I wasn't feeling okay.
Are you a couch-nap person, or a bed-nap person?.Sup wrote:
I went to take a nap. Is Jord still alive?
im hungry
That's fine. I, howver, am....Sup wrote:
I wasn't feeling okay.
INVINCIBLE.
Ahem, I still said that your body would age cos it still experiences time even if "time" (clock time) stays the sameFlaming_Maniac wrote:
/bangs head on table
Timezones do not have to do with actual time. They are artificial representations of segments of the day that are staggered so that when someone says it is 6 P.M., everyone knows that that is around evening time. Certain countries are not actually "ahead" or "behind" you in time, they only have varying relatively arbitrary times to start their particular 24 cycle. It is the same time here as other places, we all just have different names for this exact time. I hope you all realize this.
So if you're looking at a completely irrelevant artificial clock as your "age clock" then bennis is right, otherwise max is right. If you aren't approaching relativistic speeds there is nothing you can do to seemingly extend your lifetime in relation to those at normal speeds, though even then you will still only think you lived 80 years or so.
Also I was just using the fact that he would jump forward in "time" to show that he couldnt stay at the exact same time/date forever.
best postusmarine wrote:
go back in time and fix yur teeths wankers
If you want to live longer (not forever) you can build a spaceship and live in space
Time goes slower in space.
Time goes slower in space.
Your bones deteriorate in space and you have to exercise a lot to keep that from happening.Jono-blundo wrote:
If you want to live longer (not forever) you can build a spaceship and live in space
Time goes slower in space.
Then you exercise alotRyan wrote:
Your bones deteriorate in space and you have to exercise a lot to keep that from happening.Jono-blundo wrote:
If you want to live longer (not forever) you can build a spaceship and live in space
Time goes slower in space.
I cant believe nobody has mentioned how hes supposed to eat and drink forever when sat in a plane
could a plane take off from a treadmill?
Jord, while I find your theory full of lunacy, I personally hope you will live forever. You deserve it you sod. lol
Last edited by oChaos.Haze (2008-08-23 11:52:48)
It has to reach a certain speed/momentum before the aerodynamic design of the wings begin to produce uplift.God Save the Queen wrote:
could a plane take off from a treadmill?
Not sure sure if the momentum has to actually be directed forward, just that airflow must be going over and under the wings at a certain velocity.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Fuck. Keep your dick out of paradox holes and old threads.God Save the Queen wrote:
could a plane take off from a treadmill?
on a treadmill?Uzique wrote:
It has to reach a certain speed/momentum before the aerodynamic design of the wings begin to produce uplift.God Save the Queen wrote:
could a plane take off from a treadmill?
Not sure sure if the momentum has to actually be directed forward, just that airflow must be going over and under the wings at a certain velocity.
I don't know whether to read that as a compliment or what. Seeing as how living past 200 years would probably be hell and extremely boring.oChaos.Haze wrote:
Jord, while I find your theory full of lunacy, I personally hope you will live forever. You deserve it you sod. lol
Also a plane can't take off from a treadmill. What speed is it going to take off the treadmill when it climbs? 0MPH? It would just stall. It wouldn't suddenly go from 0 to 200MPH in a split second.
[sarcasm]Yes, the mythbusters proved it.[/sarcasm]God Save the Queen wrote:
could a plane take off from a treadmill?
Last edited by TravisC555 (2008-08-23 12:02:08)
that doesnt mean shit. I think thats one of the worse shows on TV right now.
LoL, it was a compliment, just randomly worded. = I hope you always get everything you wanted.jord wrote:
I don't know whether to read that as a compliment or what. Seeing as how living past 200 years would probably be hell and extremely boring.oChaos.Haze wrote:
Jord, while I find your theory full of lunacy, I personally hope you will live forever. You deserve it you sod. lol
Also a plane can't take off from a treadmill. What speed is it going to take off the treadmill when it climbs? 0MPH? It would just stall. It wouldn't suddenly go from 0 to 200MPH in a split second.
3>oChaos.Haze wrote:
LoL, it was a compliment, just randomly worded. = I hope you always get everything you wanted.jord wrote:
I don't know whether to read that as a compliment or what. Seeing as how living past 200 years would probably be hell and extremely boring.oChaos.Haze wrote:
Jord, while I find your theory full of lunacy, I personally hope you will live forever. You deserve it you sod. lol
Also a plane can't take off from a treadmill. What speed is it going to take off the treadmill when it climbs? 0MPH? It would just stall. It wouldn't suddenly go from 0 to 200MPH in a split second.
sweetMek-Stizzle wrote:
best postusmarine wrote:
go back in time and fix yur teeths wankers
I am with Flaming, as an idea its just dumb.... as a joke... Didn't we all already go through this idea when we were in 6th grade?Flaming_Maniac wrote:
people have made deadly serious posts ignoring the facts in that first paragraphi g wrote:
thanks captain obviousFlaming_Maniac wrote:
/bangs head on table
Timezones do not have to do with actual time. They are artificial representations of segments of the day that are staggered so that when someone says it is 6 P.M., everyone knows that that is around evening time. Certain countries are not actually "ahead" or "behind" you in time, they only have varying relatively arbitrary times to start their particular 24 cycle. It is the same time here as other places, we all just have different names for this exact time. I hope you all realize this.
So if you're looking at a completely irrelevant artificial clock as your "age clock" then bennis is right, otherwise max is right. If you aren't approaching relativistic speeds there is nothing you can do to seemingly extend your lifetime in relation to those at normal speeds, though even then you will still only think you lived 80 years or so.