MegaGlest Forum

Off topic => Off topic => Topic started by: Gabbe on 12 October 2010, 19:23:20

Title: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 12 October 2010, 19:23:20
The glest.org/gles_board/index.php? server is american?

List of funy facts :)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 12 October 2010, 21:47:14
I am pretty sure it is glest.org/glest_board/index.php and yes, I know.
Hmm... I thought we already talked about pointless threads...

Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 12 October 2010, 23:02:39
did you know that if you leave a goldfish in a dark room, it will turn white?

(a random post for a random thread)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: John.d.h on 12 October 2010, 23:19:44
Did you know...

Flamingos are ordinarily pink, but if they don't get a proper diet, their feathers fade to white?

I thought we already talked about pointless threads...
Well, they did go overboard a while back, with all the political stuff, but I don't think this thread should be harmful as long as people just post random interesting tidbits.  It's educational, and fun for the whole family, right?

Maybe we need a couple rules for this thread... like, if challenged, a poster must be able to provide citation, just in case. ;)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 13 October 2010, 00:01:28
did you know, you CAN sneeze with your eyes open? i know, because i have.

did you know that in a standard deck of cards, the king of hearts is the only king without a mustache?

did you know that if you have 5 dollars, and Chuck Norris has 5 dollars, Chuck has more money than you? (i couldnt resist)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 13 October 2010, 00:39:01
Ah, ok. I was just thinking that this was all about glest related stuff...as I thought/think there was a thread similar to this before.

Did you know that the Glest site would expire kinda soon if Martino doesn't update it?
Code: [Select]
Last Updated On:30-Nov-2008 20:28:58 UTC
Expiration Date:08-Dec-2010 14:56:14 UTC
But that won't happen...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 13 October 2010, 01:37:26
The glest.org/gles_board/index.php? server is american?
It's HOSTED in america, yes.

How amazing whois is, ain't it Ultifd? Complete with contact info for Martino... Hmm, that's a bad idea Martino...



Did you know:
-There is a coffee flavoured PEZ
-Russia has the most nukes in the world, at ~13000, well over the USA's 9400.
-Breathing generates about 0.6g of CO2 every minute.
-If the amount of water in your body is reduced by just 1%, you’ll feel thirsty.
-It is impossible to sneeze and keep one’s eyes open at the same time.
-You’ll drink about 75,000 litres of water in your lifetime.
-Your finger nails grow at 1 nanometre per second. Your hair grows at 4 nanometres per second.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 13 October 2010, 16:31:02
-It is impossible to sneeze and keep one’s eyes open at the same time.

as i said, i have sneezed with my eyes open! it can be done...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 13 October 2010, 18:54:43
Quote
-Russia has the most nukes in the world, at ~13000, well over the USA's 9400.

srsly? Oh well, they both can destroy the world..
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 14 October 2010, 00:53:52
-It is impossible to sneeze and keep one’s eyes open at the same time.

as i said, i have sneezed with my eyes open! it can be done...
:o :o :o

Did you know:
-Canada has the longest coastline in the world
-Canada has hosted the olympics twice. Once in calgary, once in vancouver
-The canada-us border is the largest open boarder in the world

