8279 pts · June 8, 2016
Eh, it’s what breached my chuckle threshold.
Gauss’s law for gravitation: It’s true if both have spherically symmetric density distributions, which is not a far leap/approximation.
36/2.4^2=6.25g. Heavy. 124/2.4^2=21.5g. Way heavy.
Imagine hiding a body
Too big to hide
This is the best advice. Take a year for yourself. Find good friends. Find happiness you didn’t know was missing. Don’t buy a sexdoll. Heal.
For some reason, I’ve got to have it on a 2 or an 8. Specifically, 28 and 32 are hnnng for me. Idk y tho. Probably the factorization.
Trees disrupt translational invariance. No symmetry, no propagation. Power couples to vibration or is reflected.
How do you have something so relevant
Okay, neat. Only can speak from personal experiences, but as we know, anecdotes are almost worthless. Sounds terrifying to be raped on K.
I'm not saying it's true or false. But it is damn near impossible to get it up on Ketamine.
A fine petting duck
"But they did not remember" - Morgan Freeman voice
no
I remember being a broke ass kid. I would have had little to know frame of reference that this is a war crime.
underrated comment
As a physicist, I use complex numbers all day. Very useful for exactly one reason. Re[e^ix]=Cos[x]. Exponential derivatebes beat trig.
All I do is listen to his songs
Oof, that's for sure.
Practice builds intuition. But I totally relate. Teachers and syllabus can be good or bad. It's up to you to grow understanding.
I get the quotes, but the only fun one is multi because it leads to diff.geo. Physicist here, use linear algebra every day. V useful to me.
http://cdn.frustra.org/sounds/sound/vo/glados/sp_a2_column_blocker05.mp3?id=1322
Love that GlaDos quote: "you have been asleep for a while, so when you do the math this is actually pretty funny".
I haven't stopped crying since.
Parameterize the horse boundary and numerically integrate over the region
physicist?
Eh, it’s what breached my chuckle threshold.
Gauss’s law for gravitation: It’s true if both have spherically symmetric density distributions, which is not a far leap/approximation.
36/2.4^2=6.25g. Heavy. 124/2.4^2=21.5g. Way heavy.
Imagine hiding a body
Too big to hide
This is the best advice. Take a year for yourself. Find good friends. Find happiness you didn’t know was missing. Don’t buy a sexdoll. Heal.
For some reason, I’ve got to have it on a 2 or an 8. Specifically, 28 and 32 are hnnng for me. Idk y tho. Probably the factorization.
Trees disrupt translational invariance. No symmetry, no propagation. Power couples to vibration or is reflected.
How do you have something so relevant
Okay, neat. Only can speak from personal experiences, but as we know, anecdotes are almost worthless. Sounds terrifying to be raped on K.
I'm not saying it's true or false. But it is damn near impossible to get it up on Ketamine.
A fine petting duck
"But they did not remember" - Morgan Freeman voice
no
I remember being a broke ass kid. I would have had little to know frame of reference that this is a war crime.
underrated comment
As a physicist, I use complex numbers all day. Very useful for exactly one reason. Re[e^ix]=Cos[x]. Exponential derivatebes beat trig.
All I do is listen to his songs
Oof, that's for sure.
Practice builds intuition. But I totally relate. Teachers and syllabus can be good or bad. It's up to you to grow understanding.
I get the quotes, but the only fun one is multi because it leads to diff.geo. Physicist here, use linear algebra every day. V useful to me.
http://cdn.frustra.org/sounds/sound/vo/glados/sp_a2_column_blocker05.mp3?id=1322
Love that GlaDos quote: "you have been asleep for a while, so when you do the math this is actually pretty funny".
I haven't stopped crying since.
Parameterize the horse boundary and numerically integrate over the region
physicist?