

#235377
Posted 21 October 2013 - 15:51
#235378
Posted 21 October 2013 - 16:50
Liten, on 21 October 2013 - 15:42, said:
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 14:58, said:
TheDR, on 21 October 2013 - 13:32, said:
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 13:11, said:
I misread "morally moose"


CJ, on 21 October 2013 - 13:46, said:
TheDR, on 21 October 2013 - 13:32, said:
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 13:11, said:
I misread "morally moose"

ditto

Also, poor 300 guys who can't make it :(

Liten, on 21 October 2013 - 14:37, said:
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 13:11, said:

CJ, on 21 October 2013 - 15:46, said:
General, on 21 October 2013 - 15:51, said:

The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm


#235379
#235380
Posted 21 October 2013 - 18:18

Kyle Carter said:
#235381
Posted 21 October 2013 - 18:19

F O R T H E N S

#235382
Posted 21 October 2013 - 18:41

Kyle Carter said:
#235383
Posted 21 October 2013 - 19:09
#235384
Posted 21 October 2013 - 19:25

The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm


#235386
#235387
Posted 21 October 2013 - 20:32
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 20:20, said:
http://www.bbc.co.uk...europe-24617904
You see, they are angry, it seems they have temper after all
Just imagine this somewhat gets out of control and France somewhat miraculously pre-emptively strike at USA with nukes. I bet they will surrender just right after they push that big red button and will destroy their own nuke in the air

#235388
Posted 21 October 2013 - 22:06
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm


#235389
Posted 21 October 2013 - 22:09

F O R T H E N S

#235390
Posted 21 October 2013 - 22:13
12 hit combo - 45% of life taken in damage
Edited by Chyros, 21 October 2013 - 22:14.
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm


#235391
Posted 21 October 2013 - 22:22

F O R T H E N S

#235392
Posted 22 October 2013 - 05:38
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 22:13, said:
12 hit combo - 45% of life taken in damage
*Recalls one hit kill move of Paul in Tekken*
#235393
Posted 22 October 2013 - 07:24
General, on 22 October 2013 - 05:38, said:
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 22:13, said:
12 hit combo - 45% of life taken in damage
*Recalls one hit kill move of Paul in Tekken*
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm


#235394
Posted 22 October 2013 - 07:27
Chyros, on 22 October 2013 - 07:24, said:
General, on 22 October 2013 - 05:38, said:
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 22:13, said:
12 hit combo - 45% of life taken in damage
*Recalls one hit kill move of Paul in Tekken*
Well it was a decade or so ago

#235395
Posted 22 October 2013 - 07:31
Chyros, on 21 October 2013 - 22:13, said:
12 hit combo - 45% of life taken in damage


Kyle Carter said:
#235396
Posted 22 October 2013 - 08:50
CJ, on 21 October 2013 - 15:46, said:
4.54 billion years ago, our Solar System formed within a cloud of hydrogen not unlike the Orion Nebula, or the Eagle Nebula, with its awesome pillars of creation.
Then, it took some kick, like from the shockwave from a nearby supernova, and this set a region of the cold gas falling inward through its mutual gravity. As it collapsed, the cloud began to spin.
Think about the individual atoms in the cloud of hydrogen. Each particle has its own momentum as it drifts through the void. As these atoms glom onto one another with gravity, they need to average out their momentum. It might be possible to average out perfectly to zero, but it’s really really unlikely.
Which means, there will be some left over. Like a figure skater pulling in her arms to spin more rapidly, the collapsing proto-Solar System with its averaged out particle momentum began to spin faster and faster.
This is the conservation of angular momentum at work.
As the Solar System spun more rapidly, it flattened out into a disk with a bulge in the middle. We see this same structure throughout the Universe: the shape of galaxies, around rapidly spinning black holes, and we even see it in pizza restaurants.
The Sun formed from the bulge at the center of this disk, and the planets formed further out. They inherited their rotation from the overall movement of the Solar System itself.
Over the course of a few hundred million years, all of the material in the Solar System gathered together into planets, asteroids, moons and comets. Then the powerful radiation and solar winds from the young Sun cleared out everything that was left over.
Without any unbalanced forces acting on them, the inertia of the Sun and the planets have kept them spinning for billions of years.
And they’ll continue to do so until they collide with some object, billions or even trillions of years in the future.
So are you still wondering, why does the Earth spin?
The Earth spins because it formed in the accretion disk of a cloud of hydrogen that collapsed down from mutual gravity and needed to conserve its angular momentum. It continues to spin because of inertia.
The reason it’s all the same direction is because they all formed together in the same Solar Nebula, billions of years ago.
TL:DR - you're drunk
#235397
Posted 22 October 2013 - 09:29
Sareen said:
#235398
Posted 22 October 2013 - 09:45
Wizard, on 22 October 2013 - 08:50, said:
CJ, on 21 October 2013 - 15:46, said:
4.54 billion years ago, our Solar System formed within a cloud of hydrogen not unlike the Orion Nebula, or the Eagle Nebula, with its awesome pillars of creation.
Then, it took some kick, like from the shockwave from a nearby supernova, and this set a region of the cold gas falling inward through its mutual gravity. As it collapsed, the cloud began to spin.
Think about the individual atoms in the cloud of hydrogen. Each particle has its own momentum as it drifts through the void. As these atoms glom onto one another with gravity, they need to average out their momentum. It might be possible to average out perfectly to zero, but it’s really really unlikely.
Which means, there will be some left over. Like a figure skater pulling in her arms to spin more rapidly, the collapsing proto-Solar System with its averaged out particle momentum began to spin faster and faster.
This is the conservation of angular momentum at work.
As the Solar System spun more rapidly, it flattened out into a disk with a bulge in the middle. We see this same structure throughout the Universe: the shape of galaxies, around rapidly spinning black holes, and we even see it in pizza restaurants.
The Sun formed from the bulge at the center of this disk, and the planets formed further out. They inherited their rotation from the overall movement of the Solar System itself.
Over the course of a few hundred million years, all of the material in the Solar System gathered together into planets, asteroids, moons and comets. Then the powerful radiation and solar winds from the young Sun cleared out everything that was left over.
Without any unbalanced forces acting on them, the inertia of the Sun and the planets have kept them spinning for billions of years.
And they’ll continue to do so until they collide with some object, billions or even trillions of years in the future.
So are you still wondering, why does the Earth spin?
The Earth spins because it formed in the accretion disk of a cloud of hydrogen that collapsed down from mutual gravity and needed to conserve its angular momentum. It continues to spin because of inertia.
The reason it’s all the same direction is because they all formed together in the same Solar Nebula, billions of years ago.
TL:DR - you're drunk

Edited by General, 22 October 2013 - 09:46.
#235399
#235400
Posted 22 October 2013 - 09:56
CJ, on 22 October 2013 - 09:47, said:
Your question was posed in the present tense. Therefore the answer was you drunk at the time.
Had you asked "why was the world spinning?, then your answer would have been acceptable.

Finish the rest of the bottle?
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