Code: [Select]
    * Barbie's measurements if she were life size: 39-23-33.
    * The dollar symbol ($) is a U combined with an S (U.S.)
    * Our eyes are always the same size from birth, but our nose and ears never stop growing.
    * The Statue of Liberty's tablet is two feet thick.
    * There are two credit cards for every person in the United States.
    * The slogan on New Hampshire license plates is 'Live Free or Die'. These license plates are manufactured by prisoners in the state prison in Concord.
    * The straw was probably invented by Egyptian brewers to taste in-process beer without removing the fermenting ingredients which floated on the top of the container.
    * David Prowse, was the guy in the Darth Vader suit in Star Wars. He spoke all of Vader's lines, and didn't know that he was going to be dubbed over by James Earl Jones until he saw the screening of the movie.
    * The United States government keeps its supply of silver at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, NY
    * There are only thirteen blimps in the world.
    * Nine of the thirteen blimps are in the United States.
    * The existing biggest blimp is the Fuji Film blimp.
    * Naugahyde, plastic "leather" was created in Naugatuck, Connecticut.
    * The Swiss flag is square.
    * The word 'pound' is abbreviated 'lb.' after the constellation 'libra' because it means 'pound' in Latin, and also 'scales'. The abbreviation for the British Pound Sterling comes from the same source: it is an 'L' for Libra/Lb. with a stroke through it to indicate abbreviation.
    * Sames goes for the Italian lira which uses the same abbreviation ('lira' coming from 'libra'). So British currency (before it went metric) was always quoted as "pounds/shillings/pence", abbreviated "L/s/d" (libra/solidus/denarius).
    * The three largest land-owners in England are the Queen, the Church of England and Trinity College, Cambridge.
    * The monastic hours are matins, lauds, prime, tierce, sext, nones, vespers and compline.
    * If you come from Manchester, you are a Mancunian.
    * No animal, once frozen solid (i.e., water solidifies and turns to ice) survives when thawed, because the ice crystals formed inside cells would break open the cell membranes. However there are certain frogs that can survive the experience of being frozen. These frogs make special proteins which prevent the formation of ice (or at least keep the crystals from becoming very large), so that they actually never freeze even though their body temperature is below zero Celsius. The water in them remains liquid: a phenomenon known as 'supercooling.' If you disturb one of these frogs (just touching them even), the water in them quickly freezes solid and they die.
    * The white part of your fingernail is called the lunula.
    * Madrid is the only European capital city not situated on a river.
    * The name for fungal remains found in coal is sclerotinite.
    * The Boston University Bridge (on Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts) is the only place in the world where a boat can sail under a train driving under a car driving under an airplane.
    * Emus cannot walk backwards.
    * It is believed that Shakespeare was 46 around the time that the King James Version of the Bible was written. In Psalms 46, the 46th word from the first word is shake and the 46th word from the last word is spear.
    * The shopping mall in Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada has the largest water clock in North America.
    * Both writer Edgar Allen Poe and LSD advocate Timothy Leary were kicked out of West Point.
    * The word posh, which denotes luxurious rooms or accomodations, originated when ticket agents in England marked the tickets of travelers going by ship to the Orient. Since there was no air conditioning in those days, it was always better to have a cabin on the shady side of the ship as it passed through the Mediterranean and Suez area. Since the sun is in the south, those with money paid extra to get cabin's on the left, or port, traveling to the Asia, and on the right, or starboard, when returning to Europe. Hence their tickets were marked with the initials for Port Outbound Starboard Homebound, or POSH.
    * The top layer of a wedding cake, known as the groom's cake, traditionally is a fruit cake. That way it will save until the first anniversery.
    * The German Kaiser Wilhelm II had a withered arm and often hid the fact by posing with his hand resting on a sword, or by holding gloves.
    * The forward pass was created by the football team at Saint Louis University.
    * In every show that Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt (The Fantasticks) wrote, there is at least one song about rain.
    * A kind of tortoise in the Galapagos Islands has an upturned shell at its neck so it can reach its head up to eat cactus branches.
    * The only city whose name can be spelled completely with vowels is Aiea, Hawaii, located approximately twelve miles west of Honolulu.
    * Parthenogenesis is the term used to describe the process by which certain animals are able to reproduce themselves in successive female generations without intervention of a male of the species. At least one species of lizard is known to do so.
    * Cats have over one hundred vocal sounds, while dogs only have about ten.
    * The word "Checkmate" in chess comes from the Persian phrase "Shah Mat", which means "the king is dead".
    * The ship, the Queen Elizabeth 2, should always be written as QE2. QEII is the actual queen.
    * "Quisling" is the only word in the English language to start with "quis."
    * All of the cobble stones that used to line the streets in New York were originally weighting stones put in the hulls of Belgian ships to keep an even keel.
    * Nepal is the only country without a rectangular flag (it looks like two pennants glued on on top of the other)
    * Libya has the only flag which is all one color with no writing or decoration on it
    * The only borough of New York City that isn't an island (or part of an island) is the Bronx.
    * The 1957 Milwaukee Braves were the first baseball team to win the World Series after being relocated.
    * The tune for the "A-B-C" song is the same as "Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star."
    * When a coffee seed is planted, it takes five years to yield it's first consumable fruit.
    * The common goldfish is the only animal that can see both infra-red and ultra-violet light.
    * Linn's Stamp News is the world's largest weekly newspaper for stamp collectors.
    * Tennessee is bordered by more states than any other. The eight states are Kentucky, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia.
    * Des Moines has the highest per capita Jello consumption in the U.S
    * The Western-most point in the contiguous United States is Cape Alava, Washington.
    * There are only three animals with blue tongues, the Black Bear, the Chow Chow dog and the blue-tongued lizard.
    * The first fossilized specimen of Austalopithecus afarenisis was named Lucy after the palentologists' favorite song, Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds, by the Beatles.
    * Pinocchio is Italian for "pine head."
    * The geographical center of North America is near Rugby, North Dakota.
    * The infinity sign is called a lemniscate.
    * Hacky-sack was invented in Turkey.
    * If you stretch a standard Slinky out flat it measures 87 feet long.
    * There are six five words in the English language with the letter combination "uu." Muumuu, vacuum, continuum, duumvirate and duumvir, residuum.
    * The "Calabash" pipe, most often associated with Sherlock Holmes, was not used by him until William Gillette (an American) portrayed Holmes onstage. Gillette needed a pipe he could keep in his mouth while he spoke his lines.
    * Most Americans' car horns beep in the key of F.
    * Dirty Harry's badge number is 2211.
    * The pupil of an octopus' eye is rectangular.
    * The shortest French word with all five vowels is "oiseau" meaning bird.
    * Camel's milk does not curdle.
    * "Mr. Mojo Risin" is an anagram for Jim Morrison.
    * The ball on top of a flagpole is called the truck.
    * A person from the country of Nauru is called a Nauruan; this is the only palindromic nationality.
    * The word "modem" is a contraction of the words "modulate, demodulate."
    * Oliver Cromwell was hanged and decapitated two years after he had died.
    * In the last 4000 years, no new animals have been domesticated.
    * Iowa has more independent telephone companies than any other state.
    * Many hamsters only blink one eye at a time.
    * Hamsters love to eat crickets.
    * The only "real" food that U.S. Astronauts are allowed to take into space is pecan nuts.
    * The word "queueing" is the only English word with five consecutive vowels.
    * The first Eagle Scout west of the Mississippi is buried in San Marcos, Texas.
    * In every episode of Seinfeld there is a Superman somewhere.
    * Roberta Flack wrote "Killing Me Softly" about singer Don McLean.
    * The Greek version of the Old Testament is called the Septuagint.
    * Spencer Eldon was the name of the naked baby on the cover of Nirvana's album
    * All three major 1996 Presidential candidates, Clinton, Dole and Perot, are left-handed.
    * The Madagascan Hissing Cockroach is one of the few insects who give birth to live young, rather than laying eggs.
    * The book of Esther in the Bible is the only book which does not mention the name of God.
    * Sheriff came from Shire Reeve. During early years of feudal rule in England, each shire had a reeve who was the law for that shire. When the term was brought to the United States it was shortned to Sheriff.
