Noël ...
Bon, ça fait 3 jours que je vais de faux plans en faux plans, alors pourquoi ça changerai le soir de noël ?
Me voici donc seul, à surfer sur le web, le 24 au soir.
Quelques adresses sympas :
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~jgaynor/lights/ (ça je vais faire la même chose chez moi à l'occasion, avec autre chose que du sapin)
Le Père Noël existe vraiment ( afin de livrer tous ses cadeaux à minuit, à tous les enfants du monde [ça en fait quelques bon millions à vue de nez], il est muni d'un bouclier à ion, d'un champ magnétique, et voyage dans à peu près 4 dimensions ... plus deux ou trois autres gadgets supplémentaires dont la découverte n'a pas une grande importance scientifique).
Bref la preuve est disponible sur cette page : http://www.physorg.com/news2487.html
Et comme il existe, le norad le cherche :
http://www.noradsanta.org/
Et ma source, article de /. :
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/12/24/1847259&from=rss
"Every Christmas, calculations circulate that cast doubt as to whether Santa Claus could possibly deliver gifts to all the world's good children - and still remain within the laws of physics. To deliver gifts to all who deserve them, they assert, Santa would need to move so fast that he would vaporise due to air resistance, be torn to pieces by gravitational forces or suffer other terrible fates we wouldn't wish for Santa Claus. Now a team of four top researchers looked into the case and concluded: Santa can do the job and Christmas is saved! They concluded that Santa has an ion-shield of charged particles, held together by a magnetic field to solve the heat problem and he probably travels in more than four dimensions." jgaynor writes "Inspired by an old slashdot article , I decided this year to create a 'christmas lights frontend' to our Network Management System. It came out well and has had a definite impact on response times. Videos of the results are here: WMV, AVI, REAL." Mrs. Claus writes "The NORAD Santa Tracker is up and running and ready to track the Big Guy on Christmas Eve. They've got photos of 50 years of catching Santa in the act." And if you didn't listen to the Blizzard Christmas tale we mentioned in the previous post, you're missing out.
Me voici donc seul, à surfer sur le web, le 24 au soir.
Quelques adresses sympas :
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~jgaynor/lights/ (ça je vais faire la même chose chez moi à l'occasion, avec autre chose que du sapin)
Le Père Noël existe vraiment ( afin de livrer tous ses cadeaux à minuit, à tous les enfants du monde [ça en fait quelques bon millions à vue de nez], il est muni d'un bouclier à ion, d'un champ magnétique, et voyage dans à peu près 4 dimensions ... plus deux ou trois autres gadgets supplémentaires dont la découverte n'a pas une grande importance scientifique).
Bref la preuve est disponible sur cette page : http://www.physorg.com/news2487.html
Et comme il existe, le norad le cherche :
http://www.noradsanta.org/
Et ma source, article de /. :
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/12/24/1847259&from=rss
"Every Christmas, calculations circulate that cast doubt as to whether Santa Claus could possibly deliver gifts to all the world's good children - and still remain within the laws of physics. To deliver gifts to all who deserve them, they assert, Santa would need to move so fast that he would vaporise due to air resistance, be torn to pieces by gravitational forces or suffer other terrible fates we wouldn't wish for Santa Claus. Now a team of four top researchers looked into the case and concluded: Santa can do the job and Christmas is saved! They concluded that Santa has an ion-shield of charged particles, held together by a magnetic field to solve the heat problem and he probably travels in more than four dimensions." jgaynor writes "Inspired by an old slashdot article , I decided this year to create a 'christmas lights frontend' to our Network Management System. It came out well and has had a definite impact on response times. Videos of the results are here: WMV, AVI, REAL." Mrs. Claus writes "The NORAD Santa Tracker is up and running and ready to track the Big Guy on Christmas Eve. They've got photos of 50 years of catching Santa in the act." And if you didn't listen to the Blizzard Christmas tale we mentioned in the previous post, you're missing out.