply posted something controversial*, like an entire article about how "global warming is bullshit", that would get 300 comments, easily.
That's practically a tautology. Of course you'll get comments if you post something controversial, since those tend to be matters of opinion and everyone's got a different one.
If you post about something that's a plain, simple fact (such as this discovery of yet another exoplanet) there really isn't a lot of room for discussion. 300 "Yes, this is a thing that happened" comments don't contain a lot of information.
The fact that discovering exoplanets has become routine is, in and of itself, awesome, but that happened some time ago.
A tree would give more light than a torch.
How'd you work that out? Can't quite work out what you mean.
Nice bit of click-baiting, failing to mention what the innovative idea actually was:
To maintain stability during its new campaign, mission engineers turned to the sun for help, using the continuous pressure of photons from sunlight to act as a counterbalance.
Godammit.
Snape kills Dumbledore!
"Engineering without management is art." -- Jeff Johnson