    * An animal epidemic is called an epizootic.
    * Dracula is the most filmed story of all time, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is second and Oliver Twist is third.
    * The silhouette on the NBA logo is Jerry West.
    * The silhouette on the Major League Baseball logo is Harmon Killebrew.
    * The name Jeep came from the abbreviation used in the army for the "General Purpose" vehicle, G.P.
    * The little lump of flesh just forward of your ear canal, right next to your temple, is called a tragus.
    * Soweto in South Africa ws derived from SOuth WEst TOwnship.
    * Murphy's Oil Soap is the chemical most commonly used to clean elephants.
    * The Andy Griffth Show was the first spin-off in TV history. It was a spin-off of the Danny Thomas Show.
    * Goat's eyes have rectangular pupils.
    * Walt Disney's autograph bears no resemblance to the famous Disney logo.
    * Other than humans, black lemurs are the only primates that may have blue eyes.
    * The United States has never lost a war in which mules were used.
    * The two longest one-syllable words in the English language are "screeched" and "strengths."
    * Great Britain was the first county to issue postage stamps. Hence, the postage stamps of Britain are the only stamps in the world not to bear the name of the country of origin. However, every stamp carries a relief image or a silhouette of the monarch's head instead.
    * Images for picture stamps in the United States are commissioned by the United States Postal Service Department of Philatelic Fulfillment.
    * Artist Constantino Brumidi fell from the done of the U.S. Capitol while painting a mural around the rim. He died four months later.
    * Since 1896, the beginning of the modern Olympics, only Greece and Australia have participated in every Games.
    * There were no squirrels on Nantucket until 1989.
    * Cathy Rigby is the only woman to pose nude for Sports Illustrated. (August 1972)
    * Blueberry Jelly Bellies were created especially for Ronald Reagan.
    * Will Clark of the Texas Rangers is a direct descendant of William Clark of Lewis and Clark.
    * When ocean tides are at their highest, they are called "spring tides." When they are at their lowest, they are call "neep tides."
    * February 1865 is the only month in recorded history not to have a full moon.
    * The last NASCAR driver to serve jail time for running moonshine was Buddy Arrington.
    * Many Japanese golfers carry "hole-in-one" insurance, because it is traditional in Japan to share one's good luck by sending gifts to all your friends when you get an "ace." The price for what the Japanese term an "albatross" can often reach $10,000.
    * The difference between male and female blue crabs is the design located on their apron (belly.) The male blue crab has the Washington Monument while the female apron is shaped like the U.S. Capitol.
    * It takes a lobster approxiamately seven years to grow to be one pound.
    * The ridges on the sides of coins are called reeding.
    * The lot numbers for the cyanide-tainted Tylenol capsules scare back in 1982 were MC2880 and 1910MD.
    * Montpelier, Vermont is the only U.S. state capital without a McDonalds.
    * The Roman emperor Caligula made his horse a senator.
    * At latitude 60 degrees south you can sail all the way around the world.
    * A Chinese checkerboard has 121 holes.
    * The hyoid bone, in your throat, is the only bone in the body not attached to another bone.
    * Mice, whales, elephants, giraffes and man all have seven neck vertebra.
    * Sunbeams that shine down through the clouds are called crespucular rays.
    * Very small clouds that look like they have been broken off of bigger clouds are called scuds.
    * On a dewy morning, if you look at your shadow in the grass, the dew drops shine light back to your eye creating a halo called a heilgenschein (German for halo.)
    * The correct response to the Irish greeting, "Top of the morning to you," is "and the rest of the day to yourself."
    * Giraffes have no vocal cords.
    * Joe DiMaggio had more home runs than strikeouts during his career.
    * All porcupines float in water.
    * Hang On Sloopy is the official rock song of Ohio.
    * A-1 Steak Sauce contains both orange peel and raisins.
    * Many northern parishes (counties) of Louisiana did not agree with the Confederate movement. To show their disapproval, they changed their names. That's why there is a Union Parish, Jefferson Parish, etc.
    * The Pentagon, in Arlington, Virginia, has twice as many bathrooms as is necessary. When it was built in the 1940s, the state of Virginia still had segregation laws requiring separate toilet facilities for blacks and whites.
    * Residents of the island of Lesbos are Lesbosians, rather than Lesbians. (Of course, lesbians are called lesbians because Sappho was from Lesbos.)
    * The Chinese ideogram for 'trouble' symbolizes 'two women living under one roof'.
    * German has a wood for the peace offerings brought to your mate when you've committed some conceived slight. This is "drachenfutter" or dragon's food.
    * In Chinese, the words for crisis and opportunity are the same.
    * No word in the English language rhymes with month.
    * Clans of long ago that wanted to get rid of their unwanted people without killing them use to burn their houses down - hence the expression "to get fired."
    * The poisonous copperhead smells likefresh cut cucumbers.
    * The Les Nessman character on the TV series WKRP in Cincinnati wore a band-aid in every episode. Either on himself, his glasses, or his clothing.
    * A coat hanger is 44 inches long if straightened
    * projected death toll while it was being built. No one died. The average ear of corn has eight-hundred kernels arranged in sixteen rows.
    * A cat has four rows of whiskers.
    * Vincent Van Gogh comitted suicide while painting Wheat Field with Crows.
    * An iguana can stay under water for 28 minutes.
    * Jelly Belly jelly beans were the first jelly beans in outer space when they went up with astronauts in the June 21, 1983 voyage of the space shuttle Challenger (the same voyage as the first American woman in space, Sally Ride).
    * Baseballer Connie Mack's real name was Cornelius McGilicuddy.
    * If you were standing in the northernmost point in the contiguous (48) states, you'd be standing in Minnesota.
    * Only thirty percent of the famous Maryland blue crabs are actually from Maryland, the rest are from North Carolina and Virginia.
    * Back in the mid to late 80's, an IBM compatible computer wasn't considered a hundred percent compatible unless it could run Microsoft's Flight Simulator.
    * Not all of West Virginia voted to go with the North. When the State of West Virginia was formed from Virginia in 1863 the three western counties in Virginia voted to go with West Virginia, but West Virginia didn't take them because they were poor. Instead they took three counties that voted to stay with Virginia, because they were richer and they had the B&O railroad. Those counties since split and are 5 Jefferson, Hampshire, Berkley, Mineral, and Morgan.
    * The first Ford cars had Dodge engines.
    * All the dirt from the foundation to build the World Trade Center in NYC was dumped into the Hudson River to form the community now known as Battery City Park.
    * The Holland and Lincoln Tunnels under the Hudson River connecting New Jersey and New York are an engineering feat. The air circulators in the tunnels circulate fresh air completely every ninety seconds.
    * The dirt road that General Washington and his soldiers took to fight off General Clinton during the Battle of Monmouth was called the Burlington Path.
    * The only social fraternity founded during the Civil War was Theta Xi fraternity, at Rensselear Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York in 1864.
    * The Hudson River along the island of Manhattan flows in either direction depending upon the tide.
    * Several buildings in Manhattan have their own zip code! The World Trade Center has several.
    * The topknot that quails have is called a hmuh.
    * Dr. Samuel A. Mudd was the physician who set the leg of Lincoln's assassin John Wilkes Booth ... and whose shame created the expression for ignominy, "His name is Mudd."
    * The longest recorded flight of a chicken is thirteen seconds.
    * The muzzle of a lion is like a fingerprint -- no two lions have the same pattern of whiskers.
    * There is a type of parrot in New Zealand that likes to eat the rubber strips that line car windows.
    * The nursery rhyme Ring Around the Rosey is a rhyme about the plague. Infected people with the plague would get red circular sores ("Ring around the rosey..."), these sores would smell very badly so common folks would put flowers on their bodies somewhere (inconspicuously), so that it would cover the smell of the sores ("...a pocket full of posies..."), People who died from the plague would be burned so as to reduce the possible spread of the disease ("...ashes, ashes, we all fall down!")
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 October 2010, 01:05:27
Ill be glad to see you have backup for all those claims Omega? :D
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 14 October 2010, 01:32:36
Heck, no. I copied from some random site. The list was 4x as long, but I learned that the character post limit is only 20k... Suppose that's a sane amount though, and no plans to change it...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 October 2010, 02:02:07
Quote
* In Chinese, the words for crisis and opportunity are the same.

