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Old 12-07-2011, 10:06 AM   #1
Sundae
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I want to know WTF the man, woman and child in the first house were on - it was 4.45 in the afternoon and they were asleep. Not just asleep, but so heavily asleep they missed a cannonball comig in the front door, up the stairs and exiting through a wall.

Anyone fancy robbing a house, I can recommend one on Cassata Place.
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Old 12-07-2011, 12:21 PM   #2
Pete Zicato
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sundae View Post
I want to know WTF the man, woman and child in the first house were on - it was 4.45 in the afternoon and they were asleep. Not just asleep, but so heavily asleep they missed a cannonball comig in the front door, up the stairs and exiting through a wall.

Anyone fancy robbing a house, I can recommend one on Cassata Place.
Assuming a normal or nearly normal family, I'd guess maybe it was nap-time for the kid. When my kids were little, I often napped when they did.
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Old 12-10-2011, 03:47 PM   #3
Sundae
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Originally Posted by Pete Zicato View Post
Assuming a normal or nearly normal family, I'd guess maybe it was nap-time for the kid. When my kids were little, I often napped when they did.
Sleeping in the afternoon is not bizarre or unusual.
Sleeping through ALL THAT NOISE. I'm not saying it's suspicious. But it is unusual.
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Old 12-10-2011, 05:16 PM   #4
ZenGum
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There is NO WAY I am buying the official version here. Just look at the angles!

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Old 12-10-2011, 05:50 PM   #5
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Very good, Z.
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Old 12-10-2011, 06:12 PM   #6
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Although it's for real and is important, I find this announcement almost comedic
Pay attention, they are talking about inverse femtobarns of data,
not the usual sort you find around farms, ranches and colliders.

Have physicists in two experiments independently found evidence for
the Higgs particle with a mass of 125 giga*electronvolts (GeV)
— right in the ballpark predicted by the standard model of particle physics. ?

Nature

09 December 2011

Rumours of a Higgs signal at ATLAS and CMS intensify ahead of 13 December seminar.
Quote:
Physicist Bill Murray, who is leading the ATLAS search for the Higgs,
tells Nature that he cannot comment on the latest rumours.
That is because work is still in progress to analyse 5 inverse femtobarns of data
that have amassed over the summer, with a final decision to approve the current analysis
scheduled for Wednesday, 7 December. Murray also notes that such approvals are often delayed.
An additional level of management approval will also be necessary before the result
can be released at a seminar scheduled for 13 December.
"We are moving forward in our understanding of the data and approval process
but nothing will be solidly releasable for a while," Murray says<snip>
And besides all that, we need to get a new and much bigger collider:
Quote:
ViXra comments that a Higgs at 125 GeV is good news for particle physics,
because it is favoured by supersymmetric models that would imply that
other heavy particles may be found. A heavier Higgs would mean that the masses
of those particles would be too high to be accessible by the Large Hadron Collider.
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