This thread is for stupid questions that don't deserve their own individual threads

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1) My Dad's really old mac laptop burnt out and he needs a new computer... does anyone know what the best cheap netbooks are? I think another mac is too expensive for his needs, unless theres a good used one.

2) How come no one seems to like Chopper vs. Chopper in GTA Lost and Damned multiplayer?
 
Hey, guys, I have some woefully short music that I wish were longer...so I want to loop it. Is there such things as free music-looping software? Is it legal and all that? Anyone know a few if so? :P
 
dragonlife29 said:
Hey, guys, I have some woefully short music that I wish were longer...so I want to loop it. Is there such things as free music-looping software? Is it legal and all that? Anyone know a few if so? :P

Well, you could always just set it to "Repeat" in your player...that'd kinda accomplish what you're looking for.

Otherwise I'm sure there's a free audio editing program out there somewhere that'll let you loop the track. I know Nero comes with one, but that's not free.
 
NetMapel said:
2) How come soccer fan seemed a lot more crazy than fans of other sport ? I mean, really, they are really crazy and excited !

Football is popular, immensely so, in countries with numerous and densely concentrated populations of working class or actually skint people, for whom a positive sense of socio-economic belonging and mobility is hard to come by. They might compensate with devotion to sport and allegiance to a team, as much for distraction, perhaps, as anything else.

GAF - I'm in Australia. Kindles are coming out, and I want one. Where and how do I buy ? Any other Australian Gaffers taking the plunge ?
 
dragonlife29 said:
Hey, guys, I have some woefully short music that I wish were longer...so I want to loop it. Is there such things as free music-looping software? Is it legal and all that? Anyone know a few if so? :P

not so much looping software, but audacity is a nice free audio editor that can make it fairly easy to copy and paste song segments (or entire thing) together, and then exporting an mp3 should also be possible from it
 
stupid question/request:
I need a topic for my english course (college), the prof. wants something unique, and is good enough to write 10 pages about. O_o I did looked up some topics but all seemed lame/too short :( Any help will be appreciated :D
 
Legend said:
stupid question/request:
I need a topic for my english course (college), the prof. wants something unique, and is good enough to write 10 pages about. O_o I did looked up some topics but all seemed lame/too short :( Any help will be appreciated :D

On anything?

I wrote a paper last year about stereotypes and racism and I struggled to cut it down to 10 pages because it was so easy to go on about. Where stereotypes come from, why people might be racist, ways we can fix it from extreme scenarios to more practical fixes. It was actually kind of fun.

Another paper that was easy to write a lot about was an assignment where we had to write our experiences in our own personal heaven if we died, it could be anything we wanted to be. In mine I met Marilyn Monroe, watched my family, was able to do tons of fun things I didn't do before, it was an assignment clearly inspired by The Lovely Bones.
 
jonnybryce said:
On anything?

I wrote a paper last year about stereotypes and racism and I struggled to cut it down to 10 pages because it was so easy to go on about. Where stereotypes come from, why people might be racist, ways we can fix it from extreme scenarios to more practical fixes. It was actually kind of fun.

Another paper that was easy to write a lot about was an assignment where we had to write our experiences in our own personal heaven if we died, it could be anything we wanted to be. In mine I met Marilyn Monroe, watched my family, was able to do tons of fun things I didn't do before, it was an assignment clearly inspired by The Lovely Bones.

I forgot to mention its a research paper, so anything researchable/argument-able will be fine (no topics specified). I really hate it when professors do this, I get lost :(

The first idea seems interesting, I might actually write about it :D. The second one seems fine too, but I don't think it will be a good idea for a research paper. thank you :)
 
I'm trying to find out the name of a certain Horror/gore film... I looked in most of the horror film threads but no luck.


It was a film in all black and white, with grainy quality. It started off with some girl in a cabin sitting in a chair cutting away her stomach with a knife. It was mostly silent.