Werent we like in a economic crisis a lile while ago? ^^ (I know..But its gone in Norway by now..)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 14 October 2010, 02:08:57
Quote
* In Chinese, the words for crisis and opportunity are the same.
False. It's a myth...somehow?
http://www.pinyin.info/chinese/crisis.html
Quote
Crisis: 危機 wéijī
Danger: 危 wéi
Opportunity: 機會
Kinda only partially... but then I think a lot of words are like that...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 October 2010, 02:13:55
I dunno chinzneese...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 14 October 2010, 02:15:20
I don't know it either...I also don't know spamezee...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 October 2010, 02:16:53
Spamezee?
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 14 October 2010, 02:19:29
How amazing whois is, ain't it Ultifd? Complete with contact info for Martino... Hmm, that's a bad idea Martino...
Not so much amazing, but I guess it is just how it is...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 October 2010, 02:24:07
How amazing whois is, ain't it Ultifd? Complete with contact info for Martino... Hmm, that's a bad idea Martino...
Not so much amazing, but I guess it is just how it is...

I thought it to be spanish or french, in worst case german (due to german is middle EU they got all Gameservers >.<)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 14 October 2010, 02:29:04
I thought it to be spanish or french, in worst case german (due to german is middle EU they got all Gameservers >.<)
You're talking about the server, not about whois... should have quoted
It's HOSTED in america, yes.

