heyakiddo asked: hey people exposed/talking crap about you on http://youreexposed.com/christopherizett just thought id tell you
wait wait wait…. I dont get it…
“An illegal prime is a prime number that represents information forbidden to possess or distribute. One of the first illegal primes was discovered in 2001. When interpreted a particular way, it describes a computer program which bypasses the digital rights management scheme used on DVDs….
by blaise pascal
“Justice and power must be brought together, so that whatever is just may be powerful, and whatever is powerful may be just.”
by Blaise Pascal
Binary numeral system
how to calculate someone’s age
- ask him/her if there is a number of his age in the following numbers (ex.: if he was 20 year’s old then he would answer “3 and 5”)
- add the numbers of the first number of each row that he answered (ex.: if he answered “3 and 5”, then you add the first number of 3 and 5, which is 4 and 16, and the answer is 20)
- the answer you got is his age.
Sorry if you couldnt understand because I’m not good at explaining and language stuff….
Damn Nature U Pretty of the Day: Lightning researcher Joseph Dwyer of the Florida Institute of Technology used a 1,500-pound homemade x-ray camera capable of snapping ten million images per second in order to capture the first x-ray images of a lightning strike.
The images were used to determine that a lightning bolt’s x-ray radiation is collected entirely in its tip.
(Source: thedailywhat)
Chemistry Professor (via almondsofjoy)
A rather apt quote as I start exam revision
(via fyeahchemistry)
Nathan Keyfitz, a Harvard professor of sociology and demographics, made an estimate that, updated in 1999, suggests 96 billion. Of course, most of human history lacks accurate census data, so any answer will consist of educated guesswork. The Population Reference Bureau guesstimated 106 billion in 2002, which would mean 6 percent of all the humans that ever lived, were alive in 2002. (PRB also has annual datasheets on demographics; the 2010 sheet projects that by 2050, there will only be a worldwide average of 4 people of working age for every person aged 65+, down from 9 in 2010 and 12 in 1950. In some countries, like Japan, goes the projection, the ratio of people ages 15-64 to 65+ will be one to one.)

