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2 yr. ago

  • Well in my case it is up to the standard, because it's run perfectly fine for me. I installed it, and have been running it on high graphics with no crashes, and only minor positioning bugs.

    So you and I have had very different experiences with the game.

  • So you're saying its an area that isn't meant to be normally seen. Some players may see it once in a play through, and only if they romance Sarah. That's the exact definition of not normally seen.

  • It seems I was actually wrong, sorry about that. I was thinking of agents like ethidium bromide, and assumed benzene was similarly toxic due to it's planar structure. It seems it's actually the metabolites of benzene that cause cancer, usually through oxidative damage:

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1469747/

  • Benzene is what's called in intercolating agent. Essentially it can slip into your DNA strands between the base pairs, and hang out there so to speak. When your cells attempt to replicate DNA where benzene has sidled on in, it can cause errors in the replication. When cells build up enough DNA errors it can cause cancer.

    Edit: this is an incorrect explanation, I was confusing benzene's method of toxicity with ethidium bromide's. Benzene metabolites are what's toxic, usually due to oxidative damage.

  • I can't believe you've taken in this Hamas propaganda so completely.

    No, there is zero chance there were 500 people in that tiny ass parking lot full of cars, you could not fit them in there.

    Just look at the pictures of the place, zero chance there were 500 people there.

  • Planet Coaster is also really good. I love both it and Parkitect.

  • You're so willing to believe Hamas propaganda about the numbers. No, 500 people did not die from the failed rocket launch.

    Look at this blast zone, you really think 500 people were in there:

    https://th.bing.com/th?id=OIF.KNvlh4O%2fw%2fLvXfQQvHFl1A&pid=ImgDet&rs=1

    This is not a giant wall mart parking lot, this is a tiny intersection with a dozen cars in it. No, there were not 500 people in there.

  • The double slit experiment itself, or why simply looking at the double slit experiment doesn't change the outcome?

  • You can only see photons when they bounce off something and into your eye. So you have no way to see the photons as they travel towards and through the slit, only after they hit a wall on the other side and reflect back to you.

    So there's no way for you to observe the photons with your eyes before they've gone through the slit. In order to observe them as they head to the slit you need to hit the photons with something to measure where they are, and it's this interaction that collapses the waveform and makes the light travel though a single slit of the two.

  • But they wouldn't know how, or with what software. That is indeed protecting one's privacy.

  • They were not keeping hundreds of people in the parking lot, that's an absurd claim.

  • Good, make them jump through that hoop and respect user privacy.

  • Jammed full of people, not unless there's a concert. In an emergency you try and get people into the hospital as quickly as possible, and people aren't going to arrive all at once. I could see 50 people killed in a hospital parking lot during an emergency, but 500, absolutely not.

  • Yes, it seems absolutely impossible. 500 people is a massive number.

  • I've done the double slit. Just looking at the slit does not cause the photons to start forming only 2 lines. Hell we did it back in high school with a class of 30 people, and got the wave pattern on the wall no matter who was looking.

    It takes more than just looking at it to get the photons to change behaviour.

  • But the hospital wasn't hit, the parking lot was.

  • It about device detection and privacy. Websites in the EU aren't allowed to scan your hardware or software without your permission, to protect the users privacy. Adblockers fall under this.

  • To be fair to OP, that combination of red bricks between the curb and sidewalk, the specific type of bike loop, and the streetcar tracks with slabs around them are all over Toronto, but I haven't see them all together in other cities I've been to.

  • The electronic intifada, yeah that's not going to be biased propaganda at all /s