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-- The "Ask Nou a Question" Thread
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Posted by shaw on Jun-27-2011 18:02:

The "Ask Nou a Question" Thread

quote:
Originally posted by enydo
Any topic

Anything at all

Nou can show you why it's USELESS


Nou, what do you think about importing food?


Posted by Zyklon_Jay on Jun-27-2011 18:03:

Nou, why are you jealous of the "sunshine people"?


Posted by srussell0018 on Jun-27-2011 18:05:

Nou, do you think that creating meat in test tubes will be good for the people who don't have aunts to feed them?


Posted by Zyklon_Jay on Jun-27-2011 18:06:

Nou if your tiny pud smells like brie, do you rub it on a baguette or a ciabatta?


Posted by infiniteJEST on Jun-27-2011 18:06:

how do I exp


Posted by Zyklon_Jay on Jun-27-2011 18:09:

Nou, if a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, how many hungy man dinner boxes does it take to build a fort sufficient enough to stay pale like a sheet of loose leaf paper?


Posted by we_R_DNA on Jun-27-2011 18:18:

Nou wow much wood would a woodchuck chuck
If a woodchuck could chuck wood?


Posted by tubularbills on Jun-27-2011 18:21:

Nou, what would you do if your aunt didn't have a basement?


Posted by enydo on Jun-27-2011 18:23:

If your family was to COMPLETELY cut you off, as in no more "parental dole", no more place to stay, no more nothing, what would you do?


Posted by Ygrene on Jun-27-2011 18:23:

How do I shot web?


Posted by Joss Weatherby on Jun-27-2011 18:31:

quote:
Originally posted by shaw
Nou, what do you think about importing food?


Depends on the type of food. I believe the most common import (probably not by volume, but by type) is fruits, a lot which have trouble growing in climates here, or are not economically viable to grow in mass in climates here. What I have issue with is tariffs placed on things like sugar cane and subsidies given to things like corn that create a totally artificial slant to the market, making it rather unfair, and not in a good way.

quote:
Originally posted by Zyklon_Jay
Nou, why are you jealous of the "sunshine people"?


You mean KC and The Sunshine Band? Because they have black soul voices and disco style while be white boys. They make any hipster jealous and guilty feeling... Wait I forgot to login as Nef to post this.

quote:
Originally posted by srussell0018
Nou, do you think that creating meat in test tubes will be good for the people who don't have aunts to feed them?


Yes, cheap "vat" meat would probably solve a lot of issues.

quote:
Originally posted by Zyklon_Jay
Nou if your tiny pud smells like brie, do you rub it on a baguette or a ciabatta?


I rub it on my teeth like a coke addict.

quote:
Originally posted by infiniteJEST
how do I exp


F12

quote:
Originally posted by Zyklon_Jay
Nou, if a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, how many hungy man dinner boxes does it take to build a fort sufficient enough to stay pale like a sheet of loose leaf paper?


Does not compute, if no one heard the tree, how will they know where to get the wood to make the paper to make the boxes. There would be no hungy man dinners. How sad!

quote:
Originally posted by we_R_DNA
Nou wow much wood would a woodchuck chuck
If a woodchuck could chuck wood?


Ask Geico.

quote:
Originally posted by tubularbills
Nou, what would you do if your aunt didn't have a basement?


Not live there, like I am doing now?

quote:
Originally posted by enydo
If your family was to COMPLETELY cut you off, as in no more "parental dole", no more place to stay, no more nothing, what would you do?


Get a job?

quote:
Originally posted by Ygrene
How do I shot web?


9/11


Posted by shaw on Jun-27-2011 18:35:



Is this good?


Posted by ziptnf on Jun-27-2011 18:36:

Is there a theory which explains the values of all fundamental physical constants? Is there a theory which explains why the gauge groups of the standard model are as they are, why observed space-time has 3 + 1 dimensions, and why all laws of physics are as they are? Do "fundamental physical constants" vary over time? Are any of the particles in the standard model of particle physics actually composite particles too tightly bound to observe as such at current experimental energies? Are there fundamental particles that have not yet been observed and if so which ones are they and what are their properties? Are there unobserved fundamental forces implied by a theory that explains other unsolved problems in physics?


Posted by Ygrene on Jun-27-2011 18:38:

quote:
Originally posted by shaw


Is this good for the economy?


$1.30 per cheese??!?!

OUTRAGE


Posted by tubularbills on Jun-27-2011 18:39:

quote:
Originally posted by Ygrene
$1.30 per cheese??!?!