But yeah, I can see why you would think otherwise...
Anyways, I wonder if Martino is going to do it last minute... After all, he is busy these days.

Quote
-The canada-us border is the largest open boarder in the world
Yeah I know  :O
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 October 2010, 02:31:13
Maybe we give him a poke on afcebook? just a thought..
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 14 October 2010, 03:53:13
How amazing whois is, ain't it Ultifd? Complete with contact info for Martino... Hmm, that's a bad idea Martino...
Not so much amazing, but I guess it is just how it is...

I thought it to be spanish or french, in worst case german (due to german is middle EU they got all Gameservers >.<)
That has nothing to do with this. Most English commercial hosts (which will host your site in exchange for green stuff) are USA based.

By the way, do you have the right chinese? I don't know chinese, but I know for a fact, there's quite a few versions of chinese, such as simplified chinese, etc;

Anyway, am I the only one giving cool facts here?

Did you know:
-The correct response to the Irish greeting, "Top of the morning to you," is "and the rest of the day to yourself."
-Giraffes have no vocal cords.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 October 2010, 04:28:21
Ye you are the dude giving and we are the skeptics :D

I was thinking about traditional chinese..not simplified.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 14 October 2010, 05:14:42
By the way, do you have the right chinese? I don't know chinese, but I know for a fact, there's quite a few versions of chinese, such as simplified chinese, etc
What's right? Nothing would be "right" anyways... That statement would still be false...
Usually there is traditional or simplified, I think. Since we're only talking about Chinese characters...

Quote
Anyway, am I the only one giving cool facts here?
Basically, although I think I gave a nice one, one to think about even if it isn't "cool".
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 14 October 2010, 14:18:00

-The correct response to the Irish greeting, "Top of the morning to you," is "and the rest of the day to yourself."

i was told that the correct response was "and the rest of the morning to you"

can i have some proof for your claim?
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 15 October 2010, 18:57:45

-The correct response to the Irish greeting, "Top of the morning to you," is "and the rest of the day to yourself."

i was told that the correct response was "and the rest of the morning to you"
http://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/44/messages/721.html
http://askville.amazon.com/Top-Morning-ya/AnswerViewer.do?requestId=41894566
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_does_'Top_of_the_morning'_mean
http://www.travelexpertguide.org/forum/Ireland/What-is-the-traditional-Irish-response-to-the-phrase-quot-Top-of-the-Morn-quot-322989.htm

Why would it be the rest of the morning?
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 16 October 2010, 03:20:15
ok then, my sources were wrong, thank you for correcting me
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Psychedelic_hands on 16 October 2010, 09:47:35
A pig's orgasm lasts for 30 minutes......

....Please don't ask me for proof  :-[
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 16 October 2010, 10:41:16
I wont ask for proof psych, but i have to ask, How IN THE FR|IGGIN HELL DID YOU FIND THAT OUT
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: -Archmage- on 16 October 2010, 12:49:59
 :O Like Gabbe, I would like to know how the hell you found that out?! :P
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 16 October 2010, 14:57:32
honestly, im in the same boat as Gabbe and Archmage...how did you find that out? ::)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: John.d.h on 16 October 2010, 18:02:16
Speaking of pigs, did you know they are smarter than dogs and toddlers?

http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Science/story?id=771414&page=1 (http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Science/story?id=771414&page=1)
http://www.unleashed.org.au/animals/pigs.php (http://www.unleashed.org.au/animals/pigs.php)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Mark on 16 October 2010, 21:44:28
Speaking of pigs, did you know they are smarter than dogs and toddlers?

http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Science/story?id=771414&page=1 (http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Science/story?id=771414&page=1)
http://www.unleashed.org.au/animals/pigs.php (http://www.unleashed.org.au/animals/pigs.php)
Yeah, I knew that.  I once had a debate with a kid about which would make a better guard animal--a wild boar or a wolf.  In the end, the wild boar won.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 16 October 2010, 22:14:55
A pig's orgasm lasts for 30 minutes......

....Please don't ask me for proof  :-[
Actually I heard that before. Though I refrained from posting it for obvious reasons.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Psychedelic_hands on 17 October 2010, 13:34:30
:O Like Gabbe, I would like to know how the hell you found that out?! :P

Well...... what do you and your friends talk about.... ::)

A pig's orgasm lasts for 30 minutes......
....Please don't ask me for proof  :-[
Actually I heard that before. Though I refrained from posting it for obvious reasons.

Yeah, I've heard it from a few people.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 17 October 2010, 20:06:31
Quote
Well...... what do you and your friends talk about.... Roll Eyes

I take it you and your friends talk about pigs orgasms? lol XD
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Psychedelic_hands on 19 October 2010, 09:58:04
Well, we don't restrict ourselves to that, but yes......

Haha, guess I just know some weird people.

So this isn't OF.

