FabSwingers.com > Forums > The Lounge > Things you don't understand?
Things you don't understand?
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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So as I don't have a bed head problem I was confused to find out that there is a Dry Shampoo product on the market!
What is this; how does this work? How many times can you dry shampoo yer barnet before it becomes a health hazard??
What else gets you furrowing yer brow and scratching your head...? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Historic Architecture.
Things like the Notre Dame Cathederal.
I just don't understand how they managed to carve the things they did out of stone with such detail given they only had basic tooling.
I am fascinated because I just simply don't know how in my head that it was possible |
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"So as I don't have a bed head problem I was confused to find out that there is a Dry Shampoo product on the market!
What is this; how does this work? How many times can you dry shampoo yer barnet before it becomes a health hazard??
What else gets you furrowing yer brow and scratching your head...?"
I have never used dry shampoo in my life. I get the feeling it would leave you itchy scalped so I can't answer your question.
I get a lot off food thoughts. Like, what the fuck goes through people's head when there's a really strong cheese and they opt to put it into their mouth. I'd rather do a bloody bushtucker trial. |
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By *mojeeCouple
over a year ago
Dunfermline |
How do they get the non stick to stick to non stick pans
How do you know you're in the 'middle' of nowhere
Where does your lap go when you stand up
What did they call fog before pea soup was invented.
Everyone knows that the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second but what's the speed of dark
I've got far too much time on my hands. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"How do they get the non stick to stick to non stick pans
How do you know you're in the 'middle' of nowhere
Where does your lap go when you stand up
What did they call fog before pea soup was invented.
Everyone knows that the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second but what's the speed of dark
I've got far too much time on my hands. "
Now those are the sort of questions that keep me up at night Thanks confucius haha |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Why is there only one Competition Commisioner?
Why is the tract of moorland north of Clitheroe called the Forest of Bowland when there's barely a tree in sight?
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"Historic Architecture.
Things like the Notre Dame Cathederal.
I just don't understand how they managed to carve the things they did out of stone with such detail given they only had basic tooling.
I am fascinated because I just simply don't know how in my head that it was possible "
Skilled craftsmen! There is a general lack of them around these days! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"How do they get the non stick to stick to non stick pans
How do you know you're in the 'middle' of nowhere
Where does your lap go when you stand up
What did they call fog before pea soup was invented.
Everyone knows that the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second but what's the speed of dark
I've got far too much time on my hands. " Same speed its always constant regardless of space time.The dark leaves the room at the same speed light enters it.
Also your always in the middle you live on a blue ball. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Historic Architecture.
Things like the Notre Dame Cathederal.
I just don't understand how they managed to carve the things they did out of stone with such detail given they only had basic tooling.
I am fascinated because I just simply don't know how in my head that it was possible
Skilled craftsmen! There is a general lack of them around these days! "
Ah, no way. Each individual block and the symmetry achieved! It's mind blowing. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Why is there only one Competition Commisioner?
Why is the tract of moorland north of Clitheroe called the Forest of Bowland when there's barely a tree in sight?
"
Once it was a forest and a royal hunting lodge... but the pendle witches got pissed off with being burned at the stake so all the tress were cut down to set fire to the witches |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Historic Architecture.
Things like the Notre Dame Cathederal.
I just don't understand how they managed to carve the things they did out of stone with such detail given they only had basic tooling.
I am fascinated because I just simply don't know how in my head that it was possible
Skilled craftsmen! There is a general lack of them around these days!
Ah, no way. Each individual block and the symmetry achieved! It's mind blowing. "
Precisely!
I'd probably believe it more if someone said Aliens built it |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"How do they get the non stick to stick to non stick pans
How do you know you're in the 'middle' of nowhere
Where does your lap go when you stand up
What did they call fog before pea soup was invented.
Everyone knows that the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second but what's the speed of dark
I've got far too much time on my hands. Same speed its always constant regardless of space time.The dark leaves the room at the same speed light enters it.
Also your always in the middle you live on a blue ball."
Unless it's a black hole which is a vacuum in which not even light escapes.
Your lap is always there. Just a different angle
I believe they called it fog. Or thick fog.
