Quick physics question: why does the low angle of the sunlight in the early morning make bodies of water like lakes and ponds so reflective? As you can tell I don't remember crap from optics, lol. Strangely enough one morning I was driving west through the mountains when the sky was still dark but just starting to go blue and as I made a turn and looked at a lake maybe 100 feet below and half a mile away it looked like a really bright mirror reflecting the sky. It surprised me because the Sierra crest was about 6-7 miles behind it (towards the west) and 2000-4000 feet above it. The sun wasn't even close to being visible and the sky was still a pretty dark blue behind the completely black Sierra crest. Oh yeah, not a cloud in the sky.
¡Entiendes todo! Vete a la verga, para ser sincero.
No hablo Tex-Mex comrade.
Dude, can you translate Knight Rider for me? http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=192704
haha......I've got no clue how this shit works anyway. I just type something and hit post. Likelihood of it not coming off whack is a lot lower with half a liter of Baileys on board. Yeah, I'm getting my drink on early.
Can't be (especially with the 590 SAT math part), but still funny nonetheless. On a side note, I'm fucking retarded, since I replied twice to you today on my own page.
rofl. Is that real? Not a stretch to think he or his brethren has a hand in that.
Homeschooler reviews upper division undergrad algebra book http://www.adequacy.org/stories/2001...163749.94.html I couldn't help but think of Wild Cobra as I read this.
You mean the cosine of 90 isn't -0.45?
Yeah, forget the movie its from. It's about his expression (now imagine a freshman engineering/physics student reaction to this news).