Ho, Ho, Ho 346
neutron_p writes "Every Christmas, calculations circulate that cast doubt as to whether Santa Claus could possibly deliver gifts to all the world's good children - and still remain within the laws of physics. To deliver gifts to all who deserve them, they assert, Santa would need to move so fast that he would vaporise due to air resistance, be torn to pieces by gravitational forces or suffer other terrible fates we wouldn't wish for Santa Claus. Now a team of four top researchers looked into the case and concluded: Santa can do the job and Christmas is saved! They concluded that Santa has an ion-shield of charged particles, held together by a magnetic field to solve the heat problem and he probably travels in more than four dimensions." jgaynor writes "Inspired by an old slashdot article , I decided this year to create a 'christmas lights frontend' to our Network Management System. It came out well and has had a definite impact on response times. Videos of the results are here: WMV, AVI, REAL." Mrs. Claus writes "The NORAD Santa Tracker is up and running and ready to track the Big Guy on Christmas Eve. They've got photos of 50 years of catching Santa in the act." And if you didn't listen to the Blizzard Christmas tale we mentioned in the previous post, you're missing out.
Clones! (Score:2)
Re:Clones! (Score:2)
Re:Clones! (Score:5, Insightful)
Where do they come from? The North pole river. Yeah, that's right. Each Christmas, Santas all swim upstream until reaching the North Pole. After spawning, old Santas lay eggs to produce more Santas. Along with nutrients and materials for growth, these Santa eggs also contain toys, which are molded and shaped in the egg as part of Santa's development process.
Then on December 25th all the Santas begin swimming south in one mass migration - making a streak of red in the otherwise barren north (for this reason, the migration is often known as the yuletide).
Flying reindeer then pick up these Santas to begin the symbiotic relationship - Santas are excellent trackers, capable of finding the incredibly rare forms of food that the reindeer can eat. In exchange, the reindeer carry the Santas to the homes of humans where they can get sustenence by eating milk and cookies.
Most of the time, as a way of ensuring more milk and cookies, the Santas will leave behind their womb toys, or other ones created during the previous year. If frightened, however, the Santas will most often void their bowels, which thanks to a very efficient and unusual digestive system, contain a substance remarkably like coal.
Santa is normally referred to as "he" because it is known that all Santa individuals actually comprise a single semi-intelligent collective being whose thoughts are communicated across the globe by high energy waves, and whose name is most closely pronounced "Santa" given a palate like ours. The Santa being, however, considers this word merely as a singular pronoun.
Now you know how he does it, and what he is. Now let me tell you about the Easter Bunny...
Still up? (Score:4, Funny)
Did Santa take away your Net connection or something?
I'm pulling 115k/sec on the video downloads and 200k/sec from Blizzard's ftp site...
Re:Still up? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Still up? (Score:4, Funny)
What are they talking about? (Score:2)
Re:What are they talking about? (Score:2, Funny)
Santa's Time Machine gone wrong. (Score:2, Interesting)
Santa Bot (Score:5, Funny)
He knows when you're on the can,
He'll hunt you down and blast your ass from here to Pakistan.
You better not breathe, you better not move,
You're better off dead, I'm telling you, dude.
Santa Claus is gunning you down!
Re:Santa Bot (Score:2)
Naughty v. Nice (Score:3, Funny)
Better things to do (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Better things to do (Score:3, Insightful)
Our top physicists deserve a break, too.
Re:Better things to do (Score:2)
Re:Better things to do (Score:3, Insightful)
Merry Christmas to you, too.
Reading through all the linked stories in this article, the most amusing to me is the NORAD one. They've been doing it for half a century now, and it all started out because of a misprint in a Colorado Springs newspaper. After the first "mistake" year they took the ball and ran with it.
If the guys who were watching for Soviet missiles in a time when such things were a distinct possibility
Re:Better things to do (Score:3, Insightful)
I hear ya....especially in this time where for some reason, people seem to want to ban Xmas from public celebration...even if you aren't Christian...and you are in the US....it is a Federal holiday...go ahead and enjoy it....and spread some peace, joy and goodwill towards man...
Re:Better things to do (Score:2)
Argh! (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, I say the exception to the rule...I use the term 'magic' to explain to my parents how technology works.
Oh, and merry holidays
Re:Argh! (Score:2)
Re:Argh! (Score:2)
Just your parents? Hell I use that explination on my co-workers (:
Re:Argh! (Score:2)
Re:Argh! (Score:2)
Whether it be for land, resources, or ideals, people have always found excuses to kill each other. Religion is just the current reason of the day.