My question is when something is marketed as new improved, ultra, premium etc why does that company still sell a standard range? Surely they've just said that level is now crap. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"How do they get the non stick to stick to non stick pans
How do you know you're in the 'middle' of nowhere
Where does your lap go when you stand up
What did they call fog before pea soup was invented.
Everyone knows that the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second but what's the speed of dark
I've got far too much time on my hands. "
Love these |
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By *iffaWoman
over a year ago
wherever |
The whole space thing, like does it just never end? Just goes on and on forever? And if it does end is ther like endless nothingness after that, or if it is all a bubble, what's outside the bubble?? My head hurts |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"Think it's been on the market for a while ... seen it in the shops and even bought some just to test it out
What has?
Dry shampoo "
Tell me how you get on Jo! I'm seriously befuddled with the concept |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"The whole space thing, like does it just never end? Just goes on and on forever? And if it does end is ther like endless nothingness after that, or if it is all a bubble, what's outside the bubble?? My head hurts "
It's a right mind blower huh Tiffa! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Does anybody realise that every single day, someone in the world will have the biggest shit for that day, and won't even know it"
That's some mind blowing shit, literally. |
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"The whole space thing, like does it just never end? Just goes on and on forever? And if it does end is ther like endless nothingness after that, or if it is all a bubble, what's outside the bubble?? My head hurts "
There's not even nothing outside of space. There is no spacetime outside of the bubble. I don't get it though... |
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"Why hair seems to grow quicker on some body parts than others.
Anyone got a spare strimmer?"
Why is the hair on my head getting thinner and it's coming out of my nose and ears instead...
(MrB btw!) |
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"I have difficulty understanding why some people allow their dog to lick their face :heave:"
Some allow any dog to lick their face - both are equally yuck Imo. My friends rescue dog had only one training requirement - to stop licking! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"How do they get the non stick to stick to non stick pans
How do you know you're in the 'middle' of nowhere
Where does your lap go when you stand up
What did they call fog before pea soup was invented.
Everyone knows that the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second but what's the speed of dark
I've got far too much time on my hands. "
Why doesn't Superglue stick to the inside of the bottle?
When it rains, do sheep get heavy?
Before I bought my first cordless screwdriver, all my screwdrivers were cordless
As to the OP's question about Dry Shampoo - I've never heard of it.
Is it a liquid or a powder?
Reason I ask is that you can use Talcum powder to 'freshen up' your hair (if you haven't got time to give it a proper wash and I was therefore wondering if some bright spark is simply selling Talc relabelled as Dry shampoo |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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The box jellyfish. Hunts prey and makes decisions but doesn't have a brain, suggesting the mind either isn't resident in the brain or also exists throughout our nervous system. Our common ancestor with it has got to be some kind of primordial living gloop yet it simultaneously evolved the same type of eyes as us, suggesting there are underlying laws and rules to evolution |
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By *rozacMan
over a year ago
london |
"Why do I always think of the best comebacks at 2 in the morning a week after the conversation? "
The French call this 'l'espirit d'escalier' the spirit of the stairway, thinking of a good response too late |
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"No eyebrows. When women was them off and then paint them on again. I don't get it
Mrs SB
Ps how are you ok?
Ps FAF?
Hello stranger xx
Hola. Is that bun? How are you? Faf? It's been too long "
It's Buck. Bun is at work still. I'll pass on the faf... She'll be here in a bit x |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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The thing that mind boggles me is when I miss my junction on the motorway and come off at the next one, I get back on the motorway but I'm going the wrong way yet somehow end up going the right way. thank goodness for sat nav! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Historic Architecture.
Things like the Notre Dame Cathederal.
I just don't understand how they managed to carve the things they did out of stone with such detail given they only had basic tooling.
I am fascinated because I just simply don't know how in my head that it was possible
Skilled craftsmen! There is a general lack of them around these days!
Ah, no way. Each individual block and the symmetry achieved! It's mind blowing.
Precisely!
I'd probably believe it more if someone said Aliens built it " .
