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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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krellin (80 DX)
10 May 13 UTC
Windows 8 <-> XBox 360 Help...
Trying to connect my music media from my Win 8 computer (no comments...I know..I know...) to my XBox 360. The XBox media player will see my laptop, but when I select it to play music, it fails and says "Can't connect to the PC. A firewall may be blocking the connection"
6 replies
Open
Gen. Lee (7588 D(B))
29 Apr 13 UTC
Gen. Lee to host Spring '13 Confederate Grand Ball
Invitation inside.
117 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
08 May 13 UTC
Sir Alex Ferguson retires as Manchester United manager
One of the most successful managers in the history of football announced his retirement today .............. Sir Alex I salute you, thanks for all of the fabulous memories
49 replies
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NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
10 May 13 UTC
It's the end of the world as we know it....... but I feel fine
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22486153

400 ppm .... stop paying the mortgage and worrying about your pension, the end of the world is nigh
2 replies
Open
Jamiet99uk (873 D)
02 May 13 UTC
(+3)
The Tarvu thread!
Hey everyone. FlemGem and four other users have encouraged me to start a thread for readings from the Tarvunty. I'm going to expand that to include a couple of Tarvunty readings per week, plus a daily post with inspiring stories from the lives of the great proffets, and other Tarvuist goodies!
34 replies
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NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
10 May 13 UTC
(+1)
What happened to the GR for May ??
Sometimes Alderian does a thing to get loads of +1's but I haven't seen it this month, maybe the +1's have dried up and he has lost interest :-)
3 replies
Open
steephie22 (182 D(S))
06 May 13 UTC
exo-planets
We apparently have endless possibilities for planets to appear, in completely different climates and such... Does that mean endless possibilities for, for example, life, out there in the universe? So everything that is chemically and physically possible almost certainly happens somewhere right?
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bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
09 May 13 UTC
If you're moving at the speed of light, please bring back a chunk of a black hole for us (since you can contain it at that speed) so we can find out the answer to nearly everything. Thanks.
steephie22 (182 D(S))
09 May 13 UTC
If you're rolling in an entirely stabilised room where you don't even notice you're travelling at all, the die would roll almost at the same speed as the spaceship or whatever, meaning it just acts normal within the room...

Wow, I think I just accidently explained to myself why nothing is faster than the speed of light (according to this theory, I haven't seen any evidence yet) locally and it could be faster beyond the "horizon".
steephie22 (182 D(S))
09 May 13 UTC
bo_sox48: I also have to roll infinite dice to prove something to SYnapse, not sure if I can get a chunk of a black hole with one hand...
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
09 May 13 UTC
If you can move faster than the speed of light, you can contain and control its movements (and avoid being sucked in due to moving quicker than its escape velocity) by simply rotating around it.
steephie22 (182 D(S))
09 May 13 UTC
Yes, but how do I bring it back to earth and tell the world about it? If I stop moving faster than the speed of light I can't contain it and the earth gets sucked in. Even if I keep moving faster than the speed of light, I can't talk to you guys since the sound gets sucked in... Or not? Can I contain it that well?
steephie22 (182 D(S))
09 May 13 UTC
I think I'm just going to roll infinite dice at the speed of light, oh, and one die infinitely, to prove there's no difference... Maybe I'll bring a chunk of black hole the second time.
SpeakerToAliens (147 D(S))
09 May 13 UTC
(+1)
Several points from earlier in the thread:-

The Universe - as told to me more than 30 years ago (it's probably wrong/simplified, but at least I can get my head around this explanation):-

1) Imagine you're from Flatland. You only experience 2 dimensions - forward/backwards and left/right. Your universe appears to be flat to you. To an outside observer who can sense 3 dimensions (forward/backwards, left/right *and* up/down) your universe appears to be on the surface of a large balloon. You move forwards/backwards/left/right on this surface and, if you go far enough in one direction, you end up back where you started - you've circumnavigated your universe!

2) Now it turns out that your universe is inflating. Imagine putting some dots on the balloon with a felt tip pen then blowing it up. Although the dots aren't moving over the surface they are in fact getting further away from each other and the further away one dot is from another the faster they appear to be moving apart (the dots are galaxies).

3) The balloon is being inflated so fast that opposite sides are moving away from each other (in 3 dimensional space) at light speed. The distance to any object more than 18% (18% IIRC) of the way around the balloon will be increasing at more than light speed, so light from further away will never reach you (that's why we can't see more than 18% of our universe).

4)The balloon was very very tiny when the Big Bang occurred and it has inflated a *lot* since then, so the place where the Big Bang occurred - the centre of your universe - is in the centre of the balloon, which from your point of view is in a direction at right angles to both forward/backwards *and* left/right, so it's in a direction you can't point to. A direction you can't perceive or even imagine (unless you're using products from the unregulated pharmaceuticals market). However, if your maths is advanced enough you may be able to do calculations involving more than 2 dimensions and get some idea of the true shape of your universe.

