Infinite growth meets finite world.
Professional shitposter, occasionally gives out useful information.
Infinite growth meets finite world.
I’m using this in every language I speak from now on!
6% revenue even, no masking the profits with losses!
A little bot of both probably :)
That wouldnt keep users trapped on the site as long. Trapping the users on the site longer makes Google rank it higher.
Yeah, but them telling you their life stories is also Googles fault…
Thank you for explaining. That was the context I was missing.
The work addresses the thorny problem of waste heat. Thanks to the second law of thermodynamics, a small amount of heat will always be released into the planet’s atmosphere no matter what energy source we use — be it nuclear, solar, or wind — because no energy system is 100 percent efficient.
“You can think of it like a leaky bathtub,” study coauthor Manasvi Lingam, an astrobiologist at the Florida Institute of Technology, told LiveScience. A small leak in a bathtub that’s barely filled doesn’t let out a lot of water. But as the tub continues to get filled — and our energy demands grow — that tiny leak can flood the whole house, Lingam explained.
I thought the problem was that CO2 was acting like a blanket trapping in all the heat. Is this “heat leaking” really a problem? If so, what about solar cells then?
We’ve come a long way from 1+1= Tube !
Impressive that we got to the moon with that.
You can just pinch it open instead of using more force trying to snap open the other part.
Opening a banana from the bottom up, it’s so much easier.
This was surprisingly difficult, even though I knew the theme…
I thought it’s a kind of mushroom that only grows on corpses. Since we’re both too lazy too look it up, who knows!
They don’t do that in my country.
You get a stone with a number carved in it beforehand. You put the stone with the deceased body. Afterwards that stone is in the urn.
Edit: bonus fact, if the person was heavy, their ashes will be too.
They just fell out of the sky?
Theseusaurus, if you replace a dino skeleton’s bones, with one from a different digsite, one bone at a time, would it still be the same dino?
Gotta love how human readable Python always is!