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Author Topic: NASA's experiment with balls is a success  (Read 3238 times)

Blargityblarg

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Re: NASA's experiment with balls is a success
« Reply #30 on: May 09, 2011, 04:41:01 am »

I can assure you that I am not, in fact, sitting on a myth.

OH GOD THEY TOOK MY PARENTS HELP M
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Lagslayer

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Re: NASA's experiment with balls is a success
« Reply #31 on: May 09, 2011, 10:36:07 am »

Spoiler (click to show/hide)

I am challenging time travel specifically, and everything that came from it.

I am willing to accept things after they have passed my personal tests and/or is time tested. It's gotta fit into the big picture, though. A theory can explain a lot of things, but if it's explanation is in conflict with everything else, then something is wrong, weather it be the old stuff or the new stuff. Time travel doesn't look like it fits to me.

I guess I knew less about the ALICE experiments than I thought (which I admit, wasn't all that much in the first place).

PTTG??

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Re: NASA's experiment with balls is a success
« Reply #32 on: May 09, 2011, 02:27:52 pm »

Regarding questions of usefulness:

Using the far more accurate data we now have, it should now be possible to create more accurate GPS. We now can examine gravity even more precisely, possibly finding previously invisible mineral deposits. And a better understanding of gravity may help us eventually find a connection to quantum gravity, and from that we may find useful quantum-scale tools, possibly for new kinds of quantum computing and materials.

So shut up.
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RedKing

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Re: NASA's experiment with balls is a success
« Reply #33 on: May 09, 2011, 04:11:11 pm »

<snip a lot>
Australia I take as a fact, despite the fact that I've never been more westerly than Pennsylvania, USA, nor more easterly than East Germany (as was), and certainly not south of the equator.
<snip a lot more>

Bah Australia is a myth.  It's just a bunch of Brits playing a huge practical joke on the rest of the world.  Steve Erwin (sp?) was going to spill the beans and let the world know, so MI6 had to take drastic measures with an agent in a stingray costume.

*whistles innocently*

I know, right? I think they overdid it a bit, though. In their haste to ward off people who might investigate this so-called "Land Down Under" they made it sound a little over the top...I mean, dozens of species of venomous snakes *and* spiders? Huge lizards that can run on water? The platypus?? A tiny octopus that can kill a man in seconds? And the whole place is encircled at all time by ravenous sharks?

I had my suspicions when I "visited" that it was an elaborate soundstage. In fact, the top of Ayers Rock looked suspiciously similar to the supposed "lunar surface". Bet they just recycled the props from the moon landing and slapped some red paint on everything.
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Remember, knowledge is power. The power to make other people feel stupid.
Quote from: Neil DeGrasse Tyson
Science is like an inoculation against charlatans who would have you believe whatever it is they tell you.

Farmerbob

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Re: NASA's experiment with balls is a success
« Reply #34 on: May 09, 2011, 09:13:38 pm »

Regarding questions of usefulness:

Using the far more accurate data we now have, it should now be possible to create more accurate GPS. We now can examine gravity even more precisely, possibly finding previously invisible mineral deposits. And a better understanding of gravity may help us eventually find a connection to quantum gravity, and from that we may find useful quantum-scale tools, possibly for new kinds of quantum computing and materials.

So shut up.

Hrm.  This, but nicer.

For a very long time, mechanical clocks were seen to be foppish things that only the nobility or extremely wealthy merchants might have, and they served no real purpose.  Most people ran their day based on the sun, moon, stars, & weather conditions (this would include sundials)  The time of day didn't matter at all.  Over time as more and more people started using them, they realized that they could organize better, observer more accurately, and in general add more precision to their lives.

I'd be willing to bet that one might make a very good case for portable / indoor timepieces being one of the strong roots of the industrial revolution.
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(Don't attempt to answer that.  Down that path lies ... well I was going to say madness but you all run towards madness as if it was made from chocolate and puppies.  Just forget I said anything.)
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