ppardee
ppardee t1_ja6c4op wrote
Things come into focus when the rays of light meet up at the same place at the back of your eye. Since all of these rays come from different directions, you need the lens in your eye to bend them to meet properly (or glasses/contacts that do the same).
If you look through a small hole directly in front of your eye, you're eliminating all of the rays of light except those that go straight into your eye and hit the back of your eye at the same point.
ppardee t1_j9r57zo wrote
Reply to comment by cepegma in [OC] Whose gas is this?! 29 years of CO2e greenhouse gas emissions by elibryan
The US and EU have been reducing emissions over this time.
To get China and India to reduce emissions, you'd have to bring them up to the same levels of prosperity as the US and EU. Being environmentally friendly is a luxury that developing countries can't afford.
ppardee t1_j8nzn6m wrote
There's no way that tiny amount of foliage supported a tap root of that size. Somebody's been sabotagin'!
ppardee t1_j8epj2r wrote
Reply to [Image] Health is wealth. Once you lose it, then you realize how true the saying is by crm_expert
So... work is a higher place value than family?
Frankly, I'd rather have shitty health and an amazing family than the other way around. I guess to each their own, eh?
ppardee t1_j7rg67e wrote
Reply to comment by apprenticedonkey in Pissed by linuxknight
That's nearly half a gallon.
ppardee t1_j6iax9j wrote
Reply to comment by BigHH200026 in We’ve created all these birth control measures just because people like finishing inside by [deleted]
In theory. In practice, it has worse odds than Russian roulette.
ppardee t1_j6h2gy3 wrote
Reply to We’ve created all these birth control measures just because people like finishing inside by [deleted]
Just a reminder that pulling out is not an effective form of birth control.
ppardee t1_j540qae wrote
Reply to comment by Sgt_Fox in TIL researchers found that the global average temperature from 19,000 to 23,000 years ago was about 46 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s about 11 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees Celsius) colder than the global average temperature of the 20th century, per a University of Michigan statement. by Embarrassed-Mouse-49
They prefer to be called Glacial Periods, and I think you'll find that they aren't cold. Interglacial periods are hot.
You need to be more temperature sensitive.
ppardee t1_j4z7xen wrote
Reply to Angry songs about sexual abuse and grooming by edoedo_
Megadeth - Family tree
ppardee t1_j4igu8d wrote
Reply to [Image] You are the only one who can change your life. No one will do it for you. by sylsau
God, how I wish that were true.
ppardee t1_j3t2gjf wrote
Reply to [Image] Keep Going! by ZGeekie
What if you keep going and wind up hitting liquid hot magma?
ppardee t1_j1ydfgv wrote
Flying cars just make no sense. It's far more efficient to drive. And you know the dumbass driving 90 mph in the rain on tires with the belts showing through because they haven't bothered to fix their alignment? You want them airborne and dropping their car on your house?
Not all sci-fi concepts are worth translating to the real world.
ppardee t1_izu72o9 wrote
It's often very hard to see your progress. If what you are doing is something you actually want, keep going and periodically examine your progress. Don't wait until you feel like giving up. Make it part of your process.
Don't just continue doing something because you've put so much effort into it... that's no bueno.
ppardee t1_iydqskf wrote
Homie tries to sell you a widget for $2. You say, nah, fam. $1.99. He say, word.
You've saved a penny, which is the same as having earned a penny in that instant because you have the same amount of money as if someone had given you a penny and you bought the widget for $2.
Saving in the context of the quote doesn't mean storing.... although if we're being pedantic, any money not spent is affected by inflation unless you then immediately spend it again and so your point still stands.
ppardee t1_iwvt9mr wrote
Reply to [Image] Do Not Back Down. by btce_arno
No. Always be working towards de-escalation. You're not John Wick. You're not protected by plot armor, and you can easily be killed in a fist fight.
ppardee t1_iw9on91 wrote
So, the take away is if you try 100 times, you'll fail. But if you just try once, you'll succeed?
I'll take the try once option, please!
ppardee t1_iw8w98d wrote
Reply to comment by Ubermenschen in [Image] Believe... by Gainsborough-Smythe
That may be what you take away from it. It may also have been Henry Ford's intent in say it. But that's not what it says, and if a quote needs an explanation to go along with it, it's not a good quote.
Plus, it's still false. Not everyone has the capacity to learn something and believing you're going to able to learn will not make you capable of learning it. I used to think everyone could just learn whatever they wanted... and then I started interviewing people for technical roles. Doesn't matter how much you believe and persevere. It doesn't make you capable.
ppardee t1_iw5tw8a wrote
Reply to [Image] Believe... by Gainsborough-Smythe
This kind of nonsense quote is what made the self-help industry into a joke. It sounds good and motivational, but it's just not true in any capacity.
One of the hallmarks of being a mature person is knowing your limitations. Believing you can do something isn't enough. You have to ACTUALLY BE ABLE TO DO IT. Musk believed he could run Twitter better. I believed I could change the thermostat on my wife's Kia. Both of us underestimated the complexity of the task. Belief didn't matter. Reality is the only thing that matters.
One does not repair a car on faith alone.
ppardee t1_ivr0cpv wrote
Reply to comment by redsnake15 in PsBattle: sedated gorilla by PartyPandan06
They are shorter than humans, but that's mostly because they have shorter hind legs. Gorilla males are about twice as heavy as human males.
The head gives you an idea of how big he'd be if he had the same proportions as a human.
ppardee t1_iugwxoc wrote
Reply to comment by elpasso1900 in [image] i trust you by theupsetguy
Did you hear about the constipated mathematician?
He worked it out with a pencil.
ppardee t1_iugjy4o wrote
Reply to comment by Throwawayiea in Montana photo I bought at a yard sale in 1992. Don’t know when it was taken. by devadog
Is it an electric pole because it has two cross members? How do we tell it's electricity vs telegraph?
ppardee t1_iug4v4s wrote
Reply to People who know how to fix most mistakes, have probably made the most mistakes by beardynolando
In my profession, this is what separates the new college grads from the highly valuable experienced workers - the new college grads haven't made enough mistakes to be very valuable yet.
ppardee t1_iucvk62 wrote
Reply to comment by serenitynow1983 in Beds are going to be way more comfortable in the future. by serenitynow1983
Whatever you do, DON'T SNEEZE AFTER 40! Your back will never recover.
ppardee t1_jd6s2mq wrote
Reply to In A Music Slump... by TharbyPictures
If you're in a slump, get out of your comfort zone.
BAND-MAID
Sisters of Mercy
Earth, Wind and Fire
Harley Poe
MC Frontalot
The Longest Johns
Dolly Parton
Michael Jackson
Bach
Just bounce all over the place. Commit to one or two songs per artist/genre. You'll find a new groove and appreciate your old one more.