- 37,488
- 14,378
You have to rock back and forth in the chair to power the machine.
It took a while (4 months) but I finally got my check for a little over $100 and deposited it yesterday.Borg said:I was reading an article about a man who collected $763,000 in missing money. I followed the links and put my name in just for the heck of it. TIL that I have over $50 in unclaimed money for a previous address that I lived at.
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wukunlin said:I didn't know the FPU (floating point unit) used to be a chip separate from the CPU. It was like an optional add-on for users doing something mathematically intensive.
jim hardy said:In 1973 our programmer (Dr Harry) complained the FPU wasn't working.
When i looked, i found that part of the board had no IC's soldered in. FPU was an option our system guys had neglected to order so Harry had to write a software one..
... and we still talk about grip in vault jumping, handball or motor racing ...Buzz Bloom said:TIL 200,000 years ago Neanderthals invented the distilling of tar to use as an adhesive.
ISamson said:Today I have learned how to analyse a film using SWAT codes and write an essay about it.
Today I have learned how to PMW on the Arduino.
cosmik debris said:PWM perhaps?
Yeah, stick with the wife... .Buzz Bloom said:Then a bit later I learned that it might not be so.
Buzz Bloom said:My wife has pointed out to me that the statistics about the number of intrinsic cancer mutations may be underestimated.
One of these mysteries in the universe: they are always right and we have absolutely no clue how they manage it.OCR said:Yeah, stick with the wife... .![]()
That's one of the major unsolved problems that is theoretical... meaning, that existing theories seem incapable of explaining a certain observed phenomenon or experimental result.fresh_42 said:One of these mysteries in the universe: they are always right and we have absolutely no clue how they manage it.
Warm weather makes it harder to think: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/warm-weather-makes-it-hard-think-straight/fresh_42 said:TIL that the long term average of IQ points (tested on Finnish recruits, and then found in the data-sets of other countries, too) has been increasing until the mid nineties and is decreasing ever since by 2 points per decade.
During my search for some quotable data (I saw it on TV, however, it was a serious channel), I found that scientists assume a correlation of those scores to the average temperature. I really wasn't expecting this as a result of CC. (The last statement is my conclusion and an exaggeration. It is not claimed by anyone. They assume a correlation based on their data of scores versus location, not CC. But a strange coincidence anyway.)