DAL59 Posted September 8, 2018 Share Posted September 8, 2018 4 hours ago, cubinator said: That makes sense. For instance, every planet in KSP has a point-mass at its center, and the ground is a hollow shell. But our brains don't really know or care about that while casually playing the game. Except when your submarine glitches through the sea floor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cubinator Posted September 8, 2018 Share Posted September 8, 2018 5 hours ago, cubinator said: casually 49 minutes ago, DAL59 said: submarine Case in point. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 8, 2018 Share Posted September 8, 2018 Quote Shower thoughts "Ooops! Wrong tap!" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Phil Posted September 8, 2018 Share Posted September 8, 2018 On 9/7/2018 at 11:58 AM, cubinator said: One day, someone is going to run DOOM on a human brain. Some say it's already happened... I remember playing Doom so much that I hallucinated the in-game sounds... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cubinator Posted September 8, 2018 Share Posted September 8, 2018 1 hour ago, kerbiloid said: "Ooops! Wrong tap!" Behold, the original shower thought. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
razark Posted September 8, 2018 Share Posted September 8, 2018 2 hours ago, Bill Phil said: I remember playing Doom so much that I hallucinated the in-game sounds... Late night in the college dorm. Playing Doom for multiple hours, both on and off-line. Step out of the room and walk down the hallway, where the only light is a couple of florescent lights, one at each end of the hallway. And one of them is flickering. And then a door opens just after you walk past... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0111narwhalz Posted September 9, 2018 Share Posted September 9, 2018 Now I'm a bit too young to have binged on DOOM, and Tetris has never held me overlong, but I will say that Factorio has done it for me. I see convoluted freeway interchanges and think of belt or rail spaghetti. Sometimes I hallucinate the "entity destroyed" alarm. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheSaint Posted September 9, 2018 Share Posted September 9, 2018 3 hours ago, razark said: Late night in the college dorm. Playing Doom for multiple hours, both on and off-line. Step out of the room and walk down the hallway, where the only light is a couple of florescent lights, one at each end of the hallway. And one of them is flickering. And then a door opens just after you walk past... Did you try to take them out with your chainsaw? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cubinator Posted September 9, 2018 Share Posted September 9, 2018 4 hours ago, razark said: Late night in the college dorm. Playing Doom for multiple hours, both on and off-line. Step out of the room and walk down the hallway, where the only light is a couple of florescent lights, one at each end of the hallway. And one of them is flickering. And then a door opens just after you walk past... I don't know about Doom, but one of the underground passageways in my dorm sounds straight out of Portal 2, from the hum of machinery to the sound the door makes when you open it. The walls are definitely portalable there too, white paint. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 9, 2018 Share Posted September 9, 2018 (edited) ~1990. I had the first time playing LHX (DOS combat helicopter simulator), all night long. Walking to the subway and later in the morning I was avoiding obstacles moving along the arc, sitting down by spiralling, and tilting back on stopping, Two years later this repeated after the all-day-long Fighter-Bomber on ZX Spectrum. After several years of LHXing, the habit of attention focus switching through targets when walking along the street — I still have... *** The first night after Duke Nuk'em 3d I couldn't sleep, as I had never seen anything so much realistic, so laying in bed with closed eyes I was having an endless loop of me in the game locations with excellent CGI trying to realize how should I distinguish if this is a simulation or not. Edited September 9, 2018 by kerbiloid Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kernel Kraken Posted September 9, 2018 Share Posted September 9, 2018 9 hours ago, kerbiloid said: ~1990. I had the first time playing LHX (DOS combat helicopter simulator), all night long. Walking to the subway and later in the morning I was avoiding obstacles moving along the arc, sitting down by spiralling, and tilting back on stopping, Two years later this repeated after the all-day-long Fighter-Bomber on ZX Spectrum. After several years of LHXing, the habit of attention focus switching through targets when walking along the street — I still have... *** I've had a habit of switching targets for like three years. It's helpful in dodgeball. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 10, 2018 Share Posted September 10, 2018 (edited) Do I get it right that the phrase "I miss you" means at once "it's sad without you" and "I tried to shoot you down, but missed"? Edited September 10, 2018 by kerbiloid Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Delay Posted September 10, 2018 Share Posted September 10, 2018 Any computer monitor showing a red-green-blue pattern could be considered a fractal display. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChrisSpace Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 Every single fictional story that leaves at least one character alive technically ends on a cliffhanger Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Phil Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 On 9/8/2018 at 11:07 PM, cubinator said: I don't know about Doom, but one of the underground passageways in my dorm sounds straight out of Portal 2, from the hum of machinery to the sound the door makes when you open it. The walls are definitely portalable there too, white paint. Once I was near some buildings and it sounded exactly like one place in Half Life. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