Lol it took a hundred years to build and since then has been vandalised by everybody from the Huguenots to the Nazis to the whole of France,rebuilt and remade and modernised and restored... Its a bit like Stonehenge, nearly all the stones have been uplifted and replaced, set in concrete or just fallen over themselves.
Not many things last very long without humans to constantly renovate or rebuild them I'm afraid |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"The box jellyfish. Hunts prey and makes decisions but doesn't have a brain, suggesting the mind either isn't resident in the brain or also exists throughout our nervous system. Our common ancestor with it has got to be some kind of primordial living gloop yet it simultaneously evolved the same type of eyes as us, suggesting there are underlying laws and rules to evolution " .
Der yeah.. Things with eyes tend to outlive things without eyes, having three eyes really works no better than two eyes but two eyes work alot better than one eye, having an eye that focuses is better than eye that don't.. Its not rocket science |
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"
Lol it took a hundred years to build and since then has been vandalised by everybody from the Huguenots to the Nazis to the whole of France,rebuilt and remade and modernised and restored... Its a bit like Stonehenge, nearly all the stones have been uplifted and replaced, set in concrete or just fallen over themselves.
Not many things last very long without humans to constantly renovate or rebuild them I'm afraid"
Stonehenge is even more unbelievable, 20 ton stones moved god knows how far, 1000 years BC. It would be hard enough now doing it unmechanized, with access to ropes and pulleys etc etc. These people had to survive while doing it and co-ordinate it, what maps and roads / tracks did they use?? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"The box jellyfish. Hunts prey and makes decisions but doesn't have a brain, suggesting the mind either isn't resident in the brain or also exists throughout our nervous system. Our common ancestor with it has got to be some kind of primordial living gloop yet it simultaneously evolved the same type of eyes as us, suggesting there are underlying laws and rules to evolution .
Der yeah.. Things with eyes tend to outlive things without eyes, having three eyes really works no better than two eyes but two eyes work alot better than one eye, having an eye that focuses is better than eye that don't.. Its not rocket science "
Woosh! What was that sound? Oh. It was the sound of my post flying over Sick-boy's head |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"
Lol it took a hundred years to build and since then has been vandalised by everybody from the Huguenots to the Nazis to the whole of France,rebuilt and remade and modernised and restored... Its a bit like Stonehenge, nearly all the stones have been uplifted and replaced, set in concrete or just fallen over themselves.
Not many things last very long without humans to constantly renovate or rebuild them I'm afraid
Stonehenge is even more unbelievable, 20 ton stones moved god knows how far, 1000 years BC. It would be hard enough now doing it unmechanized, with access to ropes and pulleys etc etc. These people had to survive while doing it and co-ordinate it, what maps and roads / tracks did they use??" .
Its actually thought to be 5000 years old, they use stone for stuff that they want passed down as important, there was lots of wooden structures there but obviously they don't last, so if your conveying a message to your future generations you use stone, the big ones are fairly local only about 25 miles of I remember correctly but the littler ones may have been dragged from as far away as wales.
No roads would have existed but the area is unlikely to have had much woodland on it, raising them would have been a case of simply moving shit loads of soil.
Unfortunately history that far back is never going to be definitive either way |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"No eyebrows. When women was them off and then paint them on again. I don't get it
Mrs SB
Ps how are you ok?
Ps FAF? "
No that's a mystery Mrs SB!
PS: this is a serious thread no FAFing please |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"
Lol it took a hundred years to build and since then has been vandalised by everybody from the Huguenots to the Nazis to the whole of France,rebuilt and remade and modernised and restored... Its a bit like Stonehenge, nearly all the stones have been uplifted and replaced, set in concrete or just fallen over themselves.
Not many things last very long without humans to constantly renovate or rebuild them I'm afraid
Stonehenge is even more unbelievable, 20 ton stones moved god knows how far, 1000 years BC. It would be hard enough now doing it unmechanized, with access to ropes and pulleys etc etc. These people had to survive while doing it and co-ordinate it, what maps and roads / tracks did they use??.
Its actually thought to be 5000 years old, they use stone for stuff that they want passed down as important, there was lots of wooden structures there but obviously they don't last, so if your conveying a message to your future generations you use stone, the big ones are fairly local only about 25 miles of I remember correctly but the littler ones may have been dragged from as far away as wales.
