@Olivia This cannot be allowed to go on! The people who did this need to be caught and punished to the fullest extent of the law. Disgusting!
@igeljaeger You're approaching levels of weeb that no human returned from. Be warned.
@igeljaeger @march RAWR! *pounces on u, starts succing your neck*
@ItaLain @igeljaeger @march Ain't nobody pressing F at your funeral after the gamer police 360-no-scope you into the last console generation. SMGH (Shaking My Gamer Head, for all you non-gamers)
@igeljaeger @march This is hate speech against the gamer race. Reported for genocide.
@igeljaeger @march the problem is that a show's either going to be "muh mainframe" or endless technobabble that's impossible for the average person to penetrate.
@march Why isn't programming a competitive sport in general? Shit's an art form in it's own right.
@igeljaeger @cereal >Xenon is a chemical element with the symbol Xe and atomic number 54. It is a colorless, dense, odorless noble gas found in Earth's atmosphere in trace amounts. Although generally unreactive, xenon can undergo a few chemical reactions such as the formation of xenon hexafluoroplatinate, the first noble gas compound to be synthesized.
Xenon is used in flash lamps and arc lamps, and as a general anesthetic. The first excimer laser design used a xenon dimer molecule (Xe2) as the lasing medium, and the earliest laser designs used xenon flash lamps as pumps. Xenon is used to search for hypothetical weakly interacting massive particles and as the propellant for ion thrusters in spacecraft.
Naturally occurring xenon consists of seven stable isotopes and two long-lived radioactive isotopes. More than 40 unstable xenon isotopes undergo radioactive decay, and the isotope ratios of xenon are an important tool for studying the early history of the Solar System. Radioactive xenon-135 is produced by beta decay from iodine-135 (a product of nuclear fission), and is the most significant (and unwanted) neutron absorber in nuclear reactors.
@rawrrawrfox @matrix Explains why my physics teacher confiscated my calculator for the rest of the lesson after he saw it.
@rawrrawrfox @matrix Really? My maths teachers weren't very happy with me when I figured that one out.