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OuroborusKeskiviikko 24.02.2010 01:08

An experimental physicist performs an experiment involving two cats, and an inclined tin roof.

The two cats are very nearly identical; same sex, age, weight, breed, eye and hair color.

The physicist places both cats on the roof at the same height and lets them both go at the same time. One of the cats fall off the roof first so obviously there is some difference between the two cats.

What is the difference?

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One cat has a greater mew.

[Ei aihetta]Tiistai 23.02.2010 15:08

Com treino você consegueTiistai 23.02.2010 14:53



Keeping it realTiistai 23.02.2010 13:44

[Ei aihetta]Tiistai 23.02.2010 13:02

In my dreams I was



.- -.
- . . -.-
... ..

Missing cat

AventinusSunnuntai 21.02.2010 13:19

If you watch the movie `Jaws' backwards, it's a movie about a shark that keeps throwing up people until they have to open a beach.



I wish the same would apply for my mirror, and for some other things too.

"If the professors of English will complain to me that the students who come to the universities, after all those years of study, still cannot spell "friend," I say to them that something's the matter with the way you spell friend."

Milky Way Transit AuthorityPerjantai 29.01.2010 22:08



http://arbesman.net/milkyway/

Computational sociology student Samuel Arbesman from Harvard University has created a "route map" of the Milky Way based on the London Underground subway map. By simplifying the "vast and complex interconnections" of the Milky Way, the map is "an attempt to approach our galaxy with a bit more familiarity than usual".

On his schematic representation, each line corresponds to an arm of the galaxy, and the "stations", which are thousands of light years apart, show important "destinations" such as stars, nebulae and other astronomical objects. Samuel has purposely omitted the Earth to show that we "aren't the centre of the universe".

The map is not intended to be accurate: Arbesman sees it as a "useful shorthand for our place in the Milky Way, [making] the important sights and inconceivable distances a bit less daunting".

(Image: NTI Media/TRex Features)