@stevebothe@engineers_feed I was using “:” to denote the division operator. Not equating it to 12. I was saying that what you wrote on the bottom that equals 2 would translate to “12 division operator (2(5-2))”
Long day of travel ahead as I head back up to Fairbanks for the follow-on airborne portion of our #permafrost subsidence survey with NGA Research #airborneLidar#science#lasers
If you’re “at” #agu21 swing on by the #SnowEx poster session and check out C15G-0875 Building Capacity to Measure Snow to learn about airborne lidar and SWE. I’ll be hanging out in the Zoom room until 19:00 est or until all questions are answered. Shad O’Neel will join at 18:00
It's time to💪 to @qgis' point clouds. Help us with @lutraconsulting crowdfunding to add profiling, EDL, filtering, and https://t.co/IzXFuc38B4 support in time for the next release. Visit https://t.co/u3m6oQKb6b for details.
@YearoutWilliam @BetttyKrocker @PaulVergouwe @TeawithTolkien We know that hobbits have a concept of math. For no other reason that we know they have both the operations of + and x. A “gross” is defined as 144 (or 12x12), and it’s the number of guests at the party because 111+33=144
@mlecoz__ Fantastically useful! And you can sometimes find good, cheap, used ones on marketplace or Craig’s list. I love mine. It vacuums my floor every morning at 8