IvyTheTerrific wrote: » There is a rare mental illness called the Cotard delusion (or informally as Walking Dead Syndrome) in which the sufferer thinks they are dead. It can happen due to some sort of brain damage such as an accident or a stroke. There are successful drug treatments now, but people in the past with the syndrome have died of starvation through thinking that they don't need to eat because they are dead...
New Home wrote: » Had they spelt it "cheque" in the first place, there would have never been any misunderstanding.
Big Nasty wrote: » Ya don't say!?! :eek:
b318isp wrote: » You'd probably guess that volcanic lava is heated by pressure, but you may be surprised to know that it is substantially heated by two other major mechanisms: 1. Continuous cooling of the earth's core and mantle since the earth was formed about 4.6 billion years ago 2. Radioactive decay from naturally occurring materials such as plutonium and uranium I found it hard to think that there would be a substantial affect from billions of years of cooling, nor enough radioactive material to cause heating. However, the vast majority of the thermal energy within the earth is from these means, with a tiny amount from the sun.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geothermal_energyhttp://volcano.oregonstate.edu/how-lava-formed
KevRossi wrote: » If you lay the Burj Khalifa flat, it wouldn't fit into the Vatican City. At 828m it is taller than the highest point in 51 countries worldwide. The total floor area is about 75% of the size of the Vatican City; an independent nation.
standardg60 wrote: » Think of it this way..cooling=contraction=pressure=heat.
blastman wrote: » There are probably other airports that have this or similar, but the set-down area for departing passengers in Gdansk airport in Poland is officially labelled as "Kiss And Fly"
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Nebuchadnezzar II 634 BC - 562 BC had boanthropy - the psychological disorder where you believe you are a cow or ox.
Deebles McBeebles wrote: In Britain in the last century, it was quite acceptable for a gentleman to lose his virginity to one of London's many whore dogs. Dickens and Prince Albert both boasted of their experience.
Deebles McBeebles wrote: » In Britain in the last century, it was quite acceptable for a gentleman to lose his virginity to one of London's many whore dogs. Dickens and Prince Albert both boasted of their experience.
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » The dog feels nothing. It's made of string.
Conchir wrote: » Many people feel Christmas is too commercial these days, what with all the ads and shops staying open all hours right up to the day. However, it's not exactly a new phenomenon, at least in the US. Macy's department store in New York stayed open until midnight on Christmas Eve in 1867.
New Home wrote: » At least it wasn't password1... I can't remember if if was the Dutch or someone else, but our voting machines were scrapped also because someone managed to turn one into a videogame (or something to that effect, anyway).
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » These things only have 16KB of RAM so they weren't powerful enough for video. The Dutch researchers claimed that the Nedap "was just another computer, and that it could just as easily be programmed to play chess, or to lie about the election results." The guy selling the machines responded "And with regard to the claim that our machine can play chess: I would like to see that demonstrated” Picturehttps://frank.geekheim.de/wp-content/uploads/2006/10/580px-P1010892.jpg Full documenthttps://www.usenix.org/legacy/event/evt07/tech/full_papers/gonggrijp/gonggrijp.pdf
New Home wrote: » At least it wasn't password1...
DJIMI TRARORE wrote: » WTF,whore dogs that's a new one
SuperS54 wrote: » https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpxwI-A1-pU