4589 pts · December 28, 2020
I am slow apparently 🤣ntly
Yes - $19 for a movie that doesn’t have working captions out of the box
Just learned this is a thing! Thank you!!!
Thank you!! I’m taking this and the above comments and we’re going to try to rewatch it. Amazon gave us a refund and mentioned there wasn’t anything they could do to fix them since Apple provided the captions.
Thank you!!!
Wood
/a/48JNeUF
It is! Good eye!
I appreciate you teaching me!
Are they different things or same just proper grammar
Need permission for Federal and State Government as it’s a registered Historical place as well.
Thank you sweet boy
🥲 I am so envious
It’s traces to be Permian so plus 100 million!But those are those are the ones that sneak up on ya 😂
290 million years ago 😂 but now I can get my damn rocks. Mainly only a risk because of risks of deep-unstable pockets.
Oh god now I feel like I need to make a rock or cookie slide
I was in the field 😂 it’s even in the image
I love Imgur 🥲
Spot on!
We know this cause they try all the time as well to recreate and so has commercial industry (See Cybertruck; which consulted us for recs on glass/frame and promptly ignored, despite bidding the government for the know-how) and still fail
I like these questions! We do both commercial and military business and sequester our floors. Everything you see if from an approved floor.What’s cool about what we produce is that unless it’s a drawing and the exact production steps, and even if the completed items fall into enemy hands (which they have; see AGER-2) it cannot be examined without total destruction of the component parts.Which means although they’ve been taken many times in war, our tech from the 50s still hasn’t been cracked
Totally! These are all from public/commercial floors, and all info is available on our site.
The work of my grandfather! We did a retrofit in the 80s as well.
We have classified floors, where we can’t have phones or even paper out, but nothing that can’t be googled here!
We send it to the Navy Lab in Louisiana. It’s variably tested to a resistance of ~3,700 rounds of 9mm/per man/per hour.
Glass is the loss leader, it’s all the embedded technologies we use alongside it; EMP shielding, gas detection, HUD displays, and the most important element; the superstructure and frames.$70,000 for glass = $45,000 in materials + 1 week production, assembly of 1 month (mainly waiting for curing), can result in $85k in total production costs.A small window you might find on an aircraft carrier starts at $120 but more typically is in the $200 range.
^ exactly, plus to get a bid requires thousands of certifications and even more testing/verification.
Applied coating we then laminate under heat and pressure (1,000c) - cooled over a period of a week to produce a sheet with a refraction variance of less than .0001%, while reflecting other frequencies at variant angles.
It’s combined muon tomography and nucleotide tracing. We’re able to see large scale structures and trace the hydrology of the land, and at depth the movement of Magma to high degree.Right now all we’re able to discern is range and time of travel, but there are discernible influences on signals received that we’re hoping to extrapolate into a chemical analysis of these same structures.In-situ chemical analysis is the eventual goal here. Not for anything deep yet, but a start.
Also I have heard this from Nick Zentner before but didn’t know I would come this close!
I am slow apparently 🤣ntly
Yes - $19 for a movie that doesn’t have working captions out of the box
Just learned this is a thing! Thank you!!!
Thank you!! I’m taking this and the above comments and we’re going to try to rewatch it. Amazon gave us a refund and mentioned there wasn’t anything they could do to fix them since Apple provided the captions.
Thank you!!!
Wood
/a/48JNeUF
It is! Good eye!
I appreciate you teaching me!
Are they different things or same just proper grammar
Need permission for Federal and State Government as it’s a registered Historical place as well.
Thank you sweet boy
🥲 I am so envious
It’s traces to be Permian so plus 100 million!
But those are those are the ones that sneak up on ya 😂
290 million years ago 😂 but now I can get my damn rocks. Mainly only a risk because of risks of deep-unstable pockets.
Oh god now I feel like I need to make a rock or cookie slide
I was in the field 😂 it’s even in the image
I love Imgur 🥲
Spot on!
We know this cause they try all the time as well to recreate and so has commercial industry (See Cybertruck; which consulted us for recs on glass/frame and promptly ignored, despite bidding the government for the know-how) and still fail
I like these questions! We do both commercial and military business and sequester our floors. Everything you see if from an approved floor.
What’s cool about what we produce is that unless it’s a drawing and the exact production steps, and even if the completed items fall into enemy hands (which they have; see AGER-2) it cannot be examined without total destruction of the component parts.
Which means although they’ve been taken many times in war, our tech from the 50s still hasn’t been cracked
Totally! These are all from public/commercial floors, and all info is available on our site.
The work of my grandfather! We did a retrofit in the 80s as well.
We have classified floors, where we can’t have phones or even paper out, but nothing that can’t be googled here!
We send it to the Navy Lab in Louisiana.
It’s variably tested to a resistance of ~3,700 rounds of 9mm/per man/per hour.
Glass is the loss leader, it’s all the embedded technologies we use alongside it; EMP shielding, gas detection, HUD displays, and the most important element; the superstructure and frames.
$70,000 for glass = $45,000 in materials + 1 week production, assembly of 1 month (mainly waiting for curing), can result in $85k in total production costs.
A small window you might find on an aircraft carrier starts at $120 but more typically is in the $200 range.
^ exactly, plus to get a bid requires thousands of certifications and even more testing/verification.
Applied coating we then laminate under heat and pressure (1,000c) - cooled over a period of a week to produce a sheet with a refraction variance of less than .0001%, while reflecting other frequencies at variant angles.
It’s combined muon tomography and nucleotide tracing.
We’re able to see large scale structures and trace the hydrology of the land, and at depth the movement of Magma to high degree.
Right now all we’re able to discern is range and time of travel, but there are discernible influences on signals received that we’re hoping to extrapolate into a chemical analysis of these same structures.
In-situ chemical analysis is the eventual goal here. Not for anything deep yet, but a start.
Also I have heard this from Nick Zentner before but didn’t know I would come this close!