Thanks in advance.
 
themustardman said:
It was a film in all black and white, with grainy quality. It started off with some girl in a cabin sitting in a chair cutting away her stomach with a knife. It was mostly silent.

Begotten.
 
sankt-Antonio said:
why the hell do the tabs in ie8 change colors? from grey to pink to blue...yellow?!?!? wtf...

its like the tabs went gay on me?!?!?...

IE8 hasn't gone gay on you, if anything you are the homosexual :D . The tabs match the most dominant colour on the page you are viewing, so it's your fault for viewing Pink websites.
 
EraldoCoil said:
thanks a ton!!!

i'm not that great with these types of things.....

I know the other guy said he'd do this for you but I was bored and decided to have a go at it.

4027450959_c93f9fd742_o.gif


It's not as smooth since I had to cut some frames out to cut down the file size, but that is what you have to do sometimes to get under the limit.
 
SexyNerd said:
I know the other guy said he'd do this for you but I was bored and decided to have a go at it.

4027450959_c93f9fd742_o.gif


It's not as smooth since I had to cut some frames out to cut down the file size, but that is what you have to do sometimes to get under the limit.

sweet! thanks man!
 
Well I tinkered with it some more adding some frames back in and just got right under the limit. As a result it's a lot smoother.

4028237316_14fa0cb3aa_o.gif


Use whichever one you think looks best.
 
Question re: deadly force used by police officers in the US.

I know that they have the authority to shoot an assailant if they pose immediate threat and danger to the police officer or to any other people around, but why kill them off?

Why not just incapacitate the assailant, like shoot the guy in the arm, leg, or some other body parts just enough to stop him from using his weapon? I mean, I always thought it was overkill to like kill him off.

I am guessing they would still have a chance to use the weapon even if their leg or arms were shot, but I can only imagine that in the movies. Most guys would probably be screaming in pain after getting shot.

So what is the reason behind this rule?
 
Goron2000 said:
IE8 hasn't gone gay on you, if anything you are the homosexual :D . The tabs match the most dominant colour on the page you are viewing, so it's your fault for viewing Pink websites.

wow thx!

and that was some self-ownage:P

edit:

when i enter this side: link my tabs turn green?!!

edit2: and now on the same side blue
 
Troidal said:
Question re: deadly force used by police officers in the US.

I know that they have the authority to shoot an assailant if they pose immediate threat and danger to the police officer or to any other people around, but why kill them off?

Why not just incapacitate the assailant, like shoot the guy in the arm, leg, or some other body parts just enough to stop him from using his weapon? I mean, I always thought it was overkill to like kill him off.

I am guessing they would still have a chance to use the weapon even if their leg or arms were shot, but I can only imagine that in the movies. Most guys would probably be screaming in pain after getting shot.

So what is the reason behind this rule?
Shooting someone in the arm or leg is something that only happens in the movies. In real life, if you're shooting at someone, it is with intent to kill--a gun is a deadly weapon, and firing one should not be taken lightly. What happens when you are not shooting to kill, are slightly off, and kill them anyway? Or when you hit an artery and they bleed to death?

The largest part of a human is the torso, so that's generally where a shooter will aim. Aiming for a small body part increases the risk to the police officer.
 
Cyan said:
Shooting someone in the arm or leg is something that only happens in the movies. In real life, if you're shooting at someone, it is with intent to kill--a gun is a deadly weapon, and firing one should not be taken lightly. What happens when you are not shooting to kill, are slightly off, and kill them anyway? Or when you hit an artery and they bleed to death?

The largest part of a human is the torso, so that's generally where a shooter will aim. Aiming for a small body part increases the risk to the police officer.

That sounds like an answer I'd get from a gun-based culture/soceity and I totally understand that.

Personally though, if a police officer shoots the guy in the leg (and let's just say without the intention of killing) but the guy ends up dying anyway...I'd say tough luck. I just think it's a bit overkill to think that you need to kill someone to stop a threat but when people's lives are at stake, it's totally understandable.