No roads would have existed but the area is unlikely to have had much woodland on it, raising them would have been a case of simply moving shit loads of soil.
Unfortunately history that far back is never going to be definitive either way "
Lol it's called prehistory for a reason |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"Historic Architecture.
Things like the Notre Dame Cathederal.
I just don't understand how they managed to carve the things they did out of stone with such detail given they only had basic tooling.
I am fascinated because I just simply don't know how in my head that it was possible
Skilled craftsmen! There is a general lack of them around these days!
Ah, no way. Each individual block and the symmetry achieved! It's mind blowing.
Precisely!
I'd probably believe it more if someone said Aliens built it .
Lol it took a hundred years to build and since then has been vandalised by everybody from the Huguenots to the Nazis to the whole of France,rebuilt and remade and modernised and restored... Its a bit like Stonehenge, nearly all the stones have been uplifted and replaced, set in concrete or just fallen over themselves.
Not many things last very long without humans to constantly renovate or rebuild them I'm afraid"
It was started in 1163 and finished essentially in 1345. So that's almost 200 hundred years.
It hasn't suffered any major damage, during WW2 it was only the stain glass windows that got damaged and that was by stray bullets. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"So as I don't have a bed head problem I was confused to find out that there is a Dry Shampoo product on the market!
What is this; how does this work? How many times can you dry shampoo yer barnet before it becomes a health hazard??
What else gets you furrowing yer brow and scratching your head...?"
Only use it once, usually to tame my wild fringe if it's gone awry plus for festivals! It absorbs grease and adds volume.
Why does mineral water which has been filtering for centuries have a best before date? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Dry shampoo comes in many different guises now as well.
Different fragrances, for different hair colours etc.
I always have a small can in my handbag and one in my toiletries box at work.
I mainly use it on the alternative days to my hair wash to give a little bit of body.
Now you wish that you hadn't asked |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Why banks and shops have posters that state:
If you are sight impaired and cannot read this information please ask a member of staff who can provide a copy in Braille.
Usually in small writing at the bottom.
This confuses me.
On a similar note, when I lived in the states, I went through a drive through bank, and the key pad I went to was in Braille.
This also confused me. |
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"When you suck in fluid through a straw then block the top of the straw, why doesn't the fluid drip out from the bottom of the straw?"
Because it would leave a vacuum at the top, the air pressure on the outside at the bottom is higher and holds it in. |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"When you suck in fluid through a straw then block the top of the straw, why doesn't the fluid drip out from the bottom of the straw?"
The air can't get in to replace the foo foo you're drinking ! Yay I knew one!! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"When you suck in fluid through a straw then block the top of the straw, why doesn't the fluid drip out from the bottom of the straw?"
Same reason why, when you bite people in the neck and suck all their blood out, it doesn't drip off your fangs.
Gripes! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"When you suck in fluid through a straw then block the top of the straw, why doesn't the fluid drip out from the bottom of the straw?
Because it would leave a vacuum at the top, the air pressure on the outside at the bottom is higher and holds it in."
That makes sense but all I can imagine now is a huge empty transparent cylinder container floating in the sky with a suction cap at the top and water floating in the sky |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"It boggles my mind that every book I have ever read is just a different combination of the same 26 letters..
Come to think of it !! "
Yikes !!! Never thought of that |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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my mind boggles at people watching other people in 'real life'...yes..big brother etc
the arguments that it's for some psychological insight into human behaviours...when in fact thats pretty much utter shite, just from the science standpoint of observation changes the behaviour of even subatomic matter. Stick people in something they know is a show and all you get is a skewed perception of their perception.
and then we have people watching other people watch shows.
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"When you suck in fluid through a straw then block the top of the straw, why doesn't the fluid drip out from the bottom of the straw?
Because it would leave a vacuum at the top, the air pressure on the outside at the bottom is higher and holds it in."
