@nbro: GR gives us an expression for the four-acceleration, and this includes both terms due to non-inertial motion and due to spacetime curvature: $$ a^{\mu}= \frac{du^{\mu}}{d\tau}+\Gamma^{\mu}_{\alpha \beta}u^{\alpha}u^{\beta} $$
@nbro: the proper acceleration is the norm of the four-acceleration of an observer in that observer's rest frame. So the proper acceleration can be due to non-inertial motion, spacetime curvature or both.
@Slereah to be fair there aren't may bugs that kill it dead. It's the timing of doing a fresh new installation just in time for a bug to kill your fresh new installation, and of course it's natural to think that's your fault.
Unfortunately, I don't think this can really be explained in a manner that reconciles Pokedex entries and game or anime information. People have come up with many theories over the years, but none of them really works.
Do female Marowak die after giving birth? But then there would probably end ...
@BernardoMeurer that's pretty standard. In C (and C++) you can have pointers to functions and pass them as arguments or return values. The typing is a bit of a nightmare though.
@0celouvskyopoulo7 I guess there are alternatives. It's just that for things like Christoffel symbols MM is fantastically useful. Calculating them manually is a massive pain.
> By detecting a mathematical inconsistency in our world, for example that 2+22+2 can be equal both to 44 as well as 55; such an observation would make the existing
> alternatives of string theory conceivable alternatives because all of them are mathematically inconsistent as theories of gravity; clearly, nothing of the sort will occur; also, one could find out a previously unknown mathematical inconsistency of string theory - even this seems extremely unlikely after the neverending successful tests
(found from one of the questions in that link)
and I don't know what 2+2=5 physically will look like
(well actually, my rep is not enough to see it, I just kinda assume all 4 of them judging form that screenshot had something to do with pushing a nuclear agenda of sort, thus my prejudgement is likely wrong)
@Secret no, it's just that past some threshold of visibility, posts tend to accumulate a fair amount of cruft
particularly over the years
> Is there any reason why nuclear power plants cannot be constructed five miles off the shoreline. A plant floating five miles out would be safe from both tsunamis and earthquakes. I can't think of any technological problem for this.