p1t1o Posted September 13, 2018 Author Share Posted September 13, 2018 (edited) Is there anywhere/anyone that formally tracks the date? If so, have they been doing it for a significant length of time? Like, everyone just seems to keep count of what year it is on their own, considering how seldom you hear the question "Whats the year again?" I mean, you hear that, but not often. And when you get an answer, nobody looks it up from somewhere to check, they just tell you what year they think it is. I wonder if humanity has ever just kinda lost track of what the year is, and just collectively "fudged" it. We'd never know. Probably its written down in too many places (eg: newspapers) to happen now, but in the past maybe? How long have wwe been using the current yearly calendar on a global scale? (Probably not as long as I think, right?) And more importantly, how did we convince everyone to use the same one, when we cant convince everyone to do anything today?? (I know it probably wasnt someone doing any actual "convincing" but a more natural process, but still, weird.) What the year is, is probably the most agreed-upon thing on the entire planet. Edited September 13, 2018 by p1t1o Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
razark Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 7 minutes ago, p1t1o said: What the year is, is probably the most agreed-upon thing on the entire planet. Chinese Calendar: 4714 Buddhist Calendar: 2560 Byzantine Calendar: 7526 Ethiopian Calendar: 2010 Hebrew Calendar: 5778 Holocene Calendar: 12018 Islamic Calendar: 1439 Japanese Calendar: Heisei 30 Thai Solar Calendar: 2561 My calendar: 242 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NSEP Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 5 minutes ago, p1t1o said: How long have wwe been using the current yearly calendar on a global scale? (Probably not as long as I think, right?) And more importantly, how did we convince everyone to use the same one, when we cant convince everyone to do anything today?? (I know it probably wasnt someone doing any actual "convincing" but a more natural process, but still, weird.) What the year is, is probably the most agreed-upon thing on the entire planet. It works, thats why. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 53 minutes ago, razark said: 1 hour ago, p1t1o said: What the year is, is probably the most agreed-upon thing on the entire planet. Chinese Calendar: 4714 Buddhist Calendar: 2560 Byzantine Calendar: 7526 Ethiopian Calendar: 2010 Hebrew Calendar: 5778 Holocene Calendar: 12018 Islamic Calendar: 1439 Japanese Calendar: Heisei 30 Thai Solar Calendar: 2561 My calendar: 242 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Jainism Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kernel Kraken Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 It's permanatly 1-1-1 on my calendar unless something importand happens then it switches. 1-2-1 will probably be something like getting a drivers liscense. It's also month day year, for those of you communists who were wondering why the month changed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
p1t1o Posted September 13, 2018 Author Share Posted September 13, 2018 "Most agreed upon" does not preclude the existence of other calendars, and the same question would apply to all of them anyway. Just because theres a chinese calendar, doesnt mean most chinese people dont use [quickly googles...] the gregorian calendar. If i walk into a cafe in Bangkok and ask someone what year is it, are they going to tell me its 2561? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NSEP Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 Its not that hard to memorize 2 numbers between 3 and 5 digits, its even less of a problem when you have got a year time to do it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
razark Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 Point being that the year is an entirely arbitrary thing, and there is no actual correct answer to what year it is, just that we all have some way to talk about it. The reason the Gregorian one is the de facto standard is probably European colonization. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
adsii1970 Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 (edited) Ok, completely random shower thought. How come it is four, fourteen, four hundred, fourth (as in fourth place), one-fourth, four thousand, but forty? Does anyone else see the discontinuity of the English numbering system? Edited September 13, 2018 by adsii1970 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Phil Posted September 13, 2018 Share Posted September 13, 2018 2 hours ago, adsii1970 said: Ok, completely random shower thought. How come it is four, fourteen, four hundred, fourth (as in fourth place), one-fourth, four thousand, but forty? Does anyone else see the discontinuity of the English numbering system? This one gets me all the time. I write it as fourty. I am also perplexed by this though... Apparently "fourty" is obsolete. Let's bring it back. Like the thorn... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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