Kolanaki,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

If you try to use the god mode code from Doom in Heretic, it kills you and tells you not to cheat.

HonoraryMancunian,

IDDQD

Forever remember it

CADmonkey,

I think the 2nd Descent game worked in a similar fashion. Entering a cheat code from the first Descent game would reduce you to 1% shields and health.

uriel238, (edited )
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

The solar system is 99.98% 99.86% (see thread) sun. The rest is comparable to a blood draw from a human.

The earth is a blood smear on a slide.

ook_the_librarian, (edited )
@ook_the_librarian@lemmy.world avatar

The sun is about 1000 times the mass of Jupiter. You’re off a decimal place.

Edit: That in and of itself is a quotable fact. The real number rounds to 1053. So it’s about 5% off. It’s a meaningless coincidence.

Better ones include that our moon can produce both total and annular eclipses, and (geometrically) all the other planets fit between the earth and moon, but not by much.

uriel238, (edited )
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Not a decimal place, a tenth of a percent. The sun is 99.86% of the solar system.

Wikipedia has a fine pie chart featuring Jupiter and Saturn (which is 90% of the Solar System mass not in the sun)

0.14% of a 90KG human is still only 126ml so still about a blood draw.

ook_the_librarian, (edited )
@ook_the_librarian@lemmy.world avatar

The proportion is about 0.998, and the parent post had it at 0.9998. You move the decimal point by adding 9s. There was one too many. It was off by a decimal place.

Whether you would call that “off by decimal place” or not, it is certainly larger than being off by “a tenth of a percent”. That would mean the error bars of number 0.9998 ± 10% [edit: oops, did i miss a decimal place there. i’ll leave it] would just close the gap.

I like the proportion of the smear, aka, the whole point of your post. I never heard it in those terms. It reminds me of the one where if the earth were a basketball, the moon would be a tennis ball about 9 feet away. I’ll calc out the percent errors if anyone cares.

uriel238,
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Eh. It’s fixed now. I appreciate the data correction regardless.

ook_the_librarian,
@ook_the_librarian@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, come to think of it, “moving the decimal” is wrong too. There must be a term for moving the decimal in the “one minus x” complement.

rainerloeten, (edited )
@rainerloeten@lemmy.world avatar

Dolphines are whales. People keep doubting me, whenever I bring that up :D

spittingimage,
@spittingimage@lemmy.world avatar

Aren’t dolphins, whales and orcas all part of the cetacean group?

meekah,
@meekah@lemmy.world avatar

Why do people keep doubting you?! They are the exact same but a little bit smaller. Nobody bats an eye when we say that lions and tigers are cats… people are dumb.

Fedizen,

While the US uses the imperial system for most things the pharma/medical industries use the metric system

CADmonkey,

As does the auto industry, aerospace…

Outside of construction and plumbing plenty of stuff is metric here. Even our weird imperial units are based on metric units.

Rosco,

Octopi have three hearts

ThePowerOfGeek,
@ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world avatar

Don’t they also have nine brains (one little one in each tentacle, and a larger central brain)?

meekah, (edited )
@meekah@lemmy.world avatar

My understanding is that it’s not that simple. By your logic, humans also have several brains. for example, your spine is doing some processing on the signals from your limbs. it’s how that reflex works when the doctor hits your knee with a hammer. the signal travels to your spine, the spine recognizes some pattern, and returns a signal to jerk your leg. the signal doesn’t need to reach your head to trigger the reflex. basically, your whole nervous system is the brain, it’s just that the vast majority of your nervous system is inside your head.

it’s the same for octopi, but much more extreme. I think they have like 50% of their nervous system in their ‘brain’, and the rest is distributed across their tentacles.

feel free to correct me, I wrote this entirely based on my memory so I might be off.

theneverfox,
@theneverfox@pawb.social avatar

This is one of those complex topics that we don’t truly understand well yet

We’ve called them a distributed intelligence, because they do basically have a core brain and auxillary brains - but is there really any other kind?

It seems to be to be something like their core brain is in control, and the auxiliary brains are a combination motor cortex/occipital lobe (vision is our primary sense, but even though their eyes are better they have taste+smell+touch+em sense? All over their tentacles).

Conversely, we also have a brain worth of neurons in our gut and a lot of capacity to learn reactions at the spinal cord. Our brains could also be described as several brains clumped together… Personally, my fingers know a ton of things I don’t know consciously.

We also have the capacity to “run” two human level intelligences - server the link between the hemispheres and you can get an auxiliary person who can have different opinions, understand language independently, and even communicate separately through writing

We really don’t know how brains work, they’re black boxes to us. We know that “if I destroy this region, it will impact that capability”, but in a more fundamental sense? We’ve barely scratched the surface

ThePowerOfGeek,
@ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world avatar

The Moon is moving away from the Earth by approximately one inch per year. Which also means that millions of years ago it was much bigger in our sky.

