The pillow is probably activating a reflex to press the legs together. In other news, it's the Stabile Seitenlage [1] from first aid! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovery_position
> literally excuse me, but no. Our best-effort guesses might be the best we could literally do. But there is no need to be that literal, or literal at all. As long as the uncertainty range includes 0.5, it's OK, but…
The words "long" and "evidence" are gross overstatements, but the claim is trivially true if including the Asian origin in "contact". While there is no definite proof for extended contact beyond that, there is no final…
That does sound anxious (and one could read aggression into it, too). But there are so many more emotions below and on top, that maybe they serve at least some coordination effort. Here you exaggerate the emotion for…
What does that look like? A SAT problem takes a bunch of unknown variables (v_1, v_2 ... V_n) and logic operators (''not, and, or'' for example would be enough) to form a formula that combines these operators and…
> their original biological metaphor say root network
A picture of a function, its derivative and the notion, that one function shows the other's tangent's slopes, is all that's needed, that should fit in a high-school curriculum especially in physics. But you are going to…
It's easier if you consider that you and the whole galaxy are moving around the universe at 10% of light speed and that it's not exactly you who moves, but the space bending around us, just like time. On yet another…
calculus fundamentals pretty often lead to extremal problems. Those seem quite useful for optimization at any rate.
You are right of course. But because a trivial message has many "layers" of "messages", according to semantic theory, it's often a single lie in a whole message packet.
> It will glow like a galactic beacon There's no reason to believe it would have to accelerate for all its curse. > You pretty much have to talk microbe scale to go unnoticed in space. There are myriads of stars we know…
Arguably, a single message would only affect a single pathway.
Have you ever tried it? 90% of the time I tried it didn't work, in mirc or irssi.
The pillow is probably activating a reflex to press the legs together. In other news, it's the Stabile Seitenlage [1] from first aid! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovery_position
> literally excuse me, but no. Our best-effort guesses might be the best we could literally do. But there is no need to be that literal, or literal at all. As long as the uncertainty range includes 0.5, it's OK, but…
The words "long" and "evidence" are gross overstatements, but the claim is trivially true if including the Asian origin in "contact". While there is no definite proof for extended contact beyond that, there is no final…
That does sound anxious (and one could read aggression into it, too). But there are so many more emotions below and on top, that maybe they serve at least some coordination effort. Here you exaggerate the emotion for…
What does that look like? A SAT problem takes a bunch of unknown variables (v_1, v_2 ... V_n) and logic operators (''not, and, or'' for example would be enough) to form a formula that combines these operators and…
> their original biological metaphor say root network
A picture of a function, its derivative and the notion, that one function shows the other's tangent's slopes, is all that's needed, that should fit in a high-school curriculum especially in physics. But you are going to…
It's easier if you consider that you and the whole galaxy are moving around the universe at 10% of light speed and that it's not exactly you who moves, but the space bending around us, just like time. On yet another…
calculus fundamentals pretty often lead to extremal problems. Those seem quite useful for optimization at any rate.
You are right of course. But because a trivial message has many "layers" of "messages", according to semantic theory, it's often a single lie in a whole message packet.
> It will glow like a galactic beacon There's no reason to believe it would have to accelerate for all its curse. > You pretty much have to talk microbe scale to go unnoticed in space. There are myriads of stars we know…
Arguably, a single message would only affect a single pathway.
Have you ever tried it? 90% of the time I tried it didn't work, in mirc or irssi.