5) Finally: We perceive a universe of 3 dimensions of space and one of time. Our universe is inflating and the centre of our universe is in a direction at 90 degrees to all the others, a direction we can't point (sometimes called "in/out").

A black hole has a finite circumference and an infinite radius.

Here in the UK, "maths" is short for "mathematics", not "mathematical".

Hope this helps.
semck83 (229 D(B))
09 May 13 UTC
Great post, STA -- but I would take issue with one thing. It is indeed helpful to imagine the surface of a balloon, what it would feel like if you lived in two dimensions there, and the way it expands.

However, it's best to avoid thinking of the universe sitting in any "larger" space, the way the 2-dimensional balloon sits in 3-dimensional space. In particular, one should avoid thinking of directions "outside spacetime." Not only can we not imagine those, but they are not geometrically meaningful even at the mathematical level. They would be if one modelled the universe (spacetime) as sitting inside a larger-dimensional space, but in general relativity, you don't do this.

In particular, I would not think of the big bang as a point off in some higher dimension, nor is meaningful (geometrically or otherwise) to talk of the distance "across the gap."

So it's impossible to give mathematically meaningful content to the idea that the center of the universe lies off in "some other direction." (At least in a non-arbitrary way). Rather, just say that, like the surface of the balloon, it HAS no center. This is also true of the surface of the earth. Of course, Texas is the center of that, but every analogy has to fail somewhere.
Draugnar (0 DX)
09 May 13 UTC
But a 4th physical dimension is very plausible. If we werr two dimensional creatures who knew nothing of the third physical dimension would you be arguing this same "it is mathematically irrelevant" line?
Octavious (2701 D)
09 May 13 UTC
Re: the final paragraph

Methinks you're confusing the centre of the surface if the Earth with a black hole
semck83 (229 D(B))
09 May 13 UTC
Draug,
"
But a 4th physical dimension is very plausible."


A 4th physical dimension is not only plausible, it is absolutely central to general relativity (GR). Notice I used the term "spacetime" throughout my post. Spacetime is four dimensions. What I'm saying is that it does not make geometric sense (in the context of GR) to talk of a fifth dimension "outside" spacetime. The theory of general relativity assumes a four-dimensional spacetime that includes everything, so any embedding of spacetime in higher dimensions will be arbitrary (there would be many ways of doing it that would lead to inequivilent statements about the added dimensions, so no physically or geometrically meaningful statements about spacetime would result).

" If we werr two dimensional creatures who knew nothing of the third physical dimension would you be arguing this same "it is mathematically irrelevant" line?"

One can do geometry with any number of dimensions, and one can certainly imagine our universe as being embedded in a five-dimensional or higher space. However, we're discussing specifically what General Relativity says about the geometry of our universe. It says nothing about any fifth dimension, and in particular, there is no non-arbitrary way, in the context of GR alone, to make talk of such a fifth dimension well-defined or meaningful.
Draugnar (0 DX)
09 May 13 UTC
So the two dimensional being has a 4th spacetime dimension. My logic still applies. I just wasn't including.time as a.physical dimension.
semck83 (229 D(B))
10 May 13 UTC
(+1)
Actually, I believe I subtly misinterpreted STA's analogy; he was indeed viewing the surface of the balloon as three-dimensional, not four-dimensional (and hence, it's able to expand). In that sense, one could view the big bang as the center of the balloon, but notice the following issues still:

i) The universe we're seeing is not the surface of the balloon, but some past (smaller) version of the balloon, because light travels with finite speed;
ii) It's still not super helpful to think of points off the balloon (including the center) as points of spacetime, but it is true that one can use mathematics to discuss fourth-dimensional "places" such as the big bang. Confusingly, though, when we look at distant stars, we *are* looking at things "toward" the past, due to point 1.

This page includes a helpful discussion of the balloon analogy.

http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/GR/centre.html

Sorry for the initial misinterpretation of what your analogy was saying, STA.

@Draug,

" So the two dimensional being has a 4th spacetime dimension. My logic still applies. I just wasn't including.time as a.physical dimension. "

I'm not sure what you're arguing anymore. If you're saying that there could be five dimensions (four spatial plus one time), I already addressed that in my previous post. Short version: yes, there could, but GR has nothing meaningful to say about it, and in particular, there is no way to calculate such things as whether our universe is curved inside the five-dimensional space, whether if you left on a "perpendicular line" into the fifth dimension, you would hit our universe again, or so on.

Those things are not determined by GR.
@semck83: No worries. I've been told by others that the "Balloon Model" is an oversimplification, but at least I can understand it. ;-)

There's also this - "The central idea is that the visible, four-dimensional universe is restricted to a brane inside a higher-dimensional space". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brane_cosmology
semck83 (229 D(B))
10 May 13 UTC
SpeakerToAliens,

Correct. But Brane cosmology is not general relativity. It's a fascinating but extremely speculative extension with virtually no experimental support. So I think it's worthwhile to carefully separate the two and what they say. (It's why I was careful to say "in GR" or similar throughout my posts).


