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By Sandstorm in Uncategorized       
Oct 26, 2015
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By FutileExistence in Uncategorized       
Aug 21, 2015
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At a price of US$4,500,000, it is currently the most expensive production car in the world. But, look at it. It looks like your own personal spaceship on road!

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By grh9674 in Uncategorized       
Aug 03, 2016
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MAINZ, Germany — Strippers dressed as cops are a tale as old as time, which could explain why revelers at one German birthday party got a bit confused when two officers showed up over a noise complaint.

"THIS BOOSTED THE AMUSEMENT OF THE LADIES SKY HIGH"
Police were called to a party tent in the southwestern town of Bendorf on Sunday after a 50th birthday celebration got a bit too loud. That's when the women went wild.
Police were called to a party tent in the southwestern town of Bendorf on Sunday after a 50th birthday celebration got a bit too loud. That's when the women went wild.

"When the two male officers arrived they were cheered by the crowd" because the partygoers thought strippers had arrived, the police department said in a statement.

Several attempts to explain to the "approximately 10 tipsy women" that the officers were genuine law enforcement "were completely unsuccessful," police added.

Revelers posed for pictures with the officers and female party-goers asked for hugs with the men in uniform. But the two professionals needed something for their police report — routine procedure — and asked for the birthday girl's phone number.

"This boosted the amusement of the ladies sky high," police said in a statement. It added that the women eventually turned down the music once they spotted the police vehicle outside the tent and realized the officers were not there to dance.

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By Sandstorm in Uncategorized       
Nov 01, 2015
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quotes-on-smile-and-love-18.jpg

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By Sandstorm in Uncategorized       
Nov 01, 2015
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By Sandstorm in Uncategorized       
Nov 03, 2015
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microsoft20surface20tablet-11374271.jpg

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By Sandstorm in Uncategorized       
Oct 29, 2015
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symptoms-of-a-broken-heart.png

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By Sandstorm in Uncategorized       
Oct 26, 2015
3,959
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ht_nasa_hubble_fireworks_hb_160629_16x9_992.jpg

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By grh9674 in Uncategorized       
Jul 28, 2016
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By FutileExistence in Uncategorized       
Aug 21, 2015
4,452
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Fastest Production car in the world!

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1772907.jpg

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By Sandstorm in Uncategorized       
Oct 29, 2015
3,630
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674
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5 items
By grh9674 in Uncategorized       
Jul 31, 2016
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  1. using a meme to look at this

  2. E = mc2. It's the world's most famous equation, but what does it really mean? "Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared." On the most basic level, the equation says that energy and mass (matter) are interchangeable; they are different forms of the same thing. Under the right conditions, energy can become mass, and vice versa. We humans don't see them that way—how can a beam of light and a walnut, say, be different forms of the same thing?—but Nature does.

    So why would you have to multiply the mass of that walnut by the speed of light to determine how much energy is bound up inside it? The reason is that whenever you convert part of a walnut or any other piece of matter to pure energy, the resulting energy is by definition moving at the speed of light. Pure energy is electromagnetic radiation—whether light or X-rays or whatever—and electromagnetic radiation travels at a constant speed of 300,000 km/sec (186,000 miles/sec).

    Why, then, do you have to square the speed of light? It has to do with the nature of energy. When something is moving four times as fast as something else, it doesn't have four times the energy but rather 16 times the energy—in other words, that figure is squared. So the speed of light squared is the conversion factor that decides just how much energy lies within a walnut or any other chunk of matter. And because the speed of light squared is a huge number—90,000,000,000 (km/sec)2—the amount of energy bound up into even the smallest mass is truly mind-boggling.

    Here's an example. If you could turn every one of the atoms in a paper clip into pure energy—leaving no mass whatsoever—the paper clip would yield 18 kilotons of TNT. That's roughly the size of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima in 1945. On Earth, however, there is no practical way to convert a paper clip or any other object entirely to energy. It would require temperatures and pressures greater than those at the core of our sun.

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