Comment in my journal and I will...

  1. Tell you why I friended you. Assuming I can remember :)
  2. Associate you with something. A fandom, a song, a color, a piece of fruit. SOMETHING.
  3. Tell you something I like about you.
  4. Tell you a memory I have of you.
  5. Associate you with a character/pairing.
  6. Ask something I've always wanted to know about you. (Or else I'll just ask a random question)
  7. List a physics concept that seems to fit with you.


I have mutated the bleme so it is no longer as infectious...you may participate here without having to pass it on. Here at DVD Pseudoscience, we absorb the guilt so you don't have to!

Update: Closing the new entries...this is by far the longest thread I've had on here, and I'm having trouble keeping track. ;) Feel free to keep discussing, I'm just not going to run the list on anyone else.
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From: [identity profile] dvandom.livejournal.com


1. Well, I've known you for a while here and there on Usenet, so when I spotted you posting to various other LJs, I tacked you on. :)
2. Shhhhhh!
3. You actually like working with tweens, which strikes me as a sign of either virtue or madness, either of which I'm cool with.
4. The Trellis From Hell, perhaps?
5. Barbara Gordon, 1968 TV version.
6. Dewey or LoC, and why?
7. Maxwell's Laws.

From: [identity profile] kateshort.livejournal.com


I break out my shushy-lady icon just for you. :)

Dewey or LoC, and why?

Oh, Dewey all the way. It's a decimal system with some repetitive bits, which makes it easy to learn. Biographies in the general nonfiction will always end with 092. Stuff about the United States will generally have a 73 somewhere in it. Each section has subsections within that number, creating smaller and more specific decimals. Simple and redundant, in a way.

LC, on the other hand, is just wack. You can have a range for a topic in numbers like DB932.78 through DB1047.86, and DB1047.87 will start some other topic. There's no rhyme or reason to it, for me. Organized chaos.


Maxwell's Laws.

Musts be my electric personality?

From: [identity profile] dvandom.livejournal.com


It's the organization aspect, actually. Maxwell didn't actually do a whole lot regarding the four equations known as the Maxwell's Laws, but he did recognize that they could alo be fit together as a coherent whole, with a little jiggering and rewriting.
.

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