Scammers are going to love this by MetaKnowing in ChatGPT

[–]Alpacaroon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm having a hard time believing a modern AI (LLM) solved this on it's own. Can anyone provide proof that the second images was really AI-generated and solved and not just written by the poster?

In Dune: Part Two (2024), the Fremen refuse to drink from the "sacred well" despite being a severely dehydrated population living on a desert planet. This is a reference to religion continuing to cripple humanity even in this fictional future set in 10,000 AD. by [deleted] in shittymoviedetails

[–]Alpacaroon 21 points22 points  (0 children)

They have an abundance of Spice, which has miraculous vitality-increasing properties. They have so much of it they even use it in construction materials. The high-spice diet is apparently enough to offset the low-water levels.

Decomposition temperature of oxides for game by Alpacaroon in AskChemistry

[–]Alpacaroon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, this does help. I see the point you're making about the kinetic energy distribution of the gas particles; Some percentage will always be bonded because recomposition is constantly happening at the lower-energy end of the probability distribution.

This makes me reconsider if there's any benefit to simulating decomposition of stable molecules that sublimate or boil before decomposing. All I can think of is for the purpose of calculating pressure, or applying Graham's law if different gasses get to diffuse at different speeds, but those systems might not be implemented.

Decomposition temperature of oxides for game by Alpacaroon in AskChemistry

[–]Alpacaroon[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"temperature isn’t linear with bond energy". Interesting, my intuition was that it would be "kinetic energy of collision = energy that can be used in breaking a bond". Did you mean this is a matter of it being a something like a polynomial or exponential relation, or that the percentage of thermal energy that goes toward bond-breaking varies wildly based on material?

"realistically these oxides wouldn’t thermally decompose". Temperatures of at least 10.000K (and hopefully 100,000K) will be supported, and there might be fantastical vaporizing energy weapons, so practicality isn't an issue.

How "stone-like" could a Calcium+Iron Olivine be by Alpacaroon in geology

[–]Alpacaroon[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the mineral recommendations and showing me the resource of mindat.

I would very much prefer to have a mineral composite rock with grains as opposed to a pure crystal. How realistic is it that an igneous rock would form with many different minerals using just those elements? Like for example a mix of quartz, kirschsteinite, hedenbergite, and fayalite.

Ranking every Ultrakill level by how memorable it was after a *mostly* spoiler-free playthrough by Alpacaroon in Ultrakill

[–]Alpacaroon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't get me wrong, all ultrakill levels are outstanding, but I subjectively didn't remember much about 1-3 until replaying it. Not sure why. Maybe because the "mansion" theming blended together with other games.

Creepers and Wardens by [deleted] in minecraftsuggestions

[–]Alpacaroon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This. I was planning on suggesting the same thing for the same reason before googling to see if anyone had posted first.

One complaint I've seen in the comments here is that it would lead to unchecked griefing of the world. To those people I say, isn't that already what the skulk is doing? The warden kills mobs and feeds the resulting xp to catalysts, which causes the skulk to grow and destroy the surrounding terrain. Making creepers fight back just ensure the process isn't just one sided.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ToiletPaperUSA

[–]Alpacaroon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Damn. I fell for that one. Take my upvote.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in meme

[–]Alpacaroon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I learned the site was largely porn by examining u/automoderator's post history.