|
we will be occupying redwood and acacia forests and communicate via postcards with ambiguously scaled objects. our flapjack budget is through the goddamn roof
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 05:54 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:34 |
|
ox dye? don't get me started. it's basically the same thing as foxdie though so it was already around
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 05:54 |
|
muike posted:if you made an ak47 like 8 times bigger would it still work an ak47 8 times bigger would be an ak376 dumbass
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 06:01 |
|
*dramatically slams arms down on table full of blueprints and rotates at the torso*
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 06:03 |
|
muike posted:no i meant the first one thusly with the first problem. i'm trying to make an army of paul bunyans, but axes aren't cutting it Since fishmech couldn't be bothered to link the proper wikipedia page here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square-cube_law#Biomechanics Guns are people too. tl;dr posted:It helps explain phenomena including why large mammals like elephants have a harder time cooling themselves than small ones like mice, and why building taller and taller skyscrapers is increasingly difficult.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 06:14 |
|
the ak47 is one of those things that i imagined could break the unbreakable and do the impossible and break the square cube law by sheer eternal essence
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 06:16 |
|
muike posted:the ak47 is one of those things that i imagined could break the unbreakable and do the impossible and break the square cube law by sheer eternal essence That seems reasonable. Perhaps design one that can be used by someone with no hands. It would be very disruptive.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 06:20 |
|
why would you want an ak47 that's 8 times bigger, you just know someone would come along with a 9 times bigger ak47
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 06:28 |
|
This reminds me of the Xenonauts fluff regarding coilguns: Make a bullet fling fast enough (and made of such material that it doesn't lose integrity) and it'll cause a fairly large explosion on exit from the barrel as the very air reacts to the sheer friction, causing a significant amount of damage to whoever fired the gun. What I'm saying is, that would be a great prank. WarpedNaba fucked around with this message at 07:51 on Apr 2, 2015 |
# ? Apr 2, 2015 07:49 |
|
muike posted:if you made an ak47 like 8 times bigger would it still work Because nobody has ever really expressed a desire for a 61mm assault rifle.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 10:22 |
|
tuyop posted:Why did Google create different webapps and apps for sheets, docs, etc? What utility are people getting out of having all their docs in one view, decontextualized from folders? Have you never seen Gmail? Google left folders for the easier to search/remember semantic organization known as labels. It is easier to label a budget file with "accounting, budgets, 2015, cfo, purple monkey dishwasher" than create dynamic links for all of those folders. Folders are an artifact of computers that had limited file name length and time expensive searching.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 13:02 |
XmasGiftFromWife posted:Have you never seen Gmail? Well, and also filing cabinets. But still, am I expected to search for every doc I want to open? That's a bit more of a pain than just browsing to a folder that I created to hold and facilitate recall of related items and clicking on them in sequence.
|
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 13:17 |
|
Nintendo Kid posted:Owning the stock is owning the company, so yes it goes to the stockholders. Typically a lot of the people who run the company also hold large share of it though. So if all that changes is the type and amount of stock a shareholder owns, then ... is any money actually changing hands in a "$25 billion" merger? Is it all just shuffling pieces on a game board?
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 13:34 |
|
Golbez posted:Is it all just shuffling pieces on a game board? This is what accounting is.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 13:39 |
|
tuyop posted:Well, and also filing cabinets. If you go to drive.Google.com you can create folders, browse your documents in one place, etc.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 13:59 |
|
tuyop posted:Well, and also filing cabinets. Or just label your files with whatever you would have named the folder?
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 14:47 |
Penguissimo posted:If you go to drive.Google.com you can create folders, browse your documents in one place, etc. Of course, that's how I work now. It just sucks that the button in the top left is no longer "back to drive" but this docs/slides/sheets nonsense. XmasGiftFromWife posted:Or just label your files with whatever you would have named the folder? That would work if I didn't also use it as a synced folder outside of the drive.