Police officers can get away with this, but it becomes harder when an individual ends up shooting someone who breaks in the house for example, and usually becomes the case argument in a criminal court. Was the victim truly in a situation where his life was in imminent danger?

I've lived in the US long time ago, and holding a gun was scary in the sense that you knew you had the power to end someone's life by simply pointing and pulling the trigger. With a knife, it doesnt feel like that. I guess that's the difference between a kitchen tool and a real weapon.
 
Was just watching a Seinfeld episode on TV (the one where Kramer puts everyone's photos in the lobby and Jerry keeps getting kisses hello). It was one of the cropped widescreen ones, and a scene in a car where Elaine's friend drops her off after a ski trip had the blue screen around the car, not the city streets or whatever is supposed to appear. Is this what all the widescreen episodes have where blue screen is used, or was this a totally random one-off thing? I've never seen this before, was very strange :lol
 
A couple of quick but somewhat deep questions:

Why is God's existence a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why can you put for example the theory of evolution to the test, but if you do the same thing to God's existence it is not really considered putting it to the test? and therefore its a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why is Intelligent design considered unscientific?

Why can't a scientific theory be proven true?

Why do some atheists believe in dark energy and dark matter yet disbelieve in a creator? and also consider believing in dark energy and dark matter normal but believing in a creator is something stupid? keep in mind that both can not been seen, it is only their effects that we can observe?
 
Nizar said:
A couple of quick but somewhat deep questions:

Why is God's existence a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why can you put for example the theory of evolution to the test, but if you do the same thing to God's existence it is not really considered putting it to the test? and therefore its a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why is Intelligent design considered unscientific?

Why can't a scientific theory be proven true?

Why do some atheists believe in dark energy and dark matter yet disbelieve in a creator? and also consider believing in dark energy and dark matter normal but believing in a creator is something stupid? keep in mind that both can not been seen, it is only their effects that we can observe?

Good questions.

If I'm not mistaken a theory contains ideas which have at least been tested, and ideas which are incapable of being falsified can therefore never constitute a theory.

We can put evolution to the test by comparing the world as it is now, to the world as it would be should evolution not be true. Your question seems to imply you have a test for god. If you can test God then you would have something capable of being some kind of theory.

Intelligent design is considered unscientific for lack of falsifiability.

In this question, I guess it depends what you mean by true. We never know anything with 100% accuracy so we must always be open to the possibility that our ideas wrong, but under definitions of "proven" in a less rigorous sense, some things are proven.

And for your last question, I guess you'd have to ask those specific atheists. I think however your question is asking in a roundabout way "How does on believe in something we've indirectly observed in one case but not another" I think a satisfying answer is "Because some indirect observations have the capacity to be explained in more than one way" and another big aspect might be "because the idea of dark matter is falsifiable".
 
Nizar said:
A couple of quick but somewhat deep questions:

Why is God's existence a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why can you put for example the theory of evolution to the test, but if you do the same thing to God's existence it is not really considered putting it to the test? and therefore its a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why is Intelligent design considered unscientific?

Why can't a scientific theory be proven true?

Why do some atheists believe in dark energy and dark matter yet disbelieve in a creator? and also consider believing in dark energy and dark matter normal but believing in a creator is something stupid? keep in mind that both can not been seen, it is only their effects that we can observe?
These questions deserve their own topic tbqh
 
Troidal said:
That sounds like an answer I'd get from a gun-based culture/soceity and I totally understand that.

Personally though, if a police officer shoots the guy in the leg (and let's just say without the intention of killing) but the guy ends up dying anyway...I'd say tough luck. I just think it's a bit overkill to think that you need to kill someone to stop a threat but when people's lives are at stake, it's totally understandable.

Police officers can get away with this, but it becomes harder when an individual ends up shooting someone who breaks in the house for example, and usually becomes the case argument in a criminal court. Was the victim truly in a situation where his life was in imminent danger?

