Comment Too tall for the kinect (Score 1) 49
The new device will reportedly be able to track players with a height of one meter
That's great for them, but what about the rest of us who are taller than 3.28 feet?
The new device will reportedly be able to track players with a height of one meter
That's great for them, but what about the rest of us who are taller than 3.28 feet?
If you were to check the actual numbers, you'd discover that the rich pay way more than their fair share. The top 10% richest americans pay half of all taxes, while half the country pays no income tax at all.
I think that statistic just demonstrates how crazy, out-of-whack rich the top 10% really are. They pay the majority of the taxes because they have the majority of the money.
According to this page the top 10% hold about 75% of the nations wealth: Wealth Distribution Seems like if we're talking about "fair shares" then they should be paying about 75% of our taxes and not just 50%.
Men = hunters. Women = gatherers.
Sounds like there is potential for a co-op, Real Time Strategy game here. I tried to play Starcraft 2 recently and I'm just not fast enough, (ADD enough), to keep jumping back and forth from my main base, to my other base, to my army in the field, to my other army in the field and back again. If my wife could be building our bases and gathering resources on her screen that would free me up to build our army and focus on them and their battles without falling behind in either aspect.
"The TFA reveals the study is..."
You can't say "The TFA", that's as redundant as saying "ATM Machine"!
The way the Casimir force works is that when you put smooth plates very very close together, they are pulled closer... we get a force pulling the plates together.
I assume there is some reason this wouldn't work, but could we harness this "force" and convert it into useable energy?
Just attach something to the back of both these plates that will be pulled on by the plates as they try to move together. The "something" would not allow the plates to get together, but as far as my understanding goes, the plates would "perpetually" try to move together and you'd have a constant generation of energy.
But current physics laws don't allow endless energy for free, so what's the catch with this one? Is the amount of pull so small it would take ages to build up enough energy to be usable?
U X e dUdX, e dX, cosine, secant, tangent, sine, 3.14159...