PlutoniumAcid,
@PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world avatar

I believe it’s closer to 1,5cm per year.

And if you reverse extrapolate that some 65 million years, you’ll see that the real reason why the dinosaurs ied out was because they all got hit in the head with moon!

crystalmerchant,

If this is true, then 97.5 million cm = ~600 miles. Or, 0.25% of the distance to the moon…a small difference.

PlutoniumAcid,
@PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world avatar

It’s not funny anymore if you prove me wrong by math :-)

AmosBurton_ThatGuy,
@AmosBurton_ThatGuy@lemmy.ca avatar

To add to this, the sun will expand into a red giant in approximately 5 billion years, which is likely to consume both Earth and the Moon. This will happen before the Moon is able to leave Earth’s orbit, so it’ll shrink in the sky but odds are it won’t leave the Earth’s orbit before both are destroyed by the expanding sun in the future.

On top of that, the sun is slowly getting hotter as it gets older, so in approximately 1 billion years, the sun will have gotten hot enough to render most, if not all of the Earth uninhabitable for life as we know it.

Space is fascinating.

meekah,
@meekah@lemmy.world avatar

aha, I knew it! climate change is a hoax! the sun is just getting hotter, it’s all natural! /s

ouRKaoS,

So, possibly stupid question:

Will the sun’s gravity change as it expands, pulling things out of current orbits, or will it just change in size & not in mass?

AmosBurton_ThatGuy,
@AmosBurton_ThatGuy@lemmy.ca avatar

Great question!

No, the Sun’s diameter will expand greatly but it’s mass will remain mostly the same, if anything it’ll be ejecting significant amounts of stellar matter when it turns into a red giant and will be losing mass.

Mass is what dictates the gravity of a given object. If you replaced the sun with a black hole of the exact same mass, everything in the solar system would retain its exact same orbit outside of those few unfortunate objects that were very close to the sun (much closer than Mercury) when it got swapped out for a black hole of the same mass.

So even though the Sun will eventually swell up into a red giant and eat most, if not all of the inner planets, it’s gravity will remain the same despite its massively increased diameter, and its gravity will get weaker as the red giant ejects stellar matter over its relatively quick life. Eventually it’ll eject its outer layers, creating a new nebula thanks to the star ejecting all of its outer layers and leaving behind the dead core of a star called a white dwarf. These dead stars are often similar in size to the Earth but typically have a mass close to that of our sun.

RebekahWSD,
@RebekahWSD@lemmy.world avatar

Bananas are 4011 when buying them.

BongsForJesus,

What

meekah, (edited )
@meekah@lemmy.world avatar

most grocery stores have a number system so that a cashier can punch in a number to ring up a certain product. this is especially useful for fruit and vegetables, as often times it doesn’t have packaging and doesn’t have a barcode. the vast majority of groceries use 4011 as the number for bananas.

I’d imagine it’s because the number 4011 is already used in production and logistics of bananas, so the grocery stores just stick to the barcode/number that bananas already have on their box when they get delivered. that’s just a guess though.

Skelectus,
@Skelectus@suppo.fi avatar

Like this, except it’s operated by the cashier?

https://suppo.fi/pictrs/image/9edc58d8-39ac-4383-a955-db9051a7f30b.jpeg

meekah,
@meekah@lemmy.world avatar

kinda. the device in your image only does the job of weighing product, and applying a price per weight to the measurement and printing a barcode label based on that. the 4011 will probably only be used by cashiers, who usually have a number pad to enter those numbers into the point of sale system, instead of a button for each possible number. the device in your image is probably designed like that because it’s for customers and easier to operate. there is probably a chart somewhere out of frame that translates those numbers into products.

Skelectus,
@Skelectus@suppo.fi avatar

Pretry much. Not on a chart, but on the price label of the product you’d be buying. I don’t think any store here does weighing at the cashier.

meekah,
@meekah@lemmy.world avatar

I see, interesting. thanks for that insight.

ouRKaoS,

4011 is the PLU code for bananas. This is the number the cashier types in to weigh and sell them to you. Bananas are usually one of the cheapest items per pound in a grocery store, so I’ve “heard rumors” from a “friend” that if you type this number into a self checkout machine, whatever you weigh is charged as bananas instead of saffron or black truffles or whatever.

nikosey,

rats can’t vomit

ouRKaoS,

This is why rat poison works. There’s no way to get it out quickly once it goes in.

eatthecake,

Arachibutyrophobia is the fear of getting peanut butter stuck to the roof of your mouth.

covert_czar,
@covert_czar@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Aibohphobia is the (unofficial) fear of palindromes

thomasloven, (edited )

Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia is the fear of long words.

hakunawazo, (edited )

That is just as cruel as forcing speech impaired people to pronounce the word speech-language pathologist.

mnemonicmonkeys, (edited )

Male bedbugs have a knife-like penis. To have sex, they stab the females in the thorax with it because the females don’t have genitalia. The semen is then injected directly into the female’s main body cavity for insemination

crystalmerchant,

I don’t like you

mnemonicmonkeys,

Okay?

ook_the_librarian,
@ook_the_librarian@lemmy.world avatar

This goes by the pleasant sounding scientific name of “traumatic insemination”.

