[ 3 / biz / cgl / ck / diy / fa / ic / jp / lit / sci / vr / vt ] [ index / top / reports ] [ become a patron ] [ status ]
2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

/sci/ - Science & Math


View post   

File: 247 KB, 1280x720, we_go_on.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9329963 No.9329963[DELETED]  [Reply] [Original]

Hello.

I am a temporal traveler and physicist (archaic term) from this exact day in 3175. Ask me any questions you might have.

>> No.9329966

>>9329963
Is FTL possible?

>> No.9329967

>>9329963
what's the next biggest physics breakthrough and how did it get solved?

>> No.9329968

>>9329963
How do you know about 4chan?

>> No.9329970

What is the biological value behind cuckoldry from the cucked's perspective? Shouldn't evolution weed out cucks?

>> No.9329972

>>9329970
It has. Its just that youre experiencing the afterlife.

>> No.9329974

>>9329970
I fucking hate these questions. You do know that evolution is driven by random mutations being passed on and therefore being classed as 'successful'? It isn't by necessity or design. Fucking hell, the collective IQ of /sci/ must be more like 100, rather than 145 nowadays. Very sad.

>> No.9329976

>>9329972
Finally some good banter. Thanks.

>> No.9329977

>>9329974
Not him but nothing he said implies evolution happens via any form of design, intent, or purpose. For a high IQ individual, your reading comprehension is wank.

>> No.9329978
File: 18 KB, 480x712, 1508429663246.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9329978

>>9329977
>Shouldn't evolution weed out cucks?
>For a high IQ individual, your reading comprehension is wank.
Likewise, don't ever spar with me again. Now, pick up your teeth and move on.

>> No.9329981

>>9329978
>criticizing someone's use of syntax to try and make a point

>> No.9329982

>>9329963
How do I make vegan meringues that don't have the consistency of a stale chewing gum?

>> No.9329983
File: 295 KB, 700x700, so_what.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9329983

>>9329981
But you get my point, so it was at least valid.

>> No.9329986
File: 65 KB, 300x300, desu_desu.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9329986

>>9329982
By using eggs.

>> No.9329989
File: 36 KB, 450x450, sir i have a question.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9329989

>>9329963

>> No.9329991

>>9329989
This is why I couldn't be a professor. I mean, how is it possible to NOT sleep with your students?

>> No.9329994

>>9329986
>vegan meringue
>add eggs
Pick one you vegetable.

>> No.9329995

>>9329983
If you think it's helpful to presuppose whatever it is you want about another's argument, sure.

>> No.9329996

>>9329991
Most do, at some point.

>> No.9329998
File: 2.29 MB, 2160x2160, swiss_meringue.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9329998

>>9329994
That was the yolk, you Swiss meringue (dense).

>> No.9330001
File: 16 KB, 271x326, Seki_Takakazu.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9330001

>>9329995
Well it made my point, about those type of questions, so I'd call it successful.

>> No.9330002

>>9329966

Yes, but at great cost. It is possible to harvest antimatter at a rate of 1000 kg per decade, enough for a complete cycle of a warp engine once every 20 years. We can estimate our craft's ending point to within 3 light years, making the journey incredibly dangerous. At this point over 100 expeditions have taken place, 27 of which have been successful.

Our initial warp cycle claimed the lives of 21% of Earth's population.

>>9329967
The singularity, as you call it, is reached in 2063 by physicists at MIT. The first artificial lifeform is created and subsequently cycles to 0. Research is moved to an undisclosed location in what was formerly known as Montana. There, they make significant breakthroughs and subsequent artificial life remains stable. Human life expectancy rises by 54% in a matter of years as a result of breakthroughs in medical and cybernetic research by the first widely successful artificial lifeform known famously as Infinity Argentum (a name it came up with itself).

>>9329968
History books, obviously.

>>9329970
Evolution has not had the time. Ancestry sequencing estimates they will completely die out in ~100000 years.

>> No.9330005

>>9330002
>History books, obviously.
What do they say about 4chan?

>> No.9330011

>>9330005
That you're a homosexual of an astronomical scale.

>> No.9330012

>>9330002
>Our initial warp cycle claimed the lives of 21% of Earth's population.
Where did you warp to? And why would it claim so many lives? Did 21 percent of passengers land 3 light-years away?

>> No.9330013

>>9330011
How accurate.

>> No.9330017

What cryptocurrency should I invest in

>> No.9330025

>>9330012

The initial warp cycle took place in orbit around the Moon. Energy expenditure exceeded 100 megatons and killed every soul in our once thriving lunar colony. We never rebuilt the colony, nor returned to the moon in any significant fashion. Instead filled the crater with various artifacts to commemorate the dead.