I've lived in the US long time ago, and holding a gun was scary in the sense that you knew you had the power to end someone's life by simply pointing and pulling the trigger. With a knife, it doesnt feel like that. I guess that's the difference between a kitchen tool and a real weapon.

The general answer is that it's easier to aim for the torso than it is to aim for a limb. If you're a cop, you're risking your life and others around by trying to aim for a limb (assuming the assailant has a gun). The situation is already a matter of life and death and a miss could be disaster.
 
Troidal said:
I just think it's a bit overkill to think that you need to kill someone to stop a threat but when people's lives are at stake, it's totally understandable.
Again, a gun is a deadly weapon. I don't mean just that it's dangerous, I mean that its purpose is to kill. You never, ever fire a gun at someone unless you intend to kill them. If a police officer believes their life or the lives of others are in danger, they use their gun. Otherwise, they use something non-deadly like a taser (can of worms... taser overuse is another subject altogether)

I've lived in the US long time ago, and holding a gun was scary in the sense that you knew you had the power to end someone's life by simply pointing and pulling the trigger.
Yeah, this is kind of what I'm getting at.

Sarye said:
The general answer is that it's easier to aim for the torso than it is to aim for a limb. If you're a cop, you're risking your life and others around by trying to aim for a limb (assuming the assailant has a gun). The situation is already a matter of life and death and a miss could be disaster.
Absolutely. I alluded to this in my prior post as well.

Troidal said:
Police officers can get away with this, but it becomes harder when an individual ends up shooting someone who breaks in the house for example, and usually becomes the case argument in a criminal court. Was the victim truly in a situation where his life was in imminent danger?
Yeah, this can definitely be a source of contention. Some states have "castle doctrine" laws, which essentially means that you'll nearly always go free in this situation. Others will use more careful judgment in determining what is and is not self-defense.

Personally, if I felt that my life was threatened, I would absolutely try to defend myself... but not with a gun. I've fired various types of guns at shooting ranges before, but I don't own a gun, and never will.
 
Earthstrike said:
Good questions.

If I'm not mistaken a theory contains ideas which have at least been tested, and ideas which are incapable of being falsified can therefore never constitute a theory.

We can put evolution to the test by comparing the world as it is now, to the world as it would be should evolution not be true. Your question seems to imply you have a test for god. If you can test God then you would have something capable of being some kind of theory.

Intelligent design is considered unscientific for lack of falsifiability.

In this question, I guess it depends what you mean by true. We never know anything with 100% accuracy so we must always be open to the possibility that our ideas wrong, but under definitions of "proven" in a less rigorous sense, some things are proven.

And for your last question, I guess you'd have to ask those specific atheists. I think however your question is asking in a roundabout way "How does on believe in something we've indirectly observed in one case but not another" I think a satisfying answer is "Because some indirect observations have the capacity to be explained in more than one way" and another big aspect might be "because the idea of dark matter is falsifiable".
This should be at the top of every religionVSscience-GAF thread.

Also, why is non-salted unshelled peanuts so difficult to buy?
I can hardly find them anywhere, and when I do, they're together with other nuts.
 
Nizar said:
Why can't a scientific theory be proven true?
Earthstrike addressed your questions nicely, so I'll just touch on one or two. Science is a model of reality. As we find things in reality that don't match our model, we adjust it to fit. Thing is, we can never be 100% sure that we aren't about to find some other anomaly in nature that doesn't fit our model. And so no theory in science can be proven true, they can only be rigorously tested and shown to stand up to long years of scrutiny and attempts at proving them false.

Why do some atheists believe in dark energy and dark matter yet disbelieve in a creator? and also consider believing in dark energy and dark matter normal but believing in a creator is something stupid? keep in mind that both can not been seen, it is only their effects that we can observe?
Dark matter and dark energy aren't something you believe in. They're not a matter of faith. They're the result of matching scientific theory with observation. That is, part of the "model adjustment" I mentioned above. So what you're really asking is, "why do people believe in the model that leads to dark energy and dark matter?" The answer is that it's the best we have--it makes predictions that are nearly always correct.
 
