BaZmO* wrote: » This post is the 10,000th post
Deleted User wrote: » If you did Leaving Cert Physics I'm sure you'll know this but the image on our retina is upside down. Somewhere from there to the brain it gets turned upside-up.
Evade wrote: » Your brain can adapt reasonable quickly to strange vision. If you wore glasses that inverted or mirrored your vision you'd adjust to it after a few days and would be able to function normally again.
New Home wrote: » I heard someone say yesterday that the combined data collected for the photo of the black hole was too big to be transmitted by internet, and was physically brought to one place to be collated. Too big for the internet!
sunnysoutheast wrote: » It's very common practice to move very large data sets into the cloud via physical means rather than over the internet. AWS will send you out ruggedized drives if you ask for one, or even a shipping container!
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway. - Andrew S. Tanenbaum
Candie wrote: » And there's always tooth-in-eye surgery to restore sight to people who have bad surface damage or scarring to the eye. Amazing stuff altogether.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteo-odonto-keratoprosthesis
KAGY wrote: » I think it's the opposite, though we could be talking about either end of the seeing process. the eyeball can't see anything that it stationary relative to itself. but our eye compensates by being constantly in motion itself. they did an experiment where they glued a target to a contact lens and it disappeared.
Is that a thing? Up is down?
its_steve116 wrote: » The Simpsons and Family Guy are animated in South Korea.
Candie wrote: » And Christopher Lee released three metal albums between 2010 and 2014 - which included Christmas tunes such as 'Jingle Hell' - while in his 90's. His metal career was one of the last adventures of a man who's life reads like a work of fiction. He was related to Ian Fleming, who's literary superspy James Bond was rumoured to have been inspired by Lee's real-life badassery. I don't think he had a cookery show though.
mikhail wrote: » There's a story that he pulled up another actor on the LotR set to tell him that that wasn't what a man dying from being knifed sounds like, something he knew from personal experience having served in WWII. His service was varied and would make for a hell of a story by itself: he volunteered to help out in Finland, trained as a fighter pilot before an eye injury ended that, worked in RAF intelligence, fought in North Africa and Italy, and hunted war criminals (a job he was put to partly because he was fluent in French, German and Italian, among others). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Lee#Military_service_during_the_Second_World_War
New Home wrote: » ...it's always best if you sit in the front car....
Candie wrote: » Michigan State University professor emeritus David Wartinger carried out an unusual study after several patients reported passing kidney stones after riding Big Thunder Mountain in Walt Disney World. One even passed three different stones after riding a few times. Wartinger published a pilot study in the Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, and expanded on this by loading up his backpack with 3d model of a hollow bladder containing four appropriately-sized fake kidney stones and taking to the rollercoaster for 20 rides. His findings supported the results of the pilot study. In the pilot study, there was a 64% pass rate when sitting in the last car of the ride. The front car had a less impressive 16% pass rate. The expanded study saw a 70% back-car-pass-rate, and both studies had a 100% pass rate when it involved upper kidney chamber stones. Not all roller coasters are equally efficient, and other theme park rides didn't yield the same results. Prof Wartinger explains that the ideal coaster for passing kidney stones "is rough and quick with some twists and turns, but no upside down or inverted movements." So there you have it, certain rollercoasters can be an efficient way to expel kidney stones. One can only imagine how efficient they are at curing constipation.
GrumpyMe wrote: » Not for the other riders!;)
cdeb wrote: » In Life, The Universe, and Everything - the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy book dealing with the Krikkit Wars - one of the bails the evil (or misunderstood) Krikkiters need forms part of a Rory Award for Most Gratuitous Use of the Word "Fuck" in a Serious Screenplay. The American editors thought this was a little risqué for the US market, so they made Douglas Adams change that bit. He did - in the US edition, the award is for Most Gratuitous Use of the Word "Belgium" in a Serious Screenplay. Proof that mindless American censorship for the perpetually offended didn't just take root in recent years.
mikhail wrote: » One of the tv channels recently started showing Buffy the Vampire Slayer from the beginning.