The Bonobos monkey, is the only species that uses sex to greet each other and conflict resolution. They also don't... ummmmm "discriminate" against gender or age.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 19 October 2010, 14:27:14
[quote author=Psychedelic_hands link=topic=6036.msg61118#msg61118 date=1287482284

The Bonobos monkey, is the only species that uses sex to greet each other and conflict resolution. They also don't... ummmmm "discriminate" against gender or age.
[/quote]

ive heard this...it's odd...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: John.d.h on 19 October 2010, 15:45:02
The Bonobos monkey, is the only species that uses sex to greet each other and conflict resolution. They also don't... ummmmm "discriminate" against gender or age.

ive heard this...it's odd...
I don't think it's that odd, considering they're our closest relatives.  People's sexual inhibitions are largely cultural.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 19 October 2010, 15:54:48
It is od, considering them being gay :)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 19 October 2010, 22:14:30
Norway is "comfortable with todays internet applications" together with other countries, weird is however, Iceland Sweden Denmark and Finland is "ready for tomorrow". so we loose in internet battle here in Norway, despite being one of the richest countries in the world...Canada and UK is by the way also on the list. Germany, pwns all however (not wierd, all servers are there... -.- XD :) ) More weird is, however the US is pretty low..

Broadband connection test of countries, what quality and stuff, saw it in Norwegian but i havent cathced the english spoken site yet..

nvm...

http://newsroom.cisco.com/dlls/2010/prod_101710.html

HAHA look how south korea pwns all

http://www.flickr.com/photos/cisco_pics/5082061096/sizes/l/in/photostream/
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: John.d.h on 20 October 2010, 02:11:49
More weird is, however the US is pretty low..
Yeah, unfortunately.  It's probably because we're so spread out.  Connecting Seattle to Miami would be a bit of a challenge compared to any two places in Denmark.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 20 October 2010, 03:32:46
Too bad in most parts of the US the price for an internet connection isn't low...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 20 October 2010, 15:01:22
Now the much snow is coming to Norway! yay finally some epic paintball matches and snowball wars!  :O
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 20 October 2010, 21:45:14
I wish sometimes that it would snow where I live...but also sometimes, not...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 21 October 2010, 01:11:11
More weird is, however the US is pretty low..
Yeah, unfortunately.  It's probably because we're so spread out.  Connecting Seattle to Miami would be a bit of a challenge compared to any two places in Denmark.
Meh, just wait till you see Canada... I'm surprised that USA and Canada are tied, since Canada is even more spread out (northern half of canada = isolated wilderness ;)). Plus, USA has more larger ISPs... Hmm... Oddities...
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 21 October 2010, 02:20:02
More weird is, however the US is pretty low..
Yeah, unfortunately.  It's probably because we're so spread out.  Connecting Seattle to Miami would be a bit of a challenge compared to any two places in Denmark.
Meh, just wait till you see Canada... I'm surprised that USA and Canada are tied, since Canada is even more spread out (northern half of canada = isolated wilderness ;)). Plus, USA has more larger ISPs... Hmm... Oddities...
the world is weird, my dear friend.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: John.d.h on 21 October 2010, 03:40:21
Meh, just wait till you see Canada... I'm surprised that USA and Canada are tied, since Canada is even more spread out (northern half of canada = isolated wilderness ;)). Plus, USA has more larger ISPs... Hmm... Oddities...
True, but Canada's major cities aren't that far apart.  They're all in the narrow strip along the US-Canada border that isn't nigh-uninhabitable tundra.  Anything north of that... well, that's why you have dial-up. :P
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 21 October 2010, 18:23:47
Meh, just wait till you see Canada... I'm surprised that USA and Canada are tied, since Canada is even more spread out (northern half of canada = isolated wilderness ;)). Plus, USA has more larger ISPs... Hmm... Oddities...
True, but Canada's major cities aren't that far apart.  They're all in the narrow strip along the US-Canada border that isn't nigh-uninhabitable tundra.  Anything north of that... well, that's why you have dial-up. :P
Or in my case, satellite. :(
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Mark on 2 November 2010, 02:54:42
I thought chimps were our closest evolutionary ancestor?  Aren't bonobos monkeys, bot great primates?  

How can you guys miss the tail dancing dolphins?  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uV7hrh458aw
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: John.d.h on 2 November 2010, 03:06:56
I thought chimps were our closest evolutionary ancestor?  Aren't bonobos monkeys, bot great primates?
The bonobo, or Pan paniscus, is also known as the pygmy chimpanzee.  They are closely related to the common chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes, and humans.  They are apes, not monkeys.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 3 November 2010, 15:17:34
What are the differences with ape and monkey?  :confused:
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Zoythrus on 4 November 2010, 21:36:50
monkeys have tails, apes dont
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 5 November 2010, 07:04:54
US have been spying on Norwegian citizens for ten years, and PST didnt tell the governemtn anything, making the US think they had the right to! o.O
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 7 November 2010, 02:23:19
US have been spying on Norwegian citizens for ten years, and PST didnt tell the governemtn anything, making the US think they had the right to! o.O
I find that hard to believe. I trust you have proof (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proof_%28truth%29)?
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: ultifd on 7 November 2010, 02:32:05
allegedly (http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101104/wl_afp/norwayusdiplomacyattackspolice_20101104174720)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 7 November 2010, 08:00:18
PST is NDI btw
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 9 November 2010, 20:53:39
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tianhe-I

holy shit man!  :o

And it runs 92% Linux!
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 9 November 2010, 21:45:49
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tianhe-I

holy shit man!  :o

And it runs 92% Linux!
Good god.... that is powerful... I wanna play Glest on that! ::)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 10 November 2010, 17:02:24
And the big question; will it run crysis? :O

