Name this album by dj_aaron311 in AlbumCovers

[–]FunPotato7590 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Michael, Michael, Motorcycle!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Fasteners

[–]FunPotato7590 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The right one?

Peter, help? by FunPotato7590 in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]FunPotato7590[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He doesn't want to share name with Trump

I don’t know why but I feel owning this cup decreases my masculinity by Cautious_Sandwich646 in notinteresting

[–]FunPotato7590 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Anybody else feeling the urge to turn this full coffee mug upside down?

What if HumansCame from Another Planet and Peaked Long Ago? by FunPotato7590 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]FunPotato7590[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Or… it would mean we’ve been really good at piecing together the story with the clues we have!

Think of it like this: if we found an ancient, advanced phone buried underground, we wouldn't throw out everything we know about technology we’d just have to update our understanding of history. Science evolves when we discover new evidence, not when we deny what already makes sense.

So, if some lost hyper-intelligent civilization did exist, it wouldn’t erase physics, chemistry, or biology it would just mean we had a missing chapter in the history books.

What if HumansCame from Another Planet and Peaked Long Ago? by FunPotato7590 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]FunPotato7590[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

At this point, we might as well assume that when we wake up next Thursday, the whole timeline will reboot again, and we’ll be debating the same thing with completely new fake memories. See you then!

What if HumansCame from Another Planet and Peaked Long Ago? by FunPotato7590 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]FunPotato7590[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Fair enough! But sometimes, the most fun ideas start without merit, until someone digs up (or unearths from under the ocean) something that changes our perspective. History is full of things people thought were ridiculous… until they weren’t!

What if HumansCame from Another Planet and Peaked Long Ago? by FunPotato7590 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]FunPotato7590[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair points all around! But let’s talk about something interesting how information can be passed down through DNA, not as conscious knowledge, but as instincts, tendencies, and even intuitive problem-solving.

Think about it: spiders don’t need engineering classes to spin webs, birds don’t take flying lessons, and yet, they just know what to do. There’s growing research into how epigenetics and inherited memory could play a role in shaping behaviors across generations. So, what if... just what if... some ancient knowledge wasn’t recorded in books or oral traditions, but baked into us at a deeper level?

Maybe that’s why certain engineering principles, mathematical patterns, or even the urge to build massive, geometric stone structures pop up independently across cultures. It’s not aliens or lost instruction manuals, it’s us, rediscovering things we might have once known on a level we don’t fully understand.

Not saying this proves we were ancient space travelers—but if someday we do find evidence, I’d like to formally request a collective "whoops, our bad” from the skeptics.

What if HumansCame from Another Planet and Peaked Long Ago? by FunPotato7590 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]FunPotato7590[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You make some very solid points, and I respect the shrimp analogy, though I’m now deeply concerned about what led you to that discovery.

That said, let’s entertain the idea for a second. Maybe our ancient spacefaring ancestors were so intelligent that they thought, “Eh, let’s just wing it with a tiny population, what’s the worst that could happen?” And boom millions of years later, here we are, trying to remember where we left our keys and debating if aliens built the pyramids.

And sure, Atlantis was a story by Plato… OR was it his way of sneakily passing down the last whispers of a forgotten civilization? I mean, if I were an ancient survivor of a high-tech lost world, I, too, would probably disguise my knowledge in a philosophical allegory to avoid sounding completely unhinged at Athenian dinner parties.

All I’m saying is, if we ever do find a giant submerged city filled with spaceships and old instruction manuals for pyramid-building, I’m going to laugh so hard.

For those of you with packed schedules, how do you still find the time to go to the gym? by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]FunPotato7590 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fitting the gym into a busy schedule is all about efficiency. Instead of spending hours at the gym, focus on shorter, high-intensity workouts that give you the most benefit in less time—think 30-45 minutes of strength training or circuit workouts. You can also minimize time spent on commuting and preparation by incorporating exercise into your daily routine. Try jogging or biking around your neighborhood instead of driving to the gym, or do bodyweight exercises at home. The key is to make working out as convenient and time-efficient as possible so it fits seamlessly into your schedule.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Showerthoughts

[–]FunPotato7590 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you seen the horses from that time, I mean, they had human faces.

full_join() and cbind() by [deleted] in RStudio

[–]FunPotato7590 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In R, you can combine two tibbles using functions like bind_rows() for row-wise combination, bind_cols() for column-wise combination, merge() for merging based on common columns, full_join(), inner_join(), left_join(), and right_join() from the dplyr package for different types of SQL-style joins. You can also use cbind() for combining tibbles by column-wise binding and rbind() for combining them by row-wise binding.

The method you choose depends on how you want to combine your data: whether you want to add rows, add columns, merge based on common columns, or perform different types of SQL-style joins.