Some things that come to mind:
1) Is your ext2 partition your 2nd partition? When loading, Android
relies on the order of the partition not their type.
2) Is the partition formatted? The boot might fail if it can't mount
the partition.
If you have adb installed, an 'adb logcat' will probabl
Shachar Shemesh writes:
> Dotan Cohen wrote:
>
> Oleg, I understood that the universe has 11 or so dimensions, and that
> 5 or six can even be measured. But the wikipedia article that you
> link to claims only 3+1. I have googled a bit but found only very
> technical explanations, or baby facts w
Michael Tewner writes:
> "when you travel close to the speed of light"
>
> 88 Miles per hour?
Michael,
This is getting more and mor off-topic, but yes, exactly, 88 mph!
I confess, I am a car-buff, a petrol-head, etc. I also like movies. So
flame me - my /dev/null is ready. I will assume that y
Dotan Cohen wrote:
Oleg, I understood that the universe has 11 or so dimensions, and that
5 or six can even be measured. But the wikipedia article that you link
to claims only 3+1. I have googled a bit but found only very technical
explanations, or baby facts with no explanations. Can you sum it
Actually, the speed of light *in a vacuum* is the universal constant,
invariant regardless of the observer's frame of reference. 'C' is so defined
- the speed of light in vacuum.
This is now understood to be such a basic constant that in 1983, the meter
was defined in terms of the speed of light:
What the fuck are you doing? I did not see that movie yet...
Please write "spoiler" and leave a few empty the next time.
On יום שישי 28 אוגוסט 2009 13:17:06 Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
> Interesting enough, Light travels through Israeli movies in speed close
> to American ones (88 mph) but, complain
2009/8/24 Oleg Goldshmidt :
> I'll bite - it's OT, but too much fun to skip... ;-)
>
> 2009/8/24 Shachar Shemesh :
>
>> As a side note - does that prove that our universe only has three
>> dimensions?
>
> Technically, no, though many philosophers (as opposed to physicists or
> mathematicians) will
Please excuse me for answering a humorous post seriously.
Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
Despite popular belief, the speed of light is only fixed in vacuum and
scientists long acknowledged the fact that light may travels in
different and lesser speeds when going through different materials,
such a
Michael Tewner wrote:
>
> Until, of course, the invention of the flux capacitor...
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeLorean_time_machine
Oh, anything is possible if you travel through space-time in a
DeLorean... In particular, when you travel close to the speed of li
On Tue, Aug 25, 2009 at 11:25 AM, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 25, 2009 at 10:40 AM, Gilad Ben-Yossef
> wrote:
> > Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> >
> > Once you have satisfied yourself that N=3, you can derive R^-2 easily
> > from flux considerations.
> >
> >
> > Until, of course, the invention
Very off topic.
On Aug 28, 2009, at 12:28 PM, Michael Tewner wrote:
88 Miles per hour?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oldsmobile_88
Geoff.
--
geoffrey mendelson N3OWJ/4X1GM
Jerusalem Israel geoffreymendel...@gmail.com
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