Thread for Random Stuff

  • Thread starter Thread starter JuanMena
  • Start date Start date
  • Views Views 118,239
  • Replies Replies 2,474
NO.

GEX.
1741637353731.png
 
If color is just a form of wavelengths and energy caused by light itself, won't that mean that if you go faster than the speed of light, all you see is just darkness?
I think you just see other light paths. It's not really one wave of light that you're outrunning after all.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Cranesbill
I think Sonic the Hedgehog CD is a pretty good metaphor of our world.
The United States will modify the Present and the Future according to their own will, no matter how Good or Bad it will be. But they can never modify the Past.
 
Smart Watches should have a DC motor that charges battery when it spins with natural hand movement.
No way you would get a useful amount of charge for a smart watch from normal daily hand movements. It would have to be worn by the kind of person who spends the majority of the day vigorously masturbating to feet pics.

Oh, right.
 
Should stupids and bad people die? I mean, they only harm the world (i'm not talking about myself, I mean in general)
Without those that scar others and exploit resources, we wouldn't understand how important good, civil behavior is.

In short, without E.T. (Atari 2600), we wouldn't know how great Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (N64) truly is.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Xdqwerty
What kind of soda is it? Never heard of it before.
It's one of those millennial drinks that's healthy and stuff. Y'know, probiotics, vegan, Non-gmo, full of fiber, organic, etc

I only tried 2 of their flavors (Lemon-lime, which is just watered down sprite) with Ridge Rush being a 10/10

It's light, it's refreshing, it's a very sweet ginger ale

Tho I be cautious if I were you, apparently it's an unpopular brand as people claim it tastes bad and gives them diarrhea
 
I think the universe has a limit, because it would break some laws. For instance, if the Universe is indeed infinite, wouldn't that break thermodynamics laws? Where does it get infinite energy to keep expanding indefinitely for ever and ever? Or thermodynamics just applies to humans because we're primitive? Huh?
So yes, there's gotta be an end to it.
When it reaches it's limit, everything will stop, even time. And yet I think there's something beyond the infinite limit of the universe! Maybe "we didn't had that much energy to keep expanding at beyond the limit, good luck next time, try again".

I really can't imagine that... it's beyond my current understanding. I mean, I can get some sort of idea on just how big the universe is (observable and beyond our current observations are) ... but thinking that there's this limit, a border if you will, a wall, whatever... and then something else on the other side... is just unimaginable to me. What would that be on the other side?

So, having in mind that the universe is BILLIONS OF LIGHT YEARS WIDE... how sure are we that our universe hasn't started a "self destructive" mode? Because something that took billions of years to expand, would equally take billions of years to return to it's original point, right? Because that's the principle behind old stars and galaxies, that they're billions of light years away and when we see them it's because their light took that same amount of time to reach us, and suddenly we discovered that the same star, or galaxy we saw with our toys because their light reached us, has been long dead...

So with that idea... could it be possible that we've already reached the real limit and the universe it's begun its way to the origin point? But we haven't realised because we've been here for some millions of years and the event has been activated for longer than our own existence? 👀
 
Last edited by JuanMena,
I think the universe has a limit, because it would break some laws. For instance, if the Universe is indeed infinite, wouldn't that break thermodynamics laws? Where does it get infinite energy to keep expanding indefinitely for ever and ever? Or thermodynamics just applies to humans because we're primitive? Huh?
So yes, there's gotta be an end to it.
When it reaches it's limit, everything will stop, even time. And yet I think there's something beyond the infinite limit of the universe! Maybe "we didn't had that much energy to keep expanding at beyond the limit, good luck next time, try again".

I really can't imagine that... it's beyond my current understanding. I mean, I can get some sort of idea on just how big the universe is (observable and beyond our current observations are) ... but thinking that there's this limit, a border if you will, a wall, whatever... and then something else on the other side... is just unimaginable to me. What would that be on the other side?

So, having in mind that the universe is BILLIONS OF LIGHT YEARS WIDE... how sure are we that our universe hasn't started a "self destructive" mode? Because something that took billions of years to expand, would equally take billions of years to return to it's original point, right? Because that's the principle behind old stars and galaxies, that they're billions of light years away and when we see them it's because their light took that same amount of time to reach us, and suddenly we discovered that the same star, or galaxy we saw with our toys because their light reached us, has been long dead...

So with that idea... could it be possible that we've already reached the real limit and the universe it's begun its way to the origin point? But we haven't realised because we've been here for some millions of years and the event has been activated for longer than our own existence? 👀
The prevailing theory is that there is a finite amount of energy, but an infinite amount of potential space

So as things continue to expand, the energy per cubic meter will actually steadily decrease

This is sort of the idea behind heat death - eventually all energy will only exist as heat in tiny ever expanding and isolated pockets
 

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum