splitlikeasea
splitlikeasea t1_iy94f4e wrote
Reply to comment by diMario in Washing dishes the other day and found an oily Mickey mouse by QuickTimeX
Too bad Mickey's all likeliness are copyrighted. Edit : my phone being funny and posting the stuff before I finish.
splitlikeasea t1_iy949vh wrote
Reply to Me on my dad’s lap (while wearing an old army helmet for some reason and playing with a See ‘n Say), 1982. by oldschoolthepodcast
Your dad has cool glasses :)
splitlikeasea t1_iy5g36v wrote
Reply to comment by SurrealRareAvis in The conference I'm attending has cartons instead of plastic bottles for water by Zer0daveexpl0it
Hmm I've never used a lined paper as a sapling pot but I think roots can penetrate it ?
splitlikeasea t1_iy5e9jv wrote
Reply to The conference I'm attending has cartons instead of plastic bottles for water by Zer0daveexpl0it
From what I know these are not that friendlier to the environment than plastic is if they are lined with foil and plastic inside
splitlikeasea t1_iy2zb43 wrote
Reply to The irony putting of braille on this sign warning about a dark area ahead. by Sir_Giraffe161
Being blind enough to lose the ability to read but still making our shapes in bright light is common.
splitlikeasea t1_iy2y01w wrote
Reply to The fact that Cats are far more dangerous than Wolf Spiders, yet we love them far more and are far less afraid of them, says a lot about how humans value physical appearance in creatures by Run_MCID37
Would like to see a wolf spider curl on my lap, purr a lot and lick me to show affection. Humans generally love animals that respond to your affection with affection. Even better if they are considered a normal pet by your culture ( not a pest or food) Being cute also is important. As aesthetic is an integral part of every human. But that itself is subjective with general trends among humans.
splitlikeasea t1_iyf5exa wrote
Reply to comment by Dr0110111001101111 in There's the same amount of numbers between -∞ to 0 and -∞ to ∞ by [deleted]
I think this is a bit complex for someone who made such a comment. Basically: If you slice up as part of your number and you get a finite amount of numbers, it's a countable infinity.
Take 15-30 range from -infinity to +infinity range of integes and you have finite amount of integer.
If you slice up a part of your numbers and there is still infinite amount of numbers in it, it's an uncountable infinity.
Take 1-2 on rational set and pick any part of it, say from 1.2 to 1.3. there are are infinite amount of numbers you can choose as you can just add another decimal to end.
Uncountable infinities are infinitely denser than countable infinities. And since every uncountable infinity is infinitely dense, all of them are incomparable to each other when it comes to size. Infinity is not a number but a virtual concept so it can go into unimaginable areas.