|
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 15:02 |
|
XmasGiftFromWife posted:Have you never seen Gmail? Gmail pisses me off because they want to work in their own special way and if you don't like it, tough. Using IMAP on Outlook and the android app seems to result in emails that I know are there, not being visible as it likes to be clever and move them around.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 16:54 |
|
Golbez posted:So if all that changes is the type and amount of stock a shareholder owns, then ... is any money actually changing hands in a "$25 billion" merger? Is it all just shuffling pieces on a game board? Possibly? Let's say you as a higher up in Compaq own 1000 shares of Compaq stock, now that gets converted to HP stock at roughly 65%. So now you own 650 shares of HP stock. Which is good for you, because the Compaq stock is now effectively worthless. But, if you didn't want to be a part of this anymore, you could - in theory - sell off your new HP stock. You could sell it back to HP and negotiate a price, but it would not be any more than they would pay to anyone else for shares. In fact, it would technically be worth slightly less today that it would last week because now the whole pie has been cut into even more pieces. So if all HP stock was worth $10B yesterday, spread among 1 Million shares, and now that $10B is split into 2 Million shares today, it would cut the value of each share in half.So your 650 shares would have been worth $10,000 each before the merger and now are only worth $5,000 each. It's not that drastic in real life, but this is just an example. There's more math to it than that because obtaining all the Compaq stuff increases the net worth of HP by a fair bit, and no company would cut its own stock value in half under normal circumstances, but mergers make people antsy and a lot of people probably jumped ship before the merger...I honestly don't understand it very well myself. TL:DR It's pieces on a game board for anyone on the outside looking in, but that's not to say that no money exchanged hands. This is what the two companies agreed to and have made public. If some Compaq senior manager sold off all of his stock and got a fat paycheck out of it we'd probably never hear about it.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 17:01 |
|
Does anyone know of a simple graph-theory type graph maker? Online would be nice, but a download's fine. I had the most success with this, but I'd prefer a white background, and paint bucketing the background in Paint.net results in a bit of a mess since the nodes aren't outlined. I also tried Gephi, but it got a bit of the way through the splash screen and then just died.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 17:35 |
|
Golbez posted:So if all that changes is the type and amount of stock a shareholder owns, then ... is any money actually changing hands in a "$25 billion" merger? Is it all just shuffling pieces on a game board? Effectively yes, just shuffling the pieces. Since what was done was combine the one pool of shares of HP and the other pool of shares of Compaq using some of HP's money. No major transfer of money is realized for any of the shareholders unless they sell their shares. This is the result of a "non-hostile" takeover, where in a "hostile" takeover, the party aiming to merge goes out and buys up most of the stock directly (thus giving money to former stockholders) and then uses their newfound control of a majority of voting shares to order the merger from the target. In cases like that, those willing to sell their shares will certainly get money. CzarChasm posted:
No, this isn't true, the new stock is issued using the value of Compaq's existing stock. The price of a single share of HP stock barely fluctuated during the changeover process
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 17:49 |
|
CzarChasm posted:
Except for that little crime known as insider trading? Which is investigated and prosecuted by the SEC? Not sure why you're responding to questions you don't know the answers to.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 17:54 |
|
El_Elegante posted:Except for that little crime known as insider trading? Which is investigated and prosecuted by the SEC? Not sure why you're responding to questions you don't know the answers to. Uh, what would be insider trading about that? The merger was reported on a good 8 months before the completion of the transaction. A Compaq senior manager selling off his stock wouldn't be up to anything the SEC would judge to be insider trading, especially if he expected to be laid off due to redundancy.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 18:01 |
|
El_Elegante posted:Except for that little crime known as insider trading? Which is investigated and prosecuted by the SEC? Not sure why you're responding to questions you don't know the answers to. It's adorable that you think that. Immediately before any major announcement regarding a company, the trade volume of the stock generally dectuples. Insider trading isn't a crime, it's business as loving usual.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 18:40 |
|
Thanatosian posted:Ahahahahahahahahahahahahahah! https://www.sec.gov/spotlight/insidertrading/cases.shtml Ctrl+f, "merger". I should have made the distinction between public and non-public negotiations. Trading after negotiations have been made public doesn't meet the definition of insider trading. Since the market has presumably priced that information in, it's also not going to give a fat payoff.
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 18:53 |
hooah posted:Does anyone know of a simple graph-theory type graph maker? Online would be nice, but a download's fine. I had the most success with this, but I'd prefer a white background, and paint bucketing the background in Paint.net results in a bit of a mess since the nodes aren't outlined. I also tried Gephi, but it got a bit of the way through the splash screen and then just died. Check out lucidchart. Free accounts are limited to 60 objects per graph though.
|
|
# ? Apr 2, 2015 19:15 |
|
tuyop posted:Check out lucidchart. Free accounts are limited to 60 objects per graph though. Thanks, that worked well. I've read that it's bad for a laptop's battery to leave it plugged in all the time. If this was indeed true, is it still the case? It seems that phone batteries are intended to be able to take this sort of use (most people probably charge them overnight, and it doesn't take 8 hours to charge a phone), so it seems that that resiliency would be in all consumer rechargeable batteries by now.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 14:02 |
|
I've recently taken up indoor climbing. To do the higher walls, I have a buddy who assists from the ground with a belay device. He is much lighter than me and consequently struggles when trying to lower me. If I slip, I can literally lift the poor guy off the ground. He wonders if he should wear weights in order to hold him down. Do such things exist?
