odd facts section


It's bollocks mate. Human cells needs water, which from a physiological point of view is H2O, pure water. Anything over and above that could be either beneficial or harmful depending on what it is.

The Internet is awash with nonsense or 'fake facts' whatever you want to call it. It's all clickbait.

On the other hand, drinking too much water is bad for you.
 
It's bollocks mate. Human cells needs water, which from a physiological point of view is H2O, pure water. Anything over and above that could be either beneficial or harmful depending on what it is.

The Internet is awash with nonsense or 'fake facts' whatever you want to call it. It's all clickbait.

On the other hand, drinking too much water is bad for you.


Its all moot anyway, seems you can't get pure water anyway.

I knew about drinking to much water - as that thins your blood and can literally drown
 
To much water also washes the essential minerals out of your body "Allegedly " he was still clocking lol
 
You can drink Heavy Water (Deuterium Oxide), for a while.

Will probably die when at a certain percentage of normal water displacement, this occurs as it interferes will cell division.
 
It's bollocks mate. Human cells needs water, which from a physiological point of view is H2O, pure water. Anything over and above that could be either beneficial or harmful depending on what it is.

The Internet is awash with nonsense or 'fake facts' whatever you want to call it. It's all clickbait.

On the other hand, drinking too much water is bad for you.

If that's the case can you confirm in 2001 Sir Elton John collapsed at a party and had to have his stomach pumped of a gallon of semen??
 
Came across this (myth or fact? Lol)
"Most likely, in most developed nations, you are drinking water 99.5% pure if not more. Removing that last .5% of impurities, assuming they are 100% salts, would increase the LD-50 (amount to kill 50% of subjects) by 5/1000. Assume it takes exactly 1.5 gallons of ordinary drinking water, drunk all at once, tokill you."

Btw, is pure water the same as distilled water? :)
 
Think i need bigger page to read the headline thread post

OLD FARTS SECTION!
 
Came across this (myth or fact? Lol)
"Most likely, in most developed nations, you are drinking water 99.5% pure if not more. Removing that last .5% of impurities, assuming they are 100% salts, would increase the LD-50 (amount to kill 50% of subjects) by 5/1000. Assume it takes exactly 1.5 gallons of ordinary drinking water, drunk all at once, tokill you."

Btw, is pure water the same as distilled water? :)

in the link posted above the Scientist stated this

WHAT DO PEOPLE MEAN BY “PURE WATER”? From a drinking water standpoint, most references to "pure water" emphasise bacteria content and not the chemical contaminant concentrations. There is no such thing as pure water. The very concept of ‘pure’ water is misleading. Pure water does not exist in nature.
 
Shivviness.
A shive is a tiny splinter or fragment of something, or else a loose thread sticking out of a piece of fabric. And derived from that, shivviness is an old Yorkshire dialect word for the feeling of discomfort that comes from wearing new underwear—a word that surely needs to be more widely known.
 
The History of CTRL + ALT + DELETE.

In 2013, Bill Gates admitted ctrl+alt+del was a mistake and blamed IBM. Here’s the story of how the key combination became famous in the first place.

In the spring of 1981, David Bradley was part of a select team working from a nondescript office building in Boca Raton, Fla. His task: to help build IBM’s new personal computer. Because Apple and RadioShack were already selling small stand-alone computers, the project (code name: Acorn) was a rush job. Instead of the typical three- to five-year turnaround, Acorn had to be completed in a single year.

One of the programmers’ pet peeves was that whenever the computer encountered a coding glitch, they had to manually restart the entire system. Turning the machine back on automatically initiated a series of memory tests, which stole valuable time. “Some days, you’d be rebooting every five minutes as you searched for the problem,” Bradley says. The tedious tests made the coders want to pull their hair out.

So Bradley created a keyboard shortcut that triggered a system reset without the memory tests. He never dreamed that the simple fix would make him a programming hero, someone who’d someday be hounded to autograph keyboards at conferences. And he didn’t foresee the command becoming such an integral part of the user experience.

Bradley joined IBM as a programmer in 1975. By 1978, he was working on the Datamaster, the company’s early, flawed attempt at a PC. It was an exciting time—computers were starting to become more accessible, and Bradley had a chance to help popularize them.

In September 1980, he became the 12th of 12 engineers picked to work on Acorn. The close-knit team was whisked away from IBM’s New York headquarters. “We had very little interference,” Bradley says. “We got to do the design essentially starting with a blank sheet of paper.”

Bradley worked on everything from writing input/output programs to troubleshooting wire-wrap boards. Five months into the project, he created ctrl+alt+del. The task was just another item to tick off his to-do list. “It was five minutes, 10 minutes of activity, and then I moved on to the next of the 100 things that needed to get done,” he says. Bradley chose the keys by location—with the del key across the keyboard from the other two, it seemed unlikely that all three would be accidentally pressed at the same time. Bradley never intended to make the shortcut available to customers, nor did he expect it to enter the pop lexicon. It was meant for him and his fellow coders, for whom every second counted.

The team managed to finish Acorn on schedule. In the fall of 1981, the IBM PC hit shelves—a homely gray box beneath a monitor that spit out green lines of type. Marketing experts predicted that the company would sell a modest 241,683 units in the first five years; company execs thought that estimate was too optimistic. They were all wrong. IBM PC sales would reach into the millions, with people of all ages using the machines to play games, edit documents, and crunch numbers. Computing would never be the same.


And yet, few of these consumers were aware of Bradley’s shortcut quietly lingering in their machines. It wasn’t until the early 1990s, when Microsoft’s Windows took off, that the shortcut came to prominence. As PCs all over the country crashed and the infamous “blue screen of death” plagued Windows users, a quick fix spread from friend to friend: ctrl+alt+del. Suddenly, Bradley’s little code was a big deal. Journalists hailed “the three-finger salute” as a saving grace for PC owners—a population that kept growing.

In 2001, hundreds of people packed into the San Jose Tech Museum of Innovation to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the IBM PC. In two decades, the company had moved more than 500 million PCs worldwide. After dinner, industry luminaries, including Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, sat down for a panel discussion. But the first question didn’t go to Gates; it went to David Bradley. The programmer, who has always been surprised by how popular those five minutes spent creating ctrl+alt+del made him, was quick to deflect the glory.

“I have to share the credit,” Bradley joked. “I may have invented it, but I think Bill made it famous.”
 
The only people allowed to "legally" drive through red lights in the UK are the postal service, this dates back to early times and the declaration of wars.

The GB flag has no representation for Wales upon it. All other countries are represented, and not Wales.

Why does Wales have the best flag? Because it's got a funking dragon on it :)

The Welsh flag didn't always have a dragon on it, this was an addition made to the flag in 1959.
 
On the subject of the flag on the moon, I'm sure that one of the astronauts said that the flag fell over when they were taking off from the moon. In which case maybe the colours on the flag are still there but only on one side.
 
On the subject of the flag on the moon, I'm sure that one of the astronauts said that the flag fell over when they were taking off from the moon. In which case maybe the colours on the flag are still there but only on one side.
theres golf balls and photo of someones family left on the moon also.
 
odd fact but true
According to all known laws of aviation, there is no way that a bee should be able to fly. Its wings are too small to get its fat little body off the ground. The bee, of course, flies anyways
whos got any more strange facts like this ? haha
 
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