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OriginalGriff wrote: the Guardian Of Forever Yup!
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Reading the Post tile I was thinking you were going to say they found a Twinkie.
Give me coffee to change the things I can and wine for those I can not!
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - An updated version available! JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: Simon Says, A Child's Game
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Long live the Twinkie!
Jeremy Falcon
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Literally!
Give me coffee to change the things I can and wine for those I can not!
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - An updated version available! JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: Simon Says, A Child's Game
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A gateway to the past is dangerous enough. But what if its a gateway to Hell? In which case we're all DOOMed!
Keep Calm and Carry On
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If it is a one-way function "gateway to", can we start sending the team to make it all better? The Googalfinchians, hotel/casino developers, tic-tok influencers, MBA, project managers, etc.
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Don't forget the telephone sanitizers.... 😉
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What, no comments on one of the most subtle, yet hilarious references to be seen on the Code Project?!?
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Hey, a promising design for a sports car body.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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I think that you mean The City on the Edge of Forever. The device was called the Guardian of Forever, and IIRC the planet was quarantined after the discovery.
EDIT: I see that OG got the reference before me...
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Yeah, I really messed up that Star Trek reference. My Trekkie points have taken a hit.
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One of original Star Trek's best episodes ever!
Bond
Keep all things as simple as possible, but no simpler. -said someone, somewhere
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"The donut rock may be a meteorite that landed on Mars" .. "Landed"? I thought stuff from space generally crashed into planets pretty spectacularly. This one though obviously did "land" as there's zero sign of a crater (any minor debris could have blown away in Mars' thin atmosphere, but there'd be at least a bit of a dent, wouldn't there??).
No, given its angular external shape I reckon this is a nut that's fallen off a MASSIVE Mars explorer from some other civilisation.
Of course we don't know the scale; maybe this is not a view down a telescope but down a microscope, and it's really really tiny.
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You're thinking of "landed" as in how an aircraft lands. But they are using the word in a more technical sense. When you think about it, "landed" simply means it ended up on the surface.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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I suspect the ET conspiracy crowds will go with the other explanation. And add on to it with explanations of how it is a part from a flying saucer that they were actually on.
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Exactly... that's my point (badly made, obviously!) This looks more like it's been carefully placed down, not crashed at thousands of mph.
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How can you tell how hard the rock landed? All we see is rock sitting on the surface. What's your indication of how hard the impact was? Maybe this rock was a thousand times bigger, and this is just a fragment.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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The more books you read, the more you learn.
However, since most people don't actually read beyond secondary school (and definitely not beyond University) it is quite possible that you will know things that the unread do not know.
However, since there are more unread people than people who have actually researched and learned you will be in the minority.
And since the minority is aka "The Fringe" your ideas will be considered garbage.
And, since the unread mass is a mosh-pit of humanity, it is statistically probable that one of those unread people will be your manager.
That manager will tell you what to do and then you will question it since you've read 4 books on the subject. Then you'll argue and say, "but, Ive read 4 books on the subject"
That's when the manager will look down his nose and say, "But who's in charge here?"
Much better to just sit back and doom scroll.
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Actually, there's a lot of truth to this. To just assume for now that an intelligent person reads... If you're too far on the high end of the intelligence spectrum and speak in a manner that would be commensurate (as defined by whatever markers society tends to agree on insofar as to what intelligence is), then you're going to lose most people.
They say genius and crazy are two sides of the same coin. Both are not understood by the average person, so for all intents and purposes it may as well be. Since human relationships are all about a connection, good luck with that.
The trick is to learn to communicate with those who do not poses the same markers anyway and just accept the fact the role of a real genius is a lonely one. Maybe you'll get lucky and every now and again run into someone you can fully engage with. Don't hold your breath. The vast, vast majority of folks all assume they're smart.
Jeremy Falcon
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Yes, it is definitely the paradox of humanity.
The people who are smartest and know what best to do may not be the people who can communicate it clearly.
The people who communicate things clearly may only be able to do so because they glide over the complexity of the issue.
I'd rather have the surgeon who is lower on communication and better on skills.
And, besides, my belief is...
someone said If you can't explain it clearly, then you don't understand it.
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raddevus wrote: If you can't explain it clearly, then you don't understand it. Touché, my good man. Ther person I attribute that line to (right or wrong) is Einstein btw.
Einstein wrote: If you can't explain it to a six-year-old, you don't understand it yourself.
Jeremy Falcon
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The great Richard Feynman said that.
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The trick is learning to "talk" at all levels, depending on the audience.
Give me coffee to change the things I can and wine for those I can not!
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - An updated version available! JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: Simon Says, A Child's Game
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Mike Hankey wrote: The trick is learning to "talk" at all levels, depending on the audience.
Agree 100%!!!
It's just that you can't beat the Belief-System the person holds.
If they "think" a thing is caused by "thing1" you cannot convince them otherwise.
Because they've read it on the Internet and they know.
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raddevus wrote: It's just that you can't beat the Belief-System the person holds. No matter what they say, all humans need a sense of continuity on par with whatever their intelligence perceives. Things can change. But the further down (or up) the st00pid scale you go the harder it is because the last thing a person who doesn't exercise their mind will do... is exercise their mind.
Jeremy Falcon
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