@dwiel What if the "formwork" remains inside the walls?
https://t.co/tpW7AAkSvO
Or bricks you stamp on the ground and lift and put in place?
https://t.co/xEXSbF4CRk
I think both of these methods should be a lot faster, but again, this is coming from someone with no exp in construction
@minordissent I think this is a good indicator of who would press what Bonus: color on map matches color of buttons
I don't think you'd want to live in a country where everybody would press - RED
https://t.co/m5u2uRZlcb
@danallison I want a per-country poll for this so-so bad
Maybe pinning the standard of living to level of trust would make it more obvious what the "right choice" is
I want to get my dad (late 60s) into video games as a pastime, as an improvement over cable TV news and YouTube shorts. he agrees and is on board, but he's tried playing video games in the past and "they just don't grab me." any recs for a novice gamer? maybe map games?
when doing electrolysis using Fe electrodes, and very little water, instead of Iron hydroxide forming you get: Ferricrete. Fe binds together the Si forming a hard/insoluble material
Unfortunately I could only get small pebble sized pieces to form
context https://t.co/BxXq2fF9T0
@ProofofMaro This is Walter Russell's periodic chart from his book called The Universal One.
He re-wrote that book and called it "A New Concept of the Universe".
@benmagelsen@truth_detectiv Makes sense to me. Waves move water up/down, but they don't make the water flow. Same for sound waves.
Is there a way to calculate the frequency of the combined electrons/protons. It looks like the atoms "settle" based on this frequency, or is this just heat?