Quote
Originally, Tianhe-1 was powered by 4,096 Intel Xeon E5540 processors and 1,024 Intel Xeon E5450 processors, with 5,120 AMD graphics processing units (GPUs), which were made up of 2,560 dual-GPU ATI Radeon HD 4870 X2 graphics cards.In October 2010, Tianhe-1A, a separate supercomputer, was unveiled at HPC 2010 China.[11] It is now equipped with 14,336 Xeon X5670 processors and 7,168 Nvidia Tesla M2050 general purpose GPUs. 2,048 NUDT FT1000 heterogeneous processors are also installed in the system, but their computing power was not counted into the machine's official Linpack statistics as of October 2010.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: -Archmage- on 10 November 2010, 23:31:01
Or Arma 2? :P

Man it'd be awesome to set Crysis in dev mode and watch as in max settings it says fps 300,080,000,504,042, on a massive screen. ;D
Oops forgot motion blur, then set it on max, crap fps down to 300,080,000,504,016. :P
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 11 November 2010, 14:53:40
It got 14k XEON processors, and i suppose those are quad cored with watercooling and blacdk editions? Insane processing power, it would ,maybe run real life graphics with like 5 quadrillion polygons, for each object :D

EDIT: new news; or maybe old but anyways, translated from GT

To mars without return ticket

nrk.no

Quote
This case is taken from forskning.no

- It is important to understand that this is not a suicide mission, "the researchers Dirk Schulze-Makuch and Paul Davies in the Journal of Cosmology.

They suggest a process where four astronauts on two spacecraft lands near the caves by ancient lava times on Mars.

In these caves may astronauts camp. There they are protected from dangerous radiation, and can melt ice from the underground to the life-giving water.

    * Read: Collision on Mars created the moon

With preloaded supplies from Earth will be as the first colonists to prepare the ground for the many more who follow.

After a few decades is March 1 The colony has grown to 150 people, and the first child is born during the butter yellow, dusty sky in March.

After a few centuries, the colony has become one of several. They grow their own food and do not need any more supplies from the blue evening and the morning star they once came from.
March The journey Ryanair

Fantastic? Utopian? No, the article authors. On the contrary, this one-way mission to Mars solve problems for the manned exploration of the red planet.

First, they estimate that the mission will be about 80 percent cheaper.

When the astronauts do not have to have fuel to return, the spacecraft lighter and can carry more cargo. Thus, today's launchers and other space technologies are used.
Send old folks

Second, one-way flight to make it easier to live with two major health problems that occur during long space missions.
Mars (NASA)

Top left is seen a lava tubes, a mouth of an old volcano that can accommodate a cave where the future March colonists may seek refuge.
Photo: NASA

These problems are one of the largest brake pads for further manned exploration of space.

The first is particle radiation from the eruptions on the sun. It can provide the same diseases as radiation on Earth, such as the Chernobyl disaster: cancer and malformed children.

Schulze-Makuch and Davies addresses the issue in its own rough way.

They suggest that the first colonists should be older people with 20 years or less left of their lives. When they are finished having children, and the inevitable radiation damage will mean less.
Travel light

Moreover, the astronauts escape the strain of returning to the Earth's oppressive gravity after months and perhaps years as lightweights in weightlessness along the way, and in a weaker gravitational field down on the planet.

In March, they will in fact only weigh 0.38 times as much as on our own planet.

    * Read: Rehearse the trip to Mars

Mars is much better suited for a romkoloni than our own moon, according to article authors.

Here is the result of many more, not least the former månefareren Edwin Aldrin. He also defended the idea of a one-way process several times in March.
Not for the faint

- Set the pilgrims on the Mayflower around Plymouth Rock, waiting for a return trip? They came here to settle. And that's what we should do on Mars, "he said in an interview in Vanity Fair magazine in June this year.
Lavarørhule (Photo: NASA)

Cave in the lava tubes in Hawaii. Such caves can also be found on Mars, and be natural shelters for the first colonists.
Photo: NASA

It turns Aldrin on the strings of the deepest tone bottom of America's pioneering spirit.

It is such thoughts that are also behind a number of other American grassroots movements, such as Underground in March, Mars Homestead Foundation and especially March Artists Community.
- In the spirit of Amundsen

"Direct to Mars - cowards return to the moon," the top graphic on their site. March Artists Community has chosen what is now called "Mars To Stay" as their preferred strategy.

Also, Schulze-Makuch researchers Davies and let it shine through clearly that it is far more than dry knowledge that motivates their longing for other worlds.

"Mars two stay" means a return to discover the spirit and the courage with which Columbus and Amundsen showed, but that has now given way to a culture of safety and political correctness, they believe.
Gen-backup

In their article they point out that on March 1 colony can serve another, more macabre purpose.

