Jump to content

Shadow Wolf

Members
  • Posts

    919
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Shadow Wolf

  1. Some people have a morning wood. Bahamut wakes up with bot spam.
  2. Sweet I tried to add just OC Remix as a whole to iLike the other day and it didn't have anything. It would be nice if we could work a link into mixer profiles so people can tag them easier. Thanks for the heads up! EDIT: Popped in placeholders for Pixie and Dave using their OC Remix profile pics. Go right ahead and change them if you want, but for some reason they HAVE to be square.
  3. Just saw this. Zero, actually. I'm not a conservationist either. My last name is Spargur, which was shortened and morphed over the years from Wolfensbarger, which I'm told means something vaguely like "Owners of the Mount of the Wolves" In some damn language or another. There's wolves on my family crest. It's a heritage thing overall, but I do like wolves. I also think it awesome that since our name was shortened and the "Wolfen" was removed, our last name basically means "Owners." I own. Rock. P.S. As with many genealogies, we're just a little shady about the accuracy of the info. But it cropped up in several places, so I'll take it, but not without a grain of salt.
  4. My Spidey Sense tells me whatever's going on here was born on IRC.
  5. Nah, those weren't bot threads, they were Atomic Dog threads. The difference can be subtle.
  6. I haven't seen a forum bot in months, which begs the question, why did you just rez this thread after 13 months of inactivity?
  7. I was making a deliberate reference to the movie Idiocracy. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dupu6Y1DIJ4 EDIT: I agree with AnSo. Even if he is Swedish.
  8. Wait... no. nope. I got nothin. This man is right and you should listen to him. In other news, I don't give a fuck.
  9. Yes I did... I'm already tryin' to talk with them. Not gettin anything back yet though.
  10. Bummer, I want you to know the huge roflage I just got when I found out that all the images you used to make my sig were contained in the first page of Google Image results for the term 'Shadow Wolf.' Nice work.
  11. Well, I tried to change my nick to 'W' as a joke, and it instantly kicked me and won't let me back in.
  12. Hey, somebody that's seen me on IRC a lot lately! I can't connect all of a sudden. It may be that my school simply doesn't allow IRC connections over their network... but it's telling me I got kicked for using a protected username. Which would be mine. So yeah.
  13. Which is all to say: YAY! The nice thing is that we're pretty good at getting stem cells to turn into nervous tissue, but the trick is getting the body to accept implantation. Now if we could get as good at turning them into cardiac tissue, we'd be set, since those are the only 2 types of cells in the body that can't repair themselves.
  14. Yeah, I realized shortly after I posted that that you could simply control the enzymes that cause DNA to replicate and such. Nice to see there's someone with more intimate knowledge of the other end of the idea here. I don't see us developing the precision to use biological material for storage anytime soon, and even then, we may well have mechanical technology small enough at that point to make it not worth doing. It could have huge applications in the fields of organ replacements and prosthetics though... If you could grow and transplant a biomechanical organ, and place it into a human body to such a degree that you could actually get the thing to analyze and emulate the DNA of the original, you theoretically wouldn't have to deal with rejections anymore. If you could design prosthetics that tie into the stump of an arm on a DNA level while still creating viable connections with machinery, there is the potential for prosthetic arms that function as exactly as a real one. Bio/nanotech is an exciting field. I can't wait to see where we are in 20 years.
  15. I don't know. I just don't know. I think if I ask Larry to change it one more time I may get cut. Like, he will literally track me down and physically cut me.
  16. Oh now don't even START that shit with me. I had like 120 million people ask me why there was only one W. So I made it 2. So people would stop. So stop. kthxbai.
  17. You're darn right it is, because the dark lords that run this completely free, completely nonprofit public service website using their free time have absolutely no right to pull the thorns out from under their saddles when they've been there for years. You people, I swear.
  18. Hey, new stuff! Interesting character bio on Jim Raynor, as well as a screenshot of what he looks like in all his StarCraft II glory. They mention a new character, his second in command Matt Horner, and also link him directly to Tychus Findlay. Interesting...
  19. Excessively chill and funky. Jazz isn't usually my cup of tea, but that doesn't stop this from being very polished, well executed, and downright groovy. The EP riffage was very well done, and the whole mix just has a nice smoothness to it. Good work.
  20. Bring the funk. The "Yeah Baby's" are I think the best part of the whole mix. I <3 this mix. Great fun stuff. Especially for being put together in two days. Anso owns like a proper Viking should. Even though he's Swedish. I'll make him an honorary ulfsark for this mix.
  21. That actually had not occurred to me, and it seems logical unless you have a really good grip on how operating systems actually store data. As I've said before, a hard disk represents 1s and 0s by magnetizing and demagnetizing sectors of the disk surface. Even when you're just copying or moving a file on your hard disk, it's changing its location on the physical disk surface. With a hard disk today, when you delete a file, its contents remain on the drive. What you're really doing when you delete a file is earmarking the sectors it's written into for overwriting. Then, the next time you create any type of file whatsoever, new file data is written into the sectors that "deleted" data resides in, wherever they happen to be found on the disk surface. That's why you have to defragment your hard drive, because files are written into whatever empty sectors are found, and don't necessarily get written all in order to one spot on the disk, and as a result, the disk has to spin and search longer to find the whole file. If you etch data permanently into the disk surface, you lose that capability, which means you can never truly delete a file or clean your hard disk. Data storage would be like writing a book with a Sharpie pen... you go from the top of the page to the botttom, and you can't change anything. It would, however, mean that you would never have to defragment your hard disk again. But eventually simply using your computer would fill the disk, and you would have to start using a new disk. The question would then become, can you give me an etching surface large enough to allow me to write on it for the standard lifecycle of a computer (3 to 5 years) without having to replace it? If they can get the bible on a .5 mm or whatever it was silicon chip, that may be entirely possible. But scarier yet would be that since you can't delete anything, there is a complete record of every keystroke, click, and command ever given to that computer etched into the surface. I like this thread. I could go for a long time yet.
  22. There is definitely huge application for being able to store data in a form that small, but not as far as standard hard disks go. Standard hard disks never physically modify the disc surface, they magnetize and demagnetize parts of it. To make it rewritable you would have to develop a new type of surface to write it on. The closest thing we have right now is a CD-RW, because optical discs have microscopic holes physically burnt into them to store the data, and to erase them, the writing medium is simply melted by the laser, closing all the holes so you can write it again. The problem with that is that the more times you melt it, the less reliable it becomes. Flash memory won't work either, because it uses a very mechanically oriented gating system, which is much better explained right here. So in order for this to be useful in computing application, we need to develop a surface that can be physically modified, and completely restored to its original state on command. I know of nothing like that right off the top of my head, although I'm sure the scientists are working on it. But yes, if we ever figure out how the brain stores memories, then we'll be getting somewhere. My largest concern at that point would be that if we know how memories are stored then we know how to erase them, and that's a little too "The Matrix" for me.
×
×
  • Create New...