Re:Argh! (Score:3, Funny)
Now, go read the Holy Bible, Dt 13:13-17 [thebricktestament.com], lest you are not killed also.
Amen
It isn't that difficult... (Score:5, Funny)
That brings it down to like 4 or 5, so he really isn't all that rushed.
Santa really needs to consider selling that authoritative list of "naughty" girls. He could make a killing with that thing.
Re:It isn't that difficult... (Score:5, Funny)
Ever wonder why he keeps saying 'Ho ho ho' ?
Re:It isn't that difficult... (Score:5, Funny)
They're like, what? 4? 5? I can already guess what list you're on...
Re:It isn't that difficult... (Score:2)
My theory involves robots (which automatically makes it better than yours) and Microsoft's Windows.
Re:It isn't that difficult... (Score:2)
My theory involves a killer squad of ninjas, but noone believes in my theory.
I really can't see why that is. Noone ever sees a ninja, so it's really quite plausible.
Re:So that's how it works... (Score:4, Funny)
What's the deal with this Santa...? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What's the deal with this Santa...? (Score:2)
I remember seeing santa at the mall and in front of stores ringing bells and on tv when I was little. Its just obviously pretend and kids know what pretend is, they do it all day long. In fact kids get worried that their parents don't know when things are pretend.
So chill
Re:What's the deal with this Santa...? (Score:2)
No no, it's a valuable lesson, and it will come in handy when the parents attempt to instill belief in other beings - like god.
A.
Re:Christmas is big in Japan! (Score:2)
Re:What's the deal with this Santa...? (Score:2)
Re:What's the deal with this Santa...? (Score:2)
And who am I now?
Is this interesting? Sorry, I mean, this is interesting. Remember folks, always keep your passwords private.
Re:What's the deal with this Santa...? (Score:2)
Re:What's the deal with this Santa...? (Score:2)
Kids, some bad news... (Score:5, Funny)
Yep, here's a proof! (Score:2)
Re:Kids, some bad news... (Score:2)
here [userfriendly.org]
Re:Kids, some bad news... (Score:2)
http://www.ucomics.com/foxtrot/2004/12/24/
-B
Simpler explanation (Score:5, Funny)
The obligatory scrooge (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The obligatory scrooge (Score:2)
What truth?
There is no Santa. Then you will see it is not the Santa that breaks the rules of Physics, but your mind.
Re:The obligatory scrooge (Score:2)
Nondeterminism (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Nondeterminism (Score:2)
So with the quantum argument (badly mangled), Santa is a wave function that allows him to be everywhere with a certain probability, and only when you look to see if you have a present or not do you collapse the wave function to detect whether or not Santa has actually visited you.
Sonic booms, etc. (Score:2, Interesting)
The entire reindeer team will be vaporized within 4.26 thousandths of a second. Santa, meanwhile
Well... (Score:2)
Article /w pictures (Score:2)
No NORAD Santa tracker this year kids... (Score:5, Funny)
In a related filing, the ACLU and PFTAW are bringing a class-action lawsuit against Santa, citing numerous cases of unlawful entry, breaking and entering, trespassing, as well as a civil complaint alleging illegal operation of a flying craft without proper inspections, piloting without a license, and flying through restricted airspace without proper security clearance and prior authorization.
Sorry, kids, Christmas is cancelled this year, and for the forseeable future. It looks like Santa will be spending the rest of his life in the pen, making big rocks into little rocks.
Re:No NORAD Santa tracker this year kids... (Score:3, Insightful)
I had no idea there was a religion that believed in small elves forced to build millions of toys to be delivered by a fat man in a red suit driving a sleigh pulled by magic reindeer.
Re:No NORAD Santa tracker this year kids... (Score:2)
EEEEEEEEP! Gotcha on one thing... Santa already had his sleigh approved by the FAA on Dec 23. Observe:
REAGAN NATIONAL AIRPORT (AP) -- Federal
safety officials have given Santa the go-ahead to fly his sleigh on
Christmas Eve.
Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta says he knows how important the flight is to "good little girls and good little boys
all around the world."
Mineta says the government asked for
from Black Hole to Quasar (Score:2)
Santa uses Bittorrent! (Score:2)
Quantum physics, of course (Score:2)
This particularity makes possible a Quantum Physics explanation: actually Santa is very very small and travels so fast that what we have is a lot of different small Santa Claus, all of them working hard. Of course, no one can see him, the wave function does not collapse.
