The most random thread ever...
ORIGINAL: YellownBlack
damn its cold out
damn its cold out
We've got snow blowing here... drifts are approximately 2 feet tall... best part is having an AWD car... I can roll out whenever and a little fun snow drifting... but it's no bike...
ORIGINAL: sixhundredrr
We've got snow blowing here... drifts are approximately 2 feet tall... best part is having an AWD car... I can roll out whenever and a little fun snow drifting... but it's no bike...
ORIGINAL: YellownBlack
damn its cold out
damn its cold out
We've got snow blowing here... drifts are approximately 2 feet tall... best part is having an AWD car... I can roll out whenever and a little fun snow drifting... but it's no bike...
So.... +1 on the AWD 600.
Got a 99 Legacy L ... slower than snot in the dry... awesome and fun in the snow.... a little throttle punch and a twist of the wheel and she'll enter a very controllable oversteer...
Randomness is an objective property. Nevertheless, what appears random to one observer may not appear random to another observer. Consider two observers of a sequence of bits, only one of whom has the cryptographic key needed to turn the sequence of bits into a readable message. The message is not random, but is unpredictable for one of the observers. One of the intriguing aspects of random processes is that it is hard to know whether the process is truly random. The observer can always suspect that there is some "key" that unlocks the message. This is one of the foundations of superstition and is also what is a driving motive, curiosity, for discovery in science and mathematics.
Under the cosmological hypothesis of determinism there is no randomness in the universe, only unpredictability.
Under the cosmological hypothesis of determinism there is no randomness in the universe, only unpredictability.
ORIGINAL: Hedp203
Randomness is an objective property. Nevertheless, what appears random to one observer may not appear random to another observer. Consider two observers of a sequence of bits, only one of whom has the cryptographic key needed to turn the sequence of bits into a readable message. The message is not random, but is unpredictable for one of the observers. One of the intriguing aspects of random processes is that it is hard to know whether the process is truly random. The observer can always suspect that there is some "key" that unlocks the message. This is one of the foundations of superstition and is also what is a driving motive, curiosity, for discovery in science and mathematics.
Under the cosmological hypothesis of determinism there is no randomness in the universe, only unpredictability.
Randomness is an objective property. Nevertheless, what appears random to one observer may not appear random to another observer. Consider two observers of a sequence of bits, only one of whom has the cryptographic key needed to turn the sequence of bits into a readable message. The message is not random, but is unpredictable for one of the observers. One of the intriguing aspects of random processes is that it is hard to know whether the process is truly random. The observer can always suspect that there is some "key" that unlocks the message. This is one of the foundations of superstition and is also what is a driving motive, curiosity, for discovery in science and mathematics.
Under the cosmological hypothesis of determinism there is no randomness in the universe, only unpredictability.