Rubbish! Semen never has any probs getting out. |
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By *yrdwomanWoman
over a year ago
Putting the 'cum' in Eboracum |
"my mind boggles at people watching other people in 'real life'...yes..big brother etc
the arguments that it's for some psychological insight into human behaviours...when in fact thats pretty much utter shite, just from the science standpoint of observation changes the behaviour of even subatomic matter. Stick people in something they know is a show and all you get is a skewed perception of their perception.
and then we have people watching other people watch shows."
My family love Gogglebox. I prefer to have a barbed wire enema than watch it. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one! "
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken. |
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken."
In a vacuum? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"my mind boggles at people watching other people in 'real life'...yes..big brother etc
the arguments that it's for some psychological insight into human behaviours...when in fact thats pretty much utter shite, just from the science standpoint of observation changes the behaviour of even subatomic matter. Stick people in something they know is a show and all you get is a skewed perception of their perception.
and then we have people watching other people watch shows.
My family love Gogglebox. I prefer to have a barbed wire enema than watch it."
when I've been forced to watch gogglebox..I just sit and dont know what the programmes are that theyre watching anyway most of the time.
As for BB..I just sit and screw my face up wondering what the fucks so interesting about self obsessed twats looking to make a name for themselves.."here you go, you were kicked out of some show..but heres a job rewarding that amazing fuckall talent you have." |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken.
In a vacuum?"
I would assume they broke it in a particle accelerator or whatever it is they use to fire subatomic particles. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken."
has it?-I'm sure if it has you would have to be an observer outside of our galaxy. its all about relativity,mass.To my understanding. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken.
has it?-I'm sure if it has you would have to be an observer outside of our galaxy. its all about relativity,mass.To my understanding."
Something to do with Quantum entanglement. Also by bending space time you could also potentially travel faster than light. |
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken."
It was cern firing neutrinos to italy, but was an error in measurement. Speed of light for objects travelling is the maximum in current understanding. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken."
Okay in a vacuum, drops to 40mph through liquid sodium?, What and how travels faster (in a vacuum?)
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Light doesn't have a consistent speed first of all.
Second of all, the speed of light has already been broken.
has it?-I'm sure if it has you would have to be an observer outside of our galaxy. its all about relativity,mass.To my understanding.
Something to do with Quantum entanglement. Also by bending space time you could also potentially travel faster than light."
this is what I mean:
https://phys.org/news/2015-10-galaxies-faster.html |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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I suppose one of my most WTF how..why..what!?!..I just cant understand is..
flat earthers..
this community of people throw everything into this flat earth theory, pretty much proclaiming a world wide deception is going on...a deception so utterly big that not even one person has came out from the deception to earn money on telling us the biggest secret in mankinds history.. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"
Why does mineral water which has been filtering for centuries have a best before date?
That's purely down to the plastic bottles they're kept in. "
Because it leaches stuff into the water? Can't be the rate it biodegrades at. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"
Why does mineral water which has been filtering for centuries have a best before date?
That's purely down to the plastic bottles they're kept in.
Because it leaches stuff into the water? Can't be the rate it biodegrades at. "
That's exactly it, and although drinking water past it's expired date won't harm you, it will have a taste to it. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"It boggles my mind that every book I have ever read is just a different combination of the same 26 letters..
Come to think of it !!
Yikes !!! Never thought of that "
I know right?! |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"The whole space thing, like does it just never end? Just goes on and on forever? And if it does end is ther like endless nothingness after that, or if it is all a bubble, what's outside the bubble?? My head hurts
There's not even nothing outside of space. There is no spacetime outside of the bubble. I don't get it though..."
Watch Family Guy "The Big Bang Theory" episode. It explains everything. |
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"If nothing can travel at the speed of light how does light, gets me that one!
Because it's the only thing that does.
It has no mass"
I thought light waves / particles did have mass but I'm wrong, they could be said to have relativistic mass but not 'real' mass. |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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"
Why does mineral water which has been filtering for centuries have a best before date?
That's purely down to the plastic bottles they're kept in.
Because it leaches stuff into the water? Can't be the rate it biodegrades at.
That's exactly it, and although drinking water past it's expired date won't harm you, it will have a taste to it. "
Well I didn't expect Fab to be so educational (beyond the bedroom at least) Thank you for that! |
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