Beware this behaviour could be destroyed by a foolish kid, hidden in the dark, watching Santa at work. This would collapse the wave function, rendering
It is really quite simple (Score:2, Funny)
The elves spend most of the year compiling data on all children. School records, criminal records, first hand surveillance and the like. It was becoming increasingly clear that no one was being good, and Santa was losing his primary asset, that of the
The Santa Claus Icon (Score:2, Troll)
Re:The Santa Claus Icon (Score:2)
Re:The Santa Claus Icon (Score:2)
Around 400AD, Christian church officials decided to celebrate the birth of Christ. Up to this point, the main holiday was Easter. The Pope at the time picked December 25th in attempt to sponge up the pagan celebrations that occured during the winter solstice.
Christmas was initially a drunken celebration. People would go to church in the morning, then spend the day getting drunk and holding a party
What about Virginia O'Hanlon's letter? (Score:3, Informative)
The Enterprise (Score:2)
Replace Toys with Tritanium Hull and Reindeer with impluse engines and viola!
Travelling Salesman (Santa) problem (Score:2)
Santa and Provda? (Score:2)
Wow. Who would have thought trying to prove that Santa can do all that he is proported to do could rest on logical fallacies. The article looks like something that you would have found in the 1980's Pravda. But I guess this is what you get when you have to prove something. Oh well.
The answer is simpler than that... (Score:4, Funny)
By that token, his personal existance is irrelevant, as the network continues to exist and operate without the central hub.
Some unexplained questions (Score:2)
But, how the heck does he get out of the furnice, and once he gets out of the basement, why doesn't he set off my motion detectors?
XMas and Futurama (Score:2)
Fry:
[1] This is disturbing to me somehow while contributing to Slashdot.
On the subject of Santa... (Score:2)
Good stuff.
History of Claus (Score:5, Interesting)
History of Santa Claus
1689--Spanish-German explorer Santa Claus discovers the North Pole, and establishes a small base camp.
1691--Because of harsh and meager living conditions, Claus' crew abandons him.
1692--Claus is rescued by the Viking ship Hvorfor. He returns to Europe, bringing some items along with him from the North Pole. He finds he is able to sell them quite easily, making a small profit.
1703--Claus saves up enough money to buy a small ship and crew, and returns to the North Pole. Upon arriving, he finds his base camp, half-buried but still intact.
1704--Claus returns to Europe with a shipload of North Pole artifacts, and is successful in selling them. He makes enough profit to increase his crew, and buys building materials to expand his polar base.
1705--Claus returns again to the North Pole, and builds quarters for him and his crew, and sets up the Polar Exports Company.
1716--After six shiploads of exports, the European market is flooded with polar artifacts, as well as the phony ones making charlatans rich. Seeing this decline, Claus decides to invest his money by starting a toy company in his native Germany.
1720--Claus Toys becomes the largest toy company in Germany, but only because of Claus' underhanded business dealings. (It was also rumored that Claus was dealing with enemy countries as well). Competitors urged government officials to begin an investigation.
1721--Enough evidence is found, and charges are drawn up against the Claus Toys Company. Claus himself refuses to release his records.
1722--The German Supreme Court finds Claus guilty of tax evasion and of treason. When news of this breaks, Claus' employees all turn against him and his company.
1723--Claus is exiled to Sicily, and shortly before leaving, he absconds with all of the company's funds.
1724--A search party is sent to the Mediterranean to recover the funds, however, Claus hears of this ahead of time, and he and his Sicilian wife flee for their lives. (Some say he went into Northern Africa, but it is generally assumed that this was only a ruse to lure the searchers off course. He is believed to have returned to his North Pole base).
1725--Claus II is born en route to the North Pole.
1725-1734--The Claus' lay low at the North Pole. Claus teaches his son the arts of toy making and business dealings.
1735--Rumor has it that Claus has hired Scandinavian builders to construct a castle for him at the North Pole, making use of almost half of the company funds.
1739--The castle is finished, and is one of the largest in the world. Claus II reaches his fifteenth birthday, and in the same year, Claus' wife dies, accidentally falling from a balcony in one of the castle's great halls.
1740--Claus, mourning his wife, becomes increasingly ill.
1745--Santa Claus II becomes of age, and begins taking care of the castle and of his sick father.
1747--Using the remaining company funds, Claus II builds a small city around the castle to attract workers and craftsmen.
1748--Word of the North Pole settlement reaches Europe. The Elves of Eastern Europe, quickly becoming political outcasts and striving for a better life, begin immigrating in waves to the North Pole.
1753--All the elves have left Eastern Europe and have become firmly established at the North Pole. Claus II begins his father's toy company once again, with an estimated 30,000 elves employed. Claus I dies, at age 89.
