Re: RANDOMNESS
Posted: 10 Jun 2013 16:49
Funny how there is no 32 in 32!
*Or is it?*
*Or is it?*
A dedicated forum founded by Mateusz Skutnik, creator of world famous Submachine and several acclaimed point-and-click flash games.
https://www.pastelland.net/forum/
Quark.
That's enough to make me happy.Science wrote:In increasing order of mass, up, charm and top are positive; down, strange and bottom are negative.
They can be of different colours; red, blue and green; and they will try to join all colours together to get white (metaphorically speaking; they're obviously too small to have colour).
The particle that carries that force is the Gluon, and it kinda works like a spring that pulls them together.
When they join together they create hadrons, the most famous being the proton (up, up, down) and the neutron (up, down, down).
The Z and W bosons bully them into changing to other flavours of quarks, and that causes nuclear decay.
System32 stores 32 bits stuff, the fact is that much viruses uses that folder as hideout, so there is a factor there.borys610 wrote:It's very dangerous virus!
You need to delete System 32, before it makes serious harm to your computer!
Sublevel 102 wrote:^wha da fuk?
A-kinship Theory Treated As A Mathematical Abstraction (Because fuck you. Also, obscenely shitty graphs.) This is a g-tree,standing for genealogy tree, which formal visualization of kindred relations. [Kindred here being an adjective pertaining to a-kinship.] Its k number equals three, meaning that there is a total of 4 generations - a generation of number n is hence defined as the set of all ancestors located in a single horizontal row on a g-tree. As said before, the size of a generation (the number of its members) is 2^n. If treated as a graph, the g-tree is a tree (what a surprise) which has no euler/hamiltonian trails for sizes bigger than k=1. The k number denotes the tier of the oldest generation in a given g-tree.gil2455526 wrote:Did I ever told you Scientific thesis make me dizzy *_*