Much less practical to show off your skull coloration when you’re trying to get laid.
Much less practical to show off your skull coloration when you’re trying to get laid.
Just plain old blue electrical arcs.
On the other hand, Cherenkov radiatiation is only indirectly related to criticality. It comes from any particle moving through a medium, generally water, faster than light travels through that medium. A luminous sonic boom of sorts! It’s associated with criticality because those are the contexts where it happens often enough to actually be visible.
Mercury-based diodes both look way cooler and are way less spooky than garden variety semicondictor diodes.
Oxygen ravages electrons all day at the end of the electron transport chain and nobody bats an eye, but you steal one pair off some DNA and everybody loses their minds!
Star Trek the Motion Picture
Nope and yep. It’s an incredible tool, but it’s got a vim-sized learning curve to really leverage it plus other significant drawbacks. Still my beloved one-and-only when I can get away with it, but its a bit of a masochistic acquired taste for sure.
Template tweaking, as I imagine academia heavily relies on, is really the closest to practical it gets. You do still get beautiful results, it’s just hard to express yourself arbitrarily without really committing to the bit.
Don’t give Java the credit of inventing bytecode, it’s a much cooler concept than that
When I did a homestay in Japan, my host dad was shocked my family didn’t have one. I do now though!
Water doesn’t go on the food pyramid, silly!