OUTRAGE


rephrase into a question plzkthx


Posted by Ygrene on Jun-27-2011 18:40:

quote:
Originally posted by tubularbills
rephrase into a question plzkthx


Interrobang!


Posted by Joss Weatherby on Jun-27-2011 18:40:

quote:
Originally posted by ziptnf
Is there a theory which explains the values of all fundamental physical constants? Is there a theory which explains why the gauge groups of the standard model are as they are, why observed space-time has 3 + 1 dimensions, and why all laws of physics are as they are? Do "fundamental physical constants" vary over time? Are any of the particles in the standard model of particle physics actually composite particles too tightly bound to observe as such at current experimental energies? Are there fundamental particles that have not yet been observed and if so which ones are they and what are their properties? Are there unobserved fundamental forces implied by a theory that explains other unsolved problems in physics?



That is like a laundry list of the most pressing questions in theoretical physics lol.

I do not know the answers exactly, but I do talk physics with a number of physicists pretty regularly, in terms of me asking stupid questions and then being educated.

Most of those questions involve problems attempting to be solved at the LHC. A friend of mine is interning at the LHC this summer, if you like I can ask him, though I know there are already theories on most of what you asked, specifically a universal constant (or constants) and subparticle discoveries (like the Higgs Boson, which might be a sub-particle elements).

It is interesting stuff. I do not have the patience or the ability to work that far in the abstract though to entertain me for long.


Posted by Reza on Jun-27-2011 18:58:

What kind of shampoo do u use?


Posted by iclone on Jun-27-2011 19:03:

Nou, what is your stance on soap?


Posted by Joss Weatherby on Jun-27-2011 19:07:

quote:
Originally posted by Reza
What kind of shampoo do u use?


Don't regularly use shampoo as I shave my head to the skin. When I do shampoo my beard (which isnt that often, maybe 2 times a month) I use whatever is in the shower.


Posted by CorneliusCB21T on Jun-27-2011 19:08:

quote:
Originally posted by ziptnf
Is there a theory which explains the values of all fundamental physical constants? Is there a theory which explains why the gauge groups of the standard model are as they are, why observed space-time has 3 + 1 dimensions, and why all laws of physics are as they are? Do "fundamental physical constants" vary over time? Are any of the particles in the standard model of particle physics actually composite particles too tightly bound to observe as such at current experimental energies? Are there fundamental particles that have not yet been observed and if so which ones are they and what are their properties? Are there unobserved fundamental forces implied by a theory that explains other unsolved problems in physics?


There are a few good postulates out there, String theory being one of them. Among the various ideas put forward in the search for a theory of quantum gravity, the causal set hypothesis is distinguished by its logical simplicity and by the fact that it incorporates the assumption of an underlying spacetime discreteness organically and from the very beginning.

In the way that it has developed, the causal set hypothesis has given rise to a mathematical framework (the "dynamics of sequential growth") in which time is an active process of "becoming" that can be identified with the continual birth of new elements of the causal set.

The conceptual simplicity of the theory has meant that it has been possible to draw from it interesting phenomenological consequences, even though the theory remains in an incomplete stage of development. Perhaps the most interesting prediction so far was that of fluctuations in the value of the so-called cosmological constant that are consistent with subsequent observations.


Posted by Joss Weatherby on Jun-27-2011 19:09:

quote:
Originally posted by iclone
Nou, what is your stance on soap?


For my skin, use as little as possible. Depends on the activity level too. If I am sitting around all day I don't get that sweaty. If I am out being active sometimes I will shower with soap two-three times in a day. Last Saturday I showered three times, once in the morning, then after a long as walk in high humidity heat (with the threat of rain, so I stupidly wore a jacket that just made it worse) then again that night after getting back from a party in the sun where I got too drunk and needed a shower to actually let me get to sleep.


Posted by Ian on Jun-27-2011 19:12:

hey cliffwad

what would you do if adam's sister came onto you whilst on the rebound?


curious in cleveland


Posted by Halcyon+On+On on Jun-27-2011 19:13:

quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
When I do shampoo my beard (which isnt that often, maybe 2 times a month) I use whatever is in the shower.


Do you mean whatever soap/shampoo is in the shower, or just, whatever is in the shower?


Posted by bas on Jun-27-2011 19:16:

quote:
Originally posted by shaw


Is this good?

Good to know the price of 1 Ausome is $825.


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