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 14:42 |
|
Baron Bifford posted:I've recently taken up indoor climbing. To do the higher walls, I have a buddy who assists from the ground with a belay device. He is much lighter than me and consequently struggles when trying to lower me. If I slip, I can literally lift the poor guy off the ground. He wonders if he should wear weights in order to hold him down. Do such things exist? Have him fill his pockets with pennies. The weight should keep him down. But if he should still rise into the air you can have kids hit him with a bat like a Pinata. Candy may work too but probably ways less.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 14:47 |
|
Baron Bifford posted:I've recently taken up indoor climbing. To do the higher walls, I have a buddy who assists from the ground with a belay device. He is much lighter than me and consequently struggles when trying to lower me. If I slip, I can literally lift the poor guy off the ground. He wonders if he should wear weights in order to hold him down. Do such things exist? The actual solution is to anchor himself to the ground. This may not be possible in a gym setting, but I have done this outside many times.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 14:56 |
|
I've heard of weighted vests that bodybuilders and crossfit enthusiasts use. What do you think of them?
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 14:57 |
|
Baron Bifford posted:I've recently taken up indoor climbing. To do the higher walls, I have a buddy who assists from the ground with a belay device. He is much lighter than me and consequently struggles when trying to lower me. If I slip, I can literally lift the poor guy off the ground. He wonders if he should wear weights in order to hold him down. Do such things exist? I have idea because I'm not a climber but if it doesn't interfere with the rope path and belay mechanism a backpack full of weight plates, sand, or gravel, maybe in trash bags or whatever to contain the mess may work. Ski boots and bindings screwed to the floor would be hilarious as well.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 14:58 |
hooah posted:Thanks, that worked well. This is true. Charge amount and discharge depth are very important for lithium-ion battery life. Tl;dr: Keep a battery's charge close to 50% for as much of its life as possible, avoid charging over 80% and discharging below 20%. It's also true that it's 2015 and you're probably going to replace your device before your battery sees significant wear regardless of your charging habits. If sperging about your battery life brings you peace then go hog wild. If you're just wondering if it's something you have to worry about, the answer is no unless you're an edge case, enjoy your life.
|
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 15:59 |
|
uwaeve posted:a backpack full of weight plates, 'Twas to be my suggestion. A couple plates in a backpack should do it. A packback with the thing that fastens across the chest would be best.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 15:59 |
Baron Bifford posted:I've heard of weighted vests that bodybuilders and crossfit enthusiasts use. What do you think of them? I think if you use that poo poo while just starting climbing or running, you're cruising for a wicked case of tendinitis and a possible pulley injury in climbing (speaking from experience here). If you're approaching an advanced level of fitness in your sport, you'll know it and have a community of people who can provide advice on this stuff. Run with weight if you have a need to perform well when running with weight, like if you're in law enforcement or the military. I did a bit of research on this awhile ago when I was in the military and the general consensus was that weighted running has some benefits that carry over to non-weighted running, but it dramatically increases the chance of horrible injuries like plantar fasciitis.
|
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 16:09 |
|
Human body is adaptive; run a lot with a weighted vest and you will become good at running while weighed down. It will definitely improve your normal running but that is more of a secondary thing and not so much as you'd think. If you want to get better at running longer and/or faster you will simply have to run longer and/or faster. By the same logic the world's best bench presser isn't automatically the world champion in pushups.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 16:18 |
|
I'm presuming the weight would only be worn by Bifford's friend while he's belaying; I don't think anyone's saying either of them should wear it while climbing.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 16:22 |
Namarrgon posted:Human body is adaptive; run a lot with a weighted vest and you will become good at running while weighed down. It will definitely improve your normal running but that is more of a secondary thing and not so much as you'd think. If you want to get better at running longer and/or faster you will simply have to run longer and/or faster. By the same logic the world's best bench presser isn't automatically the world champion in pushups. Yup, specific adaptation to imposed demands (SAID). If you tan fifteen minutes a day, you get exactly as tanned as you need to be to avoid damage from exposure to fifteen minutes of sunlight. This is also why a fitness program needs some plan for progression in intensity. Most men's health bullshit plans don't have this, so people fail to improve on them.
|
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 16:23 |
|
Namarrgon posted:Human body is adaptive; run a lot with a weighted vest and you will become good at running while weighed down. It will definitely improve your normal running but that is more of a secondary thing and not so much as you'd think. If you want to get better at running longer and/or faster you will simply have to run longer and/or faster. By the same logic the world's best bench presser isn't automatically the world champion in pushups. What? Goku lied to me...
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 16:28 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:34 |
|
hooah posted:Thanks, that worked well. We're talking much longer periods of time before damage to your battery can occur. You should unplug and discharge your laptop battery at least once a month. Overnight charges won't harm your battery. We had several test laptops at work that went years without being unplugged. Most of them either have swelled or dead batteries at this point.
|
# ? Apr 3, 2015 16:58 |