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About me
Spacecraft Engineer
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How long is your average KSP play session?
[email protected] replied to ShadowZone's topic in KSP1 Discussion
I usually play for about two or three crashes. After that I just get tired of reloading the game. On the weekends I might play for up to five or six crashes. -
I actually have to work a bit now, I will as soon as I get some time! Also I will post another one for you.
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Without lifting your pencil draw a typical five pointed star. Then at each point of the star fill in a small circle (tree), and at each intersection as well. You will have 5 rows, each with 4 dots. This was a problem from a physics teacher in a puzzles games and problems class I took a couple years ago. It took me forever to solve it, thats why I still remember it.
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I'll admit this one is pretty hard and almost impossible to figure out. Its a star. A five pointed star. With a tree planted at the tips, and at each of the intersections.
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A man and his dog The man saw a bird but not the cat, the dog the cat but not the bird perched on a branch and a cat on a rock the man hit the bird with a rock and the dog bit the cat. ?? lol - - - Updated - - - Nope. The trees themselves form the rows. No halfways, no open spots. You must have 5 rows, each with 4 trees, using exactly 10 trees. Let me know if you give up. I'll give you another hint, this is not the answer btw, just a hint. Imagine planting 4 rows of 2 trees with only 4 trees, how could one accomplish this? Why by planting each of the trees at the corners of the square. - - - Updated - - - Wait...I think I got it... The Man and the bird The man saw the bird, the bird did not see the man The bird was perched on a branch but the man was not The man hit the bird with a rock and bird did not hit the man with a rock?
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I know the answer, I'll give you a hint. This one can be pretty difficult. Think about this, You can only plant 10 trees, you need 4 rows of 5, therefore each tree must be in at least 2 rows. This problem is more geometric than it is mathematical. - - - Updated - - - Also, what are the spoiler tags on this forum?
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Hahaha ok I got it. I kind of feel stupid for not seeing that immediately. It is worth more by $99.
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I'm taking this riddle is a bit more abstract and has nothing to do with math or geometry?
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Hmm, it was in regards to the time of printing due to inflation.
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Incorrect! You can only plant ten trees, you must make 5 rows, each with 4 trees in them. No blank or open spots.
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and now I'm hungry.... Maybe you'll find it in a couple hours.
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3000 if the taxes are being paid to bananaville. If not, then you can get 833 Apples to Bananaville. I won't tell anyone how unless you want me to explain it. It actually is pretty easy, only took a couple of minutes to figure out. Now I have one for you. You have been ordered to plant 10 trees in 5 rows of 4, how do you do it?
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I don't mean for anyone to take offense to this...but logically that simply doesn't follow. Legal and moral are not the same, legal cannot infuse morality into the situation. Law is irrespective of morality. The authority of the state is as fictional as that of god. Moral agency rests entirely in the minds of individuals who must make those decisions. What governments decree as law is irrelevant. Millions have been massacred in the service of unjust governments, there is no logical connection between law and ethics. Also the United Nations is an unelected body of oligarchs, no one has any obligation to obey their arbitrary decrees. To say that because something is law that it is therefore also moral is to say that all of the conflicting laws in the worlds nations are moral, and that in some areas certain actions are moral (including some very stomach turning stuff) while others are immoral, and then as soon as you cross over an invisible non-existent boundary other actions are moral, and things that were moral a couple of miles ago are now immoral. Any connection between law and morality in government is a happy accident. Now, everyone who chooses to ignore these arbitrary decrees known as law may be forced to contend with the consequences of disobeying the government, much as a store owner who doesn't pay protection to the mafia must contend with them. But it has no logical connection to morality. The only logically consistent set of moral principles I have encountered follows from the principle of self ownership. The only moral authority anyone is obligated to obey is the self. That being given, the ship owner has no moral obligation to intervene, any action he takes is purely of his own compassion. The only exception to this would be if those people on the sinking ships had previously contracted with him to perform rescue missions in the event of X. In which case I would say he has been negligent since he does not have enough fuel to even return to port once one of the ships arrives at the scene. I will refrain from taking this any further, I'd be happy to discuss it but I don't want to derail someone elses thread, that and I don't think this kind of discussion would be looked upon favorably on these forums.
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Playing KSP from my WIN 8 Tablet
[email protected] replied to [email protected]'s topic in KSP1 Discussion
So some things were pretty obvious. Simply rebinding a lot of the keys gave me most of my functionality back, but I still cannot spawn new items in the VAB except through loading ships or subassemblies.