1755--The North Pole officially becomes a nation, and Claus II and his wife take the throne. The toy business continues to flourish, and the elves enjoy prosperity. Claus III is born.
1757--The great stables are built, and scientists are secretly hired by Claus II to begin an ambitious
Re:Of course santa can deliver gifts to every chil (Score:3, Funny)
(f/x: shakes head in despair...)
Re:Of course santa can deliver gifts to every chil (Score:2)
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:4, Funny)
No kind, gift-giving soul would require RealPlayer to track him!
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:2)
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:2)
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:2)
People give all sorts of rationale. People can explain it away -- but in the end the practice is horrific. Lie to your kids. Be judged by everyone else if you speak the truth. I wonder what other societies had these values?
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:2)
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:5, Insightful)
Then who gets the credit? Not the parents, but a MYTHOLOGICAL man!
Not to mention the fact that it's a bit disconcerting for a child to find out that the whole thing is a big lie.
On a side note -- why do we lie to our children so much anyway? The stork? Santa Claus? These things just make reality more confusing for them. I mean, I know children need magic and mystery and all of that, but they can usually manage to find plenty on their own without being outright deceived.
Disclaimer: Not a parent, but I have a seven year old brother (I'm 21). And yes, we do the whole Santa thing with him, but that's our mom's call, not mine.
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:3, Insightful)
that's the point (Score:3, Interesting)
yes, the lesson which becomes apparent(pun intended) later is that the parents gave just to give, not to recieve anything, including praise.
who tells the stork story? I know of no one who was told that story. The only stork reference I can remember are from dumbo, and varies jokes.
"Not to mention the fact that it's a bit disconcerting for a child to find out that the whole thing is a big lie."
Not really. most children figure it out anf
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:5, Insightful)
Santa Claus is FUN! Boring ideologies aren't, and people who choose them over anything that might bring light to the hearts of children should just, then, shut up for a couple days a year. Let children beleive. It's a harmless tradition. And, I know you won't agree, but holidays are about tradition, not terrorism, coporate monopolies, unjust(or just) wars, and politicians you don't agree with. They are about being happy, making others happy, and being with your family and freinds for one calm, peaceful night of the year. I like my traditions, and am not going to let some mindless idiologues ruin them with their heady political views, or rationalism (for that fact).
Hell, if I was a purely rational individual I wouldn't even be celebrating today, I'd be at work, or something smart. I'm not a Christian, therefore the historical reason for this holiday is personally meaningless to me. But... The deeper reason is just as valid, I'm celebrating my family and freinds, my life, good food, a pretty tree, and the goodies beneath it, in this order.
It is the one bastion of sanity in this world, the holidays. Why don't you just shut up, stop thinking, and go home to whoever you love, and give them something to show you love them.
Diatribe out of the way.
Merry Xmas my fellow geeks!
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:2)
Especially this whole "Santa is as real as george washington is" arguement. It's odd since I've heard the EXACT same comparison to George Washington before. Now, of course Washington has his own mythologies but he was a real person! Santa was based on a person (I think, I might be wrong) but the myth has long forgotten whoever it was based on. It is a LIE.
Then people wonder why thier children dont trust them!!! My parents never used anything like that when I was a ch
Re:Enough with the silly. (Score:2)
Re:If NORAD (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:NORAD santa tracker (Score:2)
Re:NORAD santa tracker (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, I'm pretty sure it's all voluntary labour on behalf of the officers.
Re:NORAD santa tracker (Score:2)
Re:NORAD santa tracker (Score:5, Insightful)
The NORAD santa tracker is a complete waste of taxpayer money
For one, I doubt it costs much. For another, it's probably a great morale booster. A world run by accountants might seem cost effective in the short run, but long term nobody would want to live there and the effectivness would be lost to dismal morale.
Re:NORAD santa tracker (Score:2)
Re:Naughty / Nice List (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Naughty / Nice List (Score:2)
He simply tracks who's nice. It's a significantly shorter list, last estimate was somewhere around... 1.
Re:nit picking... (Score:2)
Re:Torrent? (Score:2)
DivX/XviD (Score:2)
Before the suprnova-collapse there were DivX or XviD-versions in good quality out there.
If you hate Quicktime and Real as much as I do, it may be wise to check your local p2p (or ftp, whatever) for something. The good versions are out there.
Not -just- western! (Score:2)
He did go to Afghanistan once, in case you forgot :)
Re:My dad's explanation... (Score:2)
Re:Santa is running windows, isn't he? (Score:2)