Questions

  • Spock
    7th Mar 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    Spock:



    What does "cof" mean?

    Spock:

    @snail (View Post)
    It is actually memory in Welsh.


    42.

    What is on the bottom of a coconut macaroon?
  • TPTROXRLYITSTRUE
    8th Mar 2013 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • Aloysius1234
    9th Mar 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    just hold it at right place and you're defended!

     

    what is the scariest game ever?

  • Spock
    9th Mar 2013 Member 0 Permalink
    Deflector shields operated by creating a layer, or layers, of energetic distortion containing a high concentration of gravitons around the object to be protected. On starships, the shield contained six sections, forward, starboard, port, aft, dorsal, and ventral. Shield energies could be emitted from a localized antenna or "dish", such as a ship's navigational deflector, or from a network of "grid" emitters laid out on the object's surface, such as a starship's hull. Since at least the 23rd century, deflector shields were essential equipment on starships.
    Neither matter nor highly-concentrated energy could normally penetrate a shield. When shields were "up," or energized at a high level, most matter or energy that came into contact with the shields was harmlessly deflected away. This was important in starship combat, as shields were essential for hull protection. When the shields were up, only minor hull damage would be expected during combat. In the 23rd and 24th century, without deflector shields weapons were capable of causing catastrophic damage to starship hulls almost immediately.
    Continuous or extremely powerful energy discharges could progressively dissipate the integrity of a shield to the point of failure. Shield capacities varied according to many variables, from the power available to environmental concerns, making definitive and universal calculations of how much damage they could take difficult to estimate. Therefore, during combat tactical officers would continually report on shield strength, usually as a percentage of total effectiveness, with 100% meaning that the shields were at full capacity, and lower percentage scores indicating weaker shield conditions. Specific sections of the shield grid could take more damage than other sections, and be reinforced with additional power reserves, so tactical officers would report on the health of the shields by section if need be. Shields were said to be "holding" if damage was not sufficient enough to allow a compromise; if the shields were "buckling" or "failing," then a total loss of shield protection was imminent.
    Is that enough?

    What was the first line of Doctor who S5 E1 The Eleventh hour?
  • TPTROXRLYITSTRUE
    10th Mar 2013 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • bimmo_devices
    10th Mar 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    My sister's voices

     

    how long is a piece of string? - a string theory string that is.

  • TPTROXRLYITSTRUE
    10th Mar 2013 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • Aloysius1234
    10th Mar 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    much larger than a molecule.

     

    what is the most weird moustache ever?

    note: tell me if my English wrong

  • TPTROXRLYITSTRUE
    10th Mar 2013 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • Aloysius1234
    10th Mar 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    *if you know what i mean*

     

    do you know what i mean?