Why does Tab mess shit up in word these days. Back in my day tab was used to indent the first line of a paragraph but now it indents everything and adds bullet points and does a ton of annoying things

My day:

I write a post.
::tab::
(five spaces right) I write a post

Today:

I write a post.
::tab::
#$^&$%%$#$%&
 
Nizar said:
A couple of quick but somewhat deep questions:

Why is God's existence a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why can you put for example the theory of evolution to the test, but if you do the same thing to God's existence it is not really considered putting it to the test? and therefore its a hypothesis and not a theory?

Why is Intelligent design considered unscientific?

Why can't a scientific theory be proven true?

Why do some atheists believe in dark energy and dark matter yet disbelieve in a creator? and also consider believing in dark energy and dark matter normal but believing in a creator is something stupid? keep in mind that both can not been seen, it is only their effects that we can observe?

1. A theory is something that can be tested and will get the same results each time. The only real difference between a theory and a law is that it hasn't been proven in every situation (which, by definition, means a "law" is actually just a really well-done theory).

2. Putting evolution to the test requires physical evidence, which exists. No such thing exists for God.

3. Intelligent design is considered unscientific because there's zero proof to support it. That's like asking "why is magic unscientific?" Sure... technically it's possible (since in an infinite universe, anything is possible) but it has never been recreated, and is therefore deemed unscientific.

4. A scientific theory IS proven true, just not in every situation.

5. Because they're observable, and are therefore being "seen" in some type of way. There is absolutely nothing, thus far, that has let somebody "see" God.


Hopefully those are honest questions, and not flame-bait. I really enjoy this type of discussion, provided it stays civil.
 
Troidal said:
Question re: deadly force used by police officers in the US.

I know that they have the authority to shoot an assailant if they pose immediate threat and danger to the police officer or to any other people around, but why kill them off?

Why not just incapacitate the assailant, like shoot the guy in the arm, leg, or some other body parts just enough to stop him from using his weapon? I mean, I always thought it was overkill to like kill him off.

I am guessing they would still have a chance to use the weapon even if their leg or arms were shot, but I can only imagine that in the movies. Most guys would probably be screaming in pain after getting shot.

So what is the reason behind this rule?

Troidal said:
That sounds like an answer I'd get from a gun-based culture/soceity and I totally understand that.

Personally though, if a police officer shoots the guy in the leg (and let's just say without the intention of killing) but the guy ends up dying anyway...I'd say tough luck. I just think it's a bit overkill to think that you need to kill someone to stop a threat but when people's lives are at stake, it's totally understandable.

Police officers can get away with this, but it becomes harder when an individual ends up shooting someone who breaks in the house for example, and usually becomes the case argument in a criminal court. Was the victim truly in a situation where his life was in imminent danger?

I've lived in the US long time ago, and holding a gun was scary in the sense that you knew you had the power to end someone's life by simply pointing and pulling the trigger. With a knife, it doesnt feel like that. I guess that's the difference between a kitchen tool and a real weapon.

*twitch* *twitch*

Okay, before I fly off the handle and call you all sorts of names insulting your intelligence, here's an article for you to read:

Real life is not television
By Dave Brown

When police are forced to resort to deadly force, there are necessary consequences. This is Canada after all, and we would not tolerate the indiscriminate use of any level of force on the part of the people who are supposed to be there to protect us, let alone the highest level of force that it is possible for a police officer to employ. Trust me; no one takes this lightly.

On the other hand, it is about time we got rid of all those myths that have built up over the years on the use of force by police. Life is not television and this is not some “Dirty Harry” movie; this is real life.

