Freya Jayne Vaughn (
luckyescape) wrote in
riverview2018-02-07 02:21 pm
001 text; wolfgirl579
[Maybe Freya is bored and testing strange things at her new job with Prometheus... and who says a mechanical engineer can't have hobbies outside of her field and use work resources to test said hobbies.]
Interesting Fact:
Dry air is primarily made up of nitrogen (78.09%) and oxygen (20.95%). The remaining 1% is made up of argon (0.93%), carbon dioxide (0.039% ) and other trace gases (0.003%). Water vapor (water in its gaseous state) is also present in the atmosphere in varying amounts, by up to 2%.
This is my Earth as of 2010.
So here is my question; What is the air in quarantine made of?
[About ten minutes later another text goes out.]
Maybe someone, not me, should try and figure this out. On the plus side, I found out that exploding things at my new job is not grounds for being fired! I also started a new project that I have named Prometheus.
He will be a robot that helps clean up the streets with a cute friendly tune. You'll see prototypes on the streets in about a month. If you see him, please fill out one of the surveys that are on his back and insert them into his mouth. If you hurt him, I will find you.
He's going to be like Wall-e so if you hurt him I consider you a monster of epic douche-baggery.
Interesting Fact:
Dry air is primarily made up of nitrogen (78.09%) and oxygen (20.95%). The remaining 1% is made up of argon (0.93%), carbon dioxide (0.039% ) and other trace gases (0.003%). Water vapor (water in its gaseous state) is also present in the atmosphere in varying amounts, by up to 2%.
This is my Earth as of 2010.
So here is my question; What is the air in quarantine made of?
[About ten minutes later another text goes out.]
Maybe someone, not me, should try and figure this out. On the plus side, I found out that exploding things at my new job is not grounds for being fired! I also started a new project that I have named Prometheus.
He will be a robot that helps clean up the streets with a cute friendly tune. You'll see prototypes on the streets in about a month. If you see him, please fill out one of the surveys that are on his back and insert them into his mouth. If you hurt him, I will find you.
He's going to be like Wall-e so if you hurt him I consider you a monster of epic douche-baggery.

no subject
Back on topic --- That makes sense. It honestly sounds like you took magic and quantified it so that you could explain it scientifically. It sounds pretty cool. I'd love to pick your brain about it. I have a natural curiosity.
I've also found that genius is a relative term, generally based on species with shorter life spans.
no subject
Normally I'd direct you to my brother
because he's the real genius alchemist
and can explain better than i can,
but he left
so I guess I can definitely teach you.
Or at least try.
But I'm curious: what do you mean
by species with shorter life spans.
no subject
[Even though she can look up his picture on Friendr.]
I think you explain things really well, better than I could, and I never ask people to do more than try. Life is a lot of trying. So thanks. :)
As for what I mean, I don't know what sort of species you're used to but I've met a lot over the years.
An extreme comparison is to look at house flies. They live for 28 days and as such live an accelerated life. So a genius in terms of a house fly is based off of how much that fly can learn within their live span and it's also based to the base knowledge of other flies. Since genius usually implies you're comparing to the same species.
See, I am not good at explaining things.