Riley: Oh, yeah. Sorry 'bout last time. Heard I missed out on some fun. Xander: Oh yeah, fun was had. Also frolic, merriment and near-death hijinks.

'Never Leave Me'


Natter 40: The Nice One  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


§ ita § - Dec 05, 2005 6:40:32 am PST #9374 of 10006
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I wonder if they'll run seasons 1 & 2 together on BBCA?

Probably not, though I'm hoping they'll run them closely enough that I don't bust a fuse. Of course, they could just slip something else silly in there so I can develop another indefensible attachment. Man, I'm ship-happy.

Marco looked kinda familiar to me too, but it turns out I'd not seen him in anything. That's happening a lot (cf Ada, Bleak House) to me. I think it must be age.

Rick, will that be the Internet, or will it be another global network?


Rick - Dec 05, 2005 6:40:46 am PST #9375 of 10006

Oh, come over, then! Um, I mean, if it's OK to ask, what is your field?

I'm a psychologist, but the parts of my work that have to do with genetic epidemiology and cognitive science sometimes border on your systems stuff. When they do, I get a headache. I like my nice, simple, deterministic models. I don't look forward to the effort of learning a whole new way of thinking, but that's where things are going, so I suppose I will have to.


tommyrot - Dec 05, 2005 6:43:02 am PST #9376 of 10006
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

"Okay, we have snow, we have bitter cold. We can call this Winter thing over with and move on to Spring."

It's those Canadians with their coldon particle emitters again.

I was actually thinking about coldon particles the other day. A coldon particle would have to be the same as a photon of heat energy, but with negative heat. So you'd fire your coldon particle emitter, and you'd instantly gain heat as the coldon particles left. Then when the coldons hit their target, the target would lose heat energy as the coldons were absorbed.

And, if you assume that a physical object cannot have negative heat energy, and if the target was already at absolute zero, then the coldon particle emitter wouldn't work. (eta: assuming that they can't bounce off and go hit something else.) So, say you fire your CPE at a planet that's one light-hour away. You would instantly gain heat, and one hour later the target planet would lose heat. Exept, if the beings on the target planet would put up a shield of absolute zero matter, then when you fire the CPE you'd instantly know that one hour later your attack would fail. So your CPE would be able to detect an event in the future.

The cool thing is that a coldon particle would behave exactly like a regular photon of heat energy that was traveling backwards in time.


Allyson - Dec 05, 2005 6:43:40 am PST #9377 of 10006
Wait, is this real-world child support, where the money goes to buy food for the kids, or MRA fantasyland child support where the women just buy Ferraris and cocaine? -Jessica

Hey Rick, my whole family is whack. You want em?

For research purposes of course.


Emily - Dec 05, 2005 6:46:16 am PST #9378 of 10006
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

So you'd fire your coldon particle emitter, and you'd instantly gain heat as the coldon particles left. Then when the coldons hit their target, the target would lose heat energy as the coldons were absorbed.

And we'd be able to use it to explain multiplication of negatives by negatives!

a shield of absolute zero matter

I've always thought absolute zero would be like ice-nine. Don't you think?


Nicole - Dec 05, 2005 6:47:51 am PST #9379 of 10006
I'm getting the pig!

Ever since T-day I've had an absolutely ravenous appetite. It's 10:45 and I'm starving. I'm trying to hold out until noon.

Tom, I've been the same way. Good luck to you. This week I'm feeling a tad desperate (formal holiday outfit to fit into on Saturday) so I'll be drinking as much hot tea as necessary to keep me away from the vast amounts of holiday junk food in the office.

The cool thing is that a coldon particle would behave exactly like a regular photon of heat energy that was traveling backwards in time.

Very interesting , tommy.


§ ita § - Dec 05, 2005 6:48:02 am PST #9380 of 10006
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Don't you think?

I don't think of it as contagious.

Now I have to go to my happy place of the Alias episode where Vaughn is a naughty priest.

Bless.


amych - Dec 05, 2005 6:49:24 am PST #9381 of 10006
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

The cool thing is that a coldon particle would behave exactly like a regular photon of heat energy that was traveling backwards in time.

So, we can have time travel, but only if we bundle up really warm?


tommyrot - Dec 05, 2005 6:51:21 am PST #9382 of 10006
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Well, a coldon particle emitter would in essense be a time machine that could reach in to the future, grab radiant heat energy and pull it back into the present. So, just a very narrow, specific time machine.


Connie Neil - Dec 05, 2005 6:52:11 am PST #9383 of 10006
brillig

I love my board full of geeks.