In real life, if you pull a knife on the police, you will be shot. There are no alternatives. There is no Taser; no baton; no pepper spray; no intermediate force option in the world that would reliably protect an officer or bystanders from a knife attack in a dynamic situation. It is simple science – the assailant is acting, and the police officer is reacting. Action always trumps reaction, and it has long been documented and understood that an assailant can travel a distance of over seven meters and stab a person in less time than it takes to react, draw and fire a sidearm.

So why not shoot for the arm or a leg as many people think would be possible? Well, we need to put this myth to bed once and for all. Sure, Olympic handgun target shooters at the absolute top of their game can put all ten shots into the 2.6 centimeter ‘10’ ring of a paper target at 20 meters, but they have ten minutes to do this, not fractions of a second. Plus, their target is not moving … nor is it trying to kill them.

A bullet must necessarily follow some simple laws of physics as it speeds through the air at two times the speed of sound. The slightest misalignment of the sights on that handgun result in not only missing a small and moving portion of a target, it results in missing the target entirely. Unlike television, once that bullet is fired, it must hit something. That ‘something’ might be another person; another officer; another vehicle two kilometers down the road with your mother/father/child/spouse/etc. in it.

Once that bullet is fired, no force on the face of the earth can bring it back again.

Police officers must shoot for the center-mass of the deadly threat; there is no other location that would be scientifically, morally or legally justified.

Police officers do not shoot to wound, nor do they shoot to kill. They shoot for only one purpose – to stop. When they are forced to employ deadly force, they must do it in such a way that it stops the threat as quickly and efficiently as possible without putting themselves or anyone else in any greater danger.

One other reason that police officers cannot shoot for an arm or a leg is that it would have little effect anyway. Again, this is not television. In real life, when people get shot, they don’t fly backwards like they were kicked by a horse. It is just not physically possible. In fact, in many cases, they don’t even know they are shot, meaning they are still a threat to life.

One of the survival mechanisms of the human body has often been termed the “fight or flight syndrome” and this dictates that in high stress situations, all blood flow concentrates into the center-mass of the body. The body is preparing itself for battle by reducing blood flow to the extremities and also by introducing adrenalin into the bloodstream to act as painkiller. This simply means that a person could literally be shot in the arm or the leg and not feel a thing. They could still be a threat.

Ever hear stories of people in combat who have their arm or leg blown off and don’t even know it until after the battle is over? This is why police officers are trained to shoot for center mass; any shot to an extremity would fail to stop a threat. With an edged weapon such as a knife, an assailant could easily travel seven meters before they even knew they were shot.

As for hitting them in the leg and bringing them down; even the best handgun shooters in the world couldn’t consistently make a shot like that – even if the target was perfectly stationary and not trying to kill them.

Police officers already have a difficult enough job. We should be necessarily examining their actions whenever they use force, but we should also be using facts to do so, not some myth or television mentality.

"why don't they shot for the leg?" Fucking television-induced stupidity, is what that question is.
 
Boogie said:
*twitch* *twitch*

Okay, before I fly off the handle and call you all sorts of names insulting your intelligence, here's an article for you to read:



"why don't they shot for the leg?" Fucking television-induced stupidity, is what that question is.

"Stupid questions that don't deserve their own threads"

Hence I asked here, jackass.

I come from a society where most people don't own guns (instead we have samurai swords and ninja stars).

The only exposure I had to guns is when I lived in the US for 5 years and that was a long time ago. That was the only time I held/shot handguns and shotguns and it's not something I would want to do as a form of habit.

So yes, I'm ignorant about guns.
 
Hey guys.. I was wondering about Blackmagic Intensity pro and if it could somehow possibly work with a laptop (say MBP)?

I want to capture HD (console) gaming but don't want to have to buy or use a huge desktop computer with slot drives and all that shit.. :\

Is it doable in any way?
 
Jay Sosa said:
Is there a way to turn off the trophy messages on the PS3?

Co-worker asked me and since I have no PS3 I have no clue...

Grazie!

Anyone?

Tried google but all the posts/therads linked to that question can't be viewed anymore..
 
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