If civilization were to collapse on the earth by a comet collision, a burst from a super volcano or an ecological disaster, the colony on Mars be a backup for human genes - for the human race.

    * Read: New pictures from March

Paul Davies is director of research BEYOND at Arizona State University.

According to their own websites, they will ask the big existential questions in cross-country research and philosophy meet: How did the universe? Is nature mathematical? Why are the physical laws adapted to life?
Man in the Moon

The idea of one-way space travel is not new. In 1962, Americans were desperate to catch up with the Soviet Union in the space race.

Engineer John Cord from Bell Aero Systems Company and psychologist Leonard Seale from the same company developed a plan that could disembark an American on the moon before the Russians.

A one-way expedition with an improved one-man Mercury capsule could land on the moon in 1964 or 1965, if they agreed to make it without the opportunity for re-entry.

Yet this was not a suicide expedition. The idea was that the man in the moon would gnaw at their cheese pieces in a few years until the engineers on the ground had developed a new and larger rescue rocket.

It would come with three astronauts and retrieve the solitary Robinson, who undoubtedly would be jerked out of their lunar loneliness to an overwhelming confetti parade on Broadway.

When the Apollo project gathered momentum and the Russians fell behind the times with its lunar plans, the project was shelved.
Earlier Mars plans

Also in March a one-way trips have been proposed previously.

George William Herbert from the now hensyknede firm Retro Aerospace proposed in 1996 to send middle-aged scientists to the red planet to cut costs and increase the scientific yield.

    * Read: - 100 million habitable planets

In 2009, the idea up again. Lawrence Krauss of Arizona State University was interviewed by the New York Times, and argued that the American pioneer spirit had revived.

He compared that right Aldrin with the American pilgrims.
More volunteers

Readers reacted negatively. One pointed out that the pilgrims knew that they could survive where they came. Another said the proposed one-way mission illustrated the moral decay.

But Dirk Schulze-Makuch and Paul Davies argues that they have support.

The article says that they have met many people who are willing to sign up volunteers for such an expedition, both because of scientific curiosity and because of the adventure and the big questions about humanity's final destiny.

(http://gfx.nrk.no/IYa_1MMeo3VBPsfhbEKZwgGro_vPgaeCHP7UZnqGjTUw.jpg)

Caves like these may be at mars, providing the astronauts with natural shelter; picture from Jamaica.

Go science :D
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 6 December 2010, 21:53:34
Norway ruled over large parts of England for a very long time, they also settled down and made several cities. Including Jorvik, wich became Yorvik, and then again York. After the viking empire had fallen England among many emigrated to America and they made New York, all from a small little settlement called Jorvik a thousand years before.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: the warlord of the reich on 13 December 2010, 08:10:50
did you know saudia arabia is rated world's first and best oil producing country?

did you know polar bears are not white? when they go at sunlight, their skins and fur mix making a strange chemistry colouring the bear in white.

did you know that ostrich's brain is smaller then its eye?

did you know that white ants use sticks and small fallens wood to fortify and entrench outskirts of their colony?

did you know when elephant dies it sometimes stay standing untill a few hours it falls off?

did you know elphants are most sensitive creatures? they mourn the dead combined with protecting each other and their males as very exelent dads, elephants make families, aunts and sisters and fathers, you know,

did you know the smartest bird is the crow? it was also mentioned in qouran
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 13 December 2010, 20:55:12
did you know saudia arabia is rated world's first and best oil producing country?

did you know polar bears are not white? when they go at sunlight, their skins and fur mix making a strange chemistry colouring the bear in white.

did you know that ostrich's brain is smaller then its eye?

did you know that white ants use sticks and small fallens wood to fortify and entrench outskirts of their colony?

did you know when elephant dies it sometimes stay standing untill a few hours it falls off?

did you know elphants are most sensitive creatures? they mourn the dead combined with protecting each other and their males as very exelent dads, elephants make families, aunts and sisters and fathers, you know,

did you know the smartest bird is the crow? it was also mentioned in qouran

;) nice, oil is good and makes riches, just make sure the people also get some of the riches.

This prooves our governments socialistic way works!
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Omega on 14 December 2010, 22:54:04
did you know saudia arabia is rated world's first and best oil producing country?
And that Canada's oil reserves are placed at having the longest oil life? [1] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_reserves#Estimated_reserves_by_country)
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 14 December 2010, 23:46:20
I am just wildely guessing is because you aren`t using them as much?
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Mark on 17 December 2010, 02:26:33
did you know saudia arabia is rated world's first and best oil producing country?
How do you determine it to be best? 

did you know the smartest bird is the crow? it was also mentioned in qouran
Don't bring the qur'an into this.  Glest cannot handle sensitive topics, and religion is the most sensitive of all topics.  But it is a very interesting fact.  They make tools with their beaks.
Title: Re: Did you know?
Post by: Gabbe on 17 December 2010, 12:28:51
Quality wise, Mongstad, Norway is the best oil refinery in the world.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongstad (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongstad)

http://www.power-technology.com/projects/monstadchp/ (http://www.power-technology.com/projects/monstadchp/)

For example, in Africa you would have oil that can tolerate heat well, while in Norway you would have oil that can withstand cold better than heat. At Mongstad they work to specialize the oil properties for the area where the customer will use it.