SeriousPuppet
SeriousPuppet t1_j9e8sgz wrote
Reply to comment by TheUpperHand in Average Attendance for North American Sports Leagues [OC] by BoMcCready
I find it so bizarre that NFL has 8-9 home games and MLB has 81. That makes no sense to me. I mean I know why it is based on the history... but still it sounds bizarre. I have always thought MLB plays too many games.
SeriousPuppet t1_j9e8ofg wrote
Reply to comment by fatamSC2 in Average Attendance for North American Sports Leagues [OC] by BoMcCready
Interesting. It seems to be quite popular amongst the younger generations.
Also, I wonder how much soccer has taken from the other sports in terms of eyeballs. It has been growing the past 30 years.
SeriousPuppet t1_j9e8iwm wrote
Reply to comment by Augen76 in Average Attendance for North American Sports Leagues [OC] by BoMcCready
The Univ is doing well too. Aren't they joining the Big 12?
SeriousPuppet t1_j9bhw21 wrote
Reply to comment by de_hell in The Tadpole galaxy by Hubble, Its eye-catching tail is about 280,000 light-years long. Also known as UGC 10214 and Arp 188, it is a disrupted barred spiral galaxy located 420 million light-years from Earth in the northern constellation Draco. Credit Image: NASA/ESA/HST/STScI. by Davicho77
I agree. There are so many stars and planets that there has to be at least a few other planets with life. Perhaps many thousands or millions. But at least a few. We can't be the only one in the entire universe.
SeriousPuppet t1_j9bhkly wrote
Reply to comment by HappyMaskSalesPerson in The Tadpole galaxy by Hubble, Its eye-catching tail is about 280,000 light-years long. Also known as UGC 10214 and Arp 188, it is a disrupted barred spiral galaxy located 420 million light-years from Earth in the northern constellation Draco. Credit Image: NASA/ESA/HST/STScI. by Davicho77
Is this a real image or recreation?
SeriousPuppet t1_j62w1mr wrote
Reply to Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
If we get all the hamsters on their wheels and hook the wheels up to the core we can get it spinning again.
SeriousPuppet t1_j62vrxd wrote
Reply to comment by oalfonso in Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
How do they know the spin of the core? (ie the pace, direction, etc)
SeriousPuppet OP t1_j5q1u31 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in When will we become nearly all-knowing? by SeriousPuppet
Yes I would like to know if we will be able to manipulate space, and to what degree. For example, will we (humans enabled with AI) be able to create new stars, or completely harness the energy of stars. I'm wondering what is actually possible as humans and AI grow into the future.
SeriousPuppet OP t1_j5q1cb9 wrote
Reply to comment by space-ModTeam in When will we become nearly all-knowing? by SeriousPuppet
I'm wondering when human-AI will become smart enough to travel through and manipulate space. How is that not related to space?
SeriousPuppet OP t1_j5q1666 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in When will we become nearly all-knowing? by SeriousPuppet
I haven't seen them.
Mine got removed though for being "not related to space". But it is related to space, because I am wondering when we'll become smart enough to engineer space. Any thoughts?
SeriousPuppet t1_j5no8xu wrote
Reply to [Image] "It’s better to walk alone than with a crowd going in the wrong direction." by Butterflies_Books
"It's best to walk in the right direction, regardless of what the crowd is doing."
- SeriousPuppet
SeriousPuppet t1_j5no1lg wrote
Reply to comment by cgg419 in [Image] "It’s better to walk alone than with a crowd going in the wrong direction." by Butterflies_Books
In that case they'd be walking in the right direction, which does not conflict with OP's quote.
SeriousPuppet t1_j5iy6vn wrote
Reply to comment by neglectedselenium in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
we're not gonna terraform anything. you'll find out eventually. as it gets closer.
SeriousPuppet t1_j5iwuok wrote
Reply to comment by neglectedselenium in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
bro our air was formed from the volanic gases and gases from plants.
how will we ensure the same gases are released in the same way on mars.
and if mars' gravity and magnetic field are different then exactly how will it hold the same molecules in place?
SeriousPuppet t1_j5i47m7 wrote
Reply to comment by thisimpetus in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
bro you said a century or two.
we can build an underground base in much shorter time span.
in two centuries we'll have underground base on mars, jupiter moon, saturn moon, uranus moon.
SeriousPuppet t1_j5gxih0 wrote
Reply to comment by neglectedselenium in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
ok bud. and what exactly is the "feasible" method of releasing all those gases? and where is your proof that that would turn into an atmosphere the same as earth's (ie about 20% / 80% oxygen to nitrogen), and where is your proof that the atmosphere would stay put (ie not erode or dissolve)?
SeriousPuppet t1_j5gwfeo wrote
Reply to comment by wasp463 in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
nice channel.
SeriousPuppet t1_j5dhwal wrote
Reply to comment by wasp463 in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
Interesting. I didn't know that was possible
SeriousPuppet t1_j5cjp74 wrote
Reply to comment by politicatessen in Wind Energy Could Power Human Colonies On Mars, Finds Study by upyoars
We don't need to terraform. In fact it's a far fetched idea.
We can however live underground. Protected from radiation.
We can then do this on the rocky moons of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune. Then on Pluto.
SeriousPuppet t1_j3og7mw wrote
Reply to [image] You got this by _Cautious_Memory
This is me with my pile of dishes every single day.
SeriousPuppet t1_j2jgjyh wrote
Reply to comment by Shmeepsheep in Water pipe robots could stop billions of litres leaking by Sariel007
Wow. Then wouldn't the fixtures downstream (ie where the water ends up, faucets etc) notice a big drop in water pressure?
SeriousPuppet t1_j2j4qg4 wrote
Reply to comment by Tyrion_toadstool in Water pipe robots could stop billions of litres leaking by Sariel007
Geez. Do you know the diameter of the main? Just curious. Trying to visualize how big it is and how big a crack/break would be to leak that much water.
SeriousPuppet t1_j2j4ct0 wrote
Reply to comment by beamer145 in Water pipe robots could stop billions of litres leaking by Sariel007
Yeah just spot fix the cracks. Clear the debris. done
SeriousPuppet t1_j21maxl wrote
Reply to The next youth sports arms race by eddytony96
The article was too long to read in full. But if I get the gist - lots of massive sports parks is the new "arms race".
I guess that's not a horrible thing.
But for soccer, kids need futsal courts and indoor and public spaces for pickup soccer.
As they get older they do more regimented training at a club typically.
Baseball I don't know much about, but there are many public baseball diamonds near me. More baseball diamonds than soccer fields, way more, at least near me.
But there are a few big "sports complexes" with a lot of soccer fields, they're just a hike to get to.
SeriousPuppet t1_j9e8vef wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Average Attendance for North American Sports Leagues [OC] by BoMcCready
Some big 10 teams do well. Esp Ohio State and Michigan.