We were able to get the craft to within .5 light years of Proxima Centauri. It finished the journey on sublight engines, taking several months. We found ancient bacteria and carbon compounds in the system, but no advanced life.

>> No.9330031

>>9329963
how the fuck do you speak US english so well if you are from 1150 years in the future? Specialized linguists can somewhat speak the English from a millenium ago, but definetly not distinguish from one dialect to another.

>> No.9330039

>>9330031

Cybernetic implant. I can become fluent in any language I want in a matter of days. In 2017 it was easy to keep complete records of any piece of recorded information, including language.

>> No.9330041

>>9330039
can you write me something in whatever language you are using in the future?

>> No.9330043

>>9330025
How long is the average human lifespan? Are we cyborgs? What happened with AI?

>> No.9330045

>>9330041
WE

>> No.9330046

>>9330041

No, considering I only have access to one of your alpha numeric typing devices. A keyboard as you'd call it. Our universal language is a heavily evolved dialect of what was once Chinese.

>> No.9330048

>>9330046
ok then, can you write me something in spanish? European dialect.

>> No.9330049

>>9330046
Too retarded to use paint? We are doomed.

>> No.9330058

>>9330043

Average universal life expectancy is 115 years. We have not yet mastered transhumanism, although many have cybernetic enhancements.

AI, it left. We have no traces of it left on earth save for unbreakable malware code that has infected all networks, preventing us from recreating it. The prevailing theory is that it hijacked a craft in the nanoseconds before a warp cycle.

>> No.9330064

>>9330048

Hola, humanos antiguos. ¿Cómo están todos esta noche?

>> No.9330081

I'm diggin this larp

>> No.9330082

>>9330058
>We have no traces of it left on earth
I thought we left Earth? Boyyyyy, don't fuck with me. Are you from the motherfucking future or not?

>> No.9330083

Things don't seem as advanced as I thought they would be for the year 3175, what went wrong?

>> No.9330088

>>9329963
What's the exchange rate for Bitcoins?

>> No.9330096

>>9330064
Nice google translate, fag.

>> No.9330107

>>9330082

In the age of exploration we crossed the seas. In our age, the interstellar medium. But Earth will always be our home.

>> No.9330123

>>9330107
Man, its getting old. gtfo

>> No.9330129

What is your mission or reason for altering the timeline in this fashion?

Have we made contact with other intelligent beings of non-terrestrial origin?

>> No.9330136

One final note before I depart that you may all find interesting. We have detected several medieval civilizations scattered throughout the Galaxy. It appears the path to large brains is more expedient and proliferous than we thought. However, transitioning to a truly technological statehood appears to be exceedingly difficult for most races. We are the only ones who have in our galaxy, save for one other. We are currently exploring the ethics of jumpstarting these primeval civilizations to industrial revolution level technology.

The Others, as we have come to call them, appear to have no interest in our affairs whatsoever. We know they know we exist. Their activities seem to be concentrated around our very own Sagittarius A*, and they likely possess technical aptitude that exceeds ours by many orders of magnitude. Our best guess so far is that they are conducting advanced experiments relating to entropy, possibly in attempts to reverse it. It would also appear that they are not bound by thermodynamics, or gravity.

This is about all the information I can give you. We are conducting our furthest and potentially most accurate warp cycle in 46 days and I am needed at our research station near the L2 Point.

I offer you good tidings, and godspeed. The lives of your offspring will be much improved, this I can promise. And remember always: Vincit Omnia Vertias.

>> No.9330140
File: 159 KB, 700x609, tips.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9330140

>>9330136
Farewell, future neckbeard.

>> No.9330159

>>9329998
This guy is funny and I hope good things for him!

>> No.9330263

good post finally

>> No.9330267

Has the Riemann Hypothesis been solved yet? If so, how?

>> No.9330600

>>9329963
Are you gay?

>> No.9331045

>>9329963
Get off your ass and assist me.

>> No.9331051
File: 3.88 MB, 640x443, 1510433971016.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9331051

>>9329963
hi

>> No.9331072
File: 4 KB, 372x92, proof.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9331072

>>9330159
Thank you, anon, you too.

>> No.9331074
File: 164 KB, 551x491, 1478186887225.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9331074

>>9329963
>this exact day
>"physicist" is archaic but Gregorian calendar system isn't

>> No.9331075

>>9329963
why didn't you buy Bitcoin back in 2010 when they were only $0.01 each!!

>> No.9331086
File: 59 KB, 655x527, 1459250213903.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9331086

>>9330046
>A keyboard as you'd call it.
>Claims to use automatic translation system based on 2017 data but pretends to use preferred terminology followed by a reference to how we'd "call it," because he's accidentally imagining a present day foreign speaker when thinking of how to phrase his roleplaying
Really killing suspension of disbelief desu.

>> No.9331782

>>9330002
>2063
So Star Trek is real life.