105 replies
Stressedlines (1559 D)
07 May 13 UTC
Whites need not apply?
http://www.examiner.com/article/whites-need-not-apply-new-financial-scholarship-open-to-minorities-only

50 replies
Open
goldfinger0303 (3157 DMod)
05 May 13 UTC
Hey guys, I'm not kidding
I need subs for the Masters. So far, all subs have been top 100 GR, and I'd like to keep it that way if possible (but please if you're interested don't let GR stop you from telling me). I need two more at least.
7 replies
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semck83 (229 D(B))
09 May 13 UTC
(+1)
An Unexpected Hanging
Some of you may be familiar with this puzzle/paradox, but please don't google it if you're not, and don't bring in outside sources till at least post 100; just post your OWN thoughts.

This has been a much-discussed paradox. Resolve it.
50 replies
Open
2ndWhiteLine (2611 D(B))
09 May 13 UTC
(+1)
9 People
See below...
23 replies
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bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
09 May 13 UTC
Sun's Ring of Fire
Anyone in the Southeast Pacific on here? If you can see it, how much can you see?

http://www.weather.com/news/science/space/solar-eclipse-this-week-20130507
0 replies
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steephie22 (182 D(S))
09 May 13 UTC
Good browsergame
I need something next to webdiplomacy to keep me busy. Any idea's?
10 replies
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Tolstoy (1962 D)
08 May 13 UTC
(+2)
Ender's Game Trailer
I believe some will appreciate this greatly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vP0cUBi4hwE
33 replies
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Tom Bombadil (4023 D(G))
08 May 13 UTC
Tips on Career Searching
This past weekend, I graduated undergrad and have moved on to being a basically unemployed member of society ( I have a minimum wage type part time job). I'm not going to grad school (yet?) and am looking for tips on finding that first job. Any hints, ideas, personal anecdotes etc. etc are welcome.
42 replies
Open
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 May 13 UTC
A video to watch
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=KTvSfeCRxe8
7 replies
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ytfh (0 DX)
09 May 13 UTC
Original game
0 replies
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djakarta97 (358 D)
08 May 13 UTC
Missing players
Hey, so the game that I'm in is missing 5 players...we need people to get in quickly...can 5 people join?

gameID=115802
5 replies
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vexlord (231 D)
08 May 13 UTC
hey its a game!
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=116528
Good old fashioned fun at a reasonable price. 135 D and you are in this classic map ppsc anon.
5 replies
Open
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) (100 D)
08 May 13 UTC
Need 1 more player for Classic 24hour, all messaging
A player got banned, here are the details of his/her previous position:
Italy, Autumn 1901, 3 centers, none will be lost this turn.
There are 15 hours to go in the turn.
gameID=117093
0 replies
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gavrilop (357 D)
08 May 13 UTC
world game starting soon
0 replies
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SYnapse (0 DX)
08 May 13 UTC
Evolutionary thinkers
I think the thread we did about the various times of communism last time was a success, so lets try this again
4 replies
Open
murraysheroes (526 D(B))
08 May 13 UTC
A cheap, reliable game
I've had a few too many games ruined by cheaters and CDs. I've created a anonymous game with a 25-point buy in that is pass-worded. If you're interested in playing, please reply and I'll PM you a password. I'd prefer it if you've completed (at least) 5 games, but I'll send the password to anyone who's not brand-new and has never "left" a game.

gameID=117291
11 replies
Open
HumanWave (337 D)
08 May 13 UTC
It figures
The weirdest game I've ever played won on a retreat…

http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=117295&nocache=934
0 replies
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ava2790 (232 D(S))
07 May 13 UTC
Trying to freak out some freemasons
Any tips welcome
35 replies
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ReBrock (189 D)
08 May 13 UTC
How do you write an e-mail to a mod?
How do you write an e-mail to a mod to report a suspicious game play?!
6 replies
Open
ckroberts (3548 D)
07 May 13 UTC
New game
For people who will actually show up and not CD http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=117225
2 replies
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semck83 (229 D(B))
08 May 13 UTC
Poll of Most Trusted Americans
One could debate how seriously to take this, but if one takes it seriously, there is little about the results that doesn't seem disastrous.

http://www.rd.com/slideshows/readers-digest-trust-poll-the-100-most-trusted-people-in-america/
10 replies
Open
ReBrock (189 D)
08 May 13 UTC
Can you do a quick check for multi!?
this is the game suspected
gameID=117261
2 replies
Open
spyman (424 D(G))
06 May 13 UTC
Boy Girl Paradox Revisited
I thought had previously thought this question was settled, and that really this probability question is not really a paradox, it just looks like one. But not I am starting to wonder if it really is a paradox.
29 replies
Open
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