AgentGrimstone,

Carrots are good for your eyes. I learned it from the movie Shoot’em Up where Clive Owen plays an assassin and he eats carrots because it’s good for his eyes.

Tessellecta,

I’ve heard this is not true, but it was a lie by the UK government to cover up the invention of radar and the cracking of the enigma code.

slazer2au,

White green, green, white blue, orange, white orange, blue, white brown, brown.

Nomecks, (edited )

California Cows Don’t Dance the Fandango

Steps for laser printing:

Cleaning, Charging, Drawing, Developing, Transferring, Fusing

I’ve known this for over 20 years and never used it. Thanks catchy mnemonics!

mangaskahn,

Are you making a crossover cable or installing it for the government? Those are the only places that I know of that A is used regularly. Nearly everywhere else uses B in my experience.

slazer2au,

Are you making the assumption I am from North America?

Every place I have worked in Australia and Europe uses green first.

indepndnt,

Really? I wasn’t sure which one I “should” use so I looked at a cable that I had laying around (probably came with a cable modem or something?) and was able to see the wire colors through the connector and it was A. So that’s what I’ve been using when making patch cables or wiring my house.

I guess my question is what’s your experience with where B is used? Mostly I’m just curious, it probably doesn’t really matter for me since I only do networking work in my house.

variants,

I guess it doesn’t really matter as long as you stick to one for both ends of the cable

Nollij,

It shouldn’t actually matter. It’s strictly by convention that the US (and probably North America; unclear about beyond) almost exclusively uses B. The big risk is that people will assume it’s B, and the other end is B, which can cause issues when they e.g. replace a receptacle and make all of your connections crossover. But even that shouldn’t matter much these days.

There’s also some very limited issues switching from A to B on the same line (A in wall, B in patch cable), but this is very rare. If you saw A, it was probably either a crossover, or you live in a place that uses A.

theneverfox,
@theneverfox@pawb.social avatar

So I learned all this almost 2 decades ago so the details may be off…

There’s crossover cables, which are a-b and used if you want to connect one computer to another-the tx and rx are flipped from one side to the other, so two “client” devices (like 2 computers) don’t speak and listen on the same line

There’s rollover cables, which are flipped on one side, that were used to connect to the console port of a router

Aside from that, nothing about the configuration really matters except being standard. The reason they’re not just in stripe-color color order is to separate the tx and rx to minimize interference

I’m pretty sure all of this became moot after hundred gigabit Ethernet became a common thing anyways - they multiplex electrical signals across each of the wires, so they have to negotiate the method or fall back to a simpler protocol from the start. I’m not sure how robust it is to randomly shuffling the order on each side individually (I wouldn’t try it on hardware I wasn’t willing to risk)

So really, all that matters is that it matches. And since we’ve been doing it a certain way for so long, doing it differently is a bad idea. A vs b makes no difference, but you could make green the split pair and it’d be identical. You could use the same arbitrary order on each side and you’d probably not notice much difference, although you might get a lot more errors from minute interference

And FWIW, I think b is the more common standard across the world… But any advantage or disadvantage probably died back when we stopped using those trunk lines with dozens of pairs split out on a punch down block that goes to a bunch of different homes

MonsterMonster,

T568A White green, Green, White orange, Blue, White blue, Orange, White brown, Brown

T568B White orange, Orange, White green, Blue, White blue, Green, White brown, Brown

RedEyeFlightControl,
@RedEyeFlightControl@lemmy.world avatar

T568-A guy I see

I’m a B guy myself.

Joeffect,

Charlie Chaplin entered a Charlie Chaplin lookalike contest and lost

This is an urban legend

felixwhynot,
@felixwhynot@lemmy.world avatar

Can we have a citation please?

xkforce,

From what I can tell,every account that people have cited as evidence for Charlie Chaplin losing a look a like contest are anecdotal and cant be verified.

…stackexchange.com/…/did-charlie-chaplin-lose-a-c…

euchriduk,

But Dolly Parton really did lose in a Dolly Parton lookalike contest - and the winner was a drag artist (pretty sure it was a drag competition, and Dolly entered it for a laugh).

bullshitter,

I before e but not after c

emptiestplace,

That’s weird.

SacralPlexus,

Don’t forget the rest:

“…and in long “a” such as neighbor and weigh.”

LoganNineFingers,

2.2lbs to a KG

Should probably make an effort to know so many as a Canadian but only know the one conversion

uriel238,
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

5cm to 2 inches. It’s slightly off but good to a 30cm = one foot.

Useful when converting penis measurements.

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