Jagid3
Jagid3 t1_jaew6zk wrote
Eating cookies my friend gave me.
His sister ripped me a new one even though I was only one out of a group of five or so whom he gave them to and he didn't tell us she baked them or that they were special for a gathering of her friends later.
The strange thing is: you'd imagine we were all children, right? Nope. Upper teens and her brother was upper 20s or so.
Jagid3 t1_j6nyuwv wrote
Reply to Just started at a new shop and this work of art was left above my new work station. by rwmurphy10
I will be printing one of these ASAP 😂
Jagid3 t1_j2fx7og wrote
Reply to comment by BE-tawhc in What’s a hill you would die on 100% of the time? by Dreadfirelit
I always also close the lid before I flush. I don't need toilet mist on my face.
My wife does the same thing and it's never mattered at our house, but I even had someone complain about not having the lid up and seat down.
OMG, and they let these people out in public??
Jagid3 t1_j2fwx5b wrote
That most people are too stupid to care what's real or important in life.
Jagid3 t1_j2fwpsn wrote
Reply to comment by BE-tawhc in What’s a hill you would die on 100% of the time? by Dreadfirelit
Seriously, who can't be bothered to look where they are sticking their butt!
Jagid3 t1_j2fwjux wrote
Reply to comment by A_Being36 in What’s a hill you would die on 100% of the time? by Dreadfirelit
It's cocoa butter! Put your butter on toast! False advertising!
I love chocolate that is chocolate. They should not lie about chocolate. It is too important. 😆 🍫 😋
Jagid3 t1_j2fva1k wrote
Reply to What is an example of corporate greed? by [deleted]
That it's legal to incorporate and view a business as if it's a person.
Then you are allowed to enslave that person to make money for you by giving him a small loan (buy stock) for a while.
So now your slave no longer focuses on doing his actual work and just focuses on making money for you so you don't take away your small loan (sell stock).
So basically that they exist at all.
Jagid3 t1_j2fuchb wrote
My name
Jagid3 t1_j112cnj wrote
Reply to comment by FlyHandler in Could being submersed in a sealed tank of fluid help humans survive heavy G acceleration in outer space? by cheeze_whiz_shampoo
But the force is not relevant. Unless their body shatters at some point, they are virtually the same density as the rest of the water.
By your logic, no part of the spacecraft could survive any part of the journey, because it's touching itself and the engine.
Jagid3 t1_j0zyfxl wrote
Reply to Could being submersed in a sealed tank of fluid help humans survive heavy G acceleration in outer space? by cheeze_whiz_shampoo
You would need to fill every air filled cavity in their body with the fluid and then they would be fine.
If you missed any they would become compressed and could possibly cause damage depending on how big they are and where they are.
Of course they would need to be able to survive in the fluid. Any normal fluids we have these days would certainly kill them.
Jagid3 t1_ixkqf77 wrote
You only think it was a bar and people say those three were planted by the CIA!!!!!!!
Jagid3 t1_iudihxt wrote
Reply to comment by awkwardhare in How does a dog detect low insulin levels? by DutchgirlAnonymous
I love this!
I'm sure that cuddling with your glucose monitor isn't nearly as comforting as having a happy dog put its head on your lap. :)
Jagid3 t1_iucdvad wrote
I can smell when a diabetic is getting hyperglycemic. It's just a specific scent.
I am sure it's the same for a dog.
I read about an older lady that could smell when a person was getting Parkinson's disease.
Once you recognize a scent you just know when you smell it again. And scent is chemical identification.
Jagid3 t1_ispo6yr wrote
Reply to comment by RamsesThePigeon in How many Redditors does it take to screw in a lightbulb? by RamsesThePigeon
So essentially that person just argued that the entire matter regarding lightbulbs would be irrelevant to thousands of people whom the person doesn't know and whom the person will never meet.
And then one more (me) pointed out the meta-ness of that response, as it is being a response in reference to your reply to a reactionary comment about the overall subject.
Um, yeah. Or something lol. You gotta love Reddit.
Jagid3 t1_isep8bs wrote
One eye can judge distance out to about 20 feet.
At that point the lens doesn't need to deform much to focus the light hitting the back of your eye, so that eye can't tell how far away anything is past that point.
Two eyes can judge distance out much farther away.
Your brain compares the differences between the two images and guesses at the distance of an object.
Jagid3 t1_jc8981v wrote
Reply to Why do movies set in space always show the people moving so slow? by SireBlew
If you want to experience it, you can play a VR simulation of a spacewalk outside the ISS. You really want to have handholds nearby.
It's free on Q2, or at least it was when I got it.