The ladder was the first step on the way to civilisation.
modeler
BASIC DATA
statement? Wow you were so lucky. On my ZX81 we had to enter them as characters in a REM
statement that was the first line of code so we knew their address so that we could execute it. Address Space Layout Randomization? Couldn't work on the ZX81!
That looked like machine code on a 8-bit micro, perhaps the Commodore 64 or VIC-20 (based on the screenshot and 40x20 text). So that would be the 6502. Child's play compared to what you'd need to do on a modern chip.
You had 100% of my attention with the cat and mouse game.
History is often much more interesting looking up from the average guy than looking down with all the majesty (and bureaucracy) of the nobles. This card has great insight into the common man.
In May, Vice thinks they had 20k unsold cybers - that's 40% of the number they had sold. Amazing fail!
You're in luck!
Why would you carry an Axe over the should opposite the hand you're holding it with?
That's not an axe, it's a bindle - exactly what a fool (in french, le fou) would carry.
What is up with his pants
He's wearing medieval trousers - that is in fact two 'hose'
These trousers, which we would today call tights but which were still called hose or sometimes joined hose at the time, emerged late in the fifteenth century and were conspicuous by their open crotch which was covered by an independently fastening front panel, the codpiece.
And again le fou is so stupid, his junk is out and all over the place.
Where else could the energy go?
It could be absorbed by the material and converted to either
- a lower wavelength (i.e. uv fluorescence) or
- heat (eg black cars are hotter than white cars in the sun)
In both cases the wearer is protected from uv, but the the spf will be found to be artificially low.
Many people do not hear as they read. In fact the skill of speed-reading depends on turning the auditory experience off:
There are three types of reading:
- Subvocalization: sounding out each word internally, as reading to oneself. This is the slowest form of reading.
- Auditory reading: hearing out the read words. This is a faster process.
- Visual reading: understanding the meaning of the word, rather than sounding or hearing. This is the fastest process.
Subvocalization readers (Mental readers) generally read at approximately 250 words per minute, auditory readers at approximately 450 words per minute and visual readers at approximately 700 words per minute. Proficient readers are able to read 280–350 wpm without compromising comprehension.
That's 2376 barleycorns, or a small bag of grain if you will.
Or a barleycorn that's one barleycorn long? Or a really large foot that's a foot long. Or a chain that's a chain long?
Islam, just like Christianity, has many different groups that believe the same basic doctrine but disagree on many points. The main splits in Islam (that echo some aspects of the Catholic vs. Protestant split) as Sunni and Shia. Each divides and divides again into small communities centred on one mosque (just as, eg, Protestantism divides and divides down to individual congregations).
The big question is: how do groups of people decide which parts of the religious documents, history and practice are more relevant or even correct?
Some groups are quite 'secular' (like the Church of England) while others are quite 'fundamental', meaning that they much more strictly follow whatever the group decides are the foundation of the religion.
Is it possible to be able so say which of these groups is right? It seems to me that we have been fighting over this since before records began, so we most definitely do not have a way to do this that any majority agrees with. I don't think anyone can say:
Islamist groups purposely ... twist actual Islamic ideology while the Christian Right just doesn’t understand the religious text they claim to follow.
There's another factor - days where thr earth is orbiting faster, eg on the closer side of the ellipse - are a different length midday to midday from when we are on the far side of the ellipse.
You can convince yourself of this when you consider that the area of the arc we traverse each day is the same (Kepler's law). On the short side of our eliptical orbit, since the orbital distance is shorter, the arc must have a larger angle that we travel. That means the amount a point on the earth rotates to have the sun come back directly overhead must be different in different parts of the year.
This difference, summed day over day, results in a +/- 20 min movement of actual midday to 12pm. The 'mean' in Greenwich Mean Time refers to averaging this difference over the whole orbit.