June 8th, 2006
Moderator: Moderators
-
- Administrative Discipline
- Posts: 613
- Joined: Thu Feb 03, 2005 5:32 pm
- Location: Indianapolis
- Contact:
- DDRKokomo_Jess
- Standard
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Thu May 25, 2006 8:20 pm
- Location: Kokomo, IN
- Contact:
The only reason no one else is showing up isn't DDRKokomo's fault Casey, it's yours, so "get that through your head". Oh yes, and, please stop being an ass. See, though you may not think so, we do have people who actually care about it. Maybe if they weren't afraid of the drama, they'd show up.
To everyone else: this isn't directed at you.
Sorry if I come off as rude but I'm sick of the drama that had no reason to start in the first place.
-Jess
To everyone else: this isn't directed at you.
Sorry if I come off as rude but I'm sick of the drama that had no reason to start in the first place.
-Jess
If you want to eliminate the "Drama", Simple solution:
DON'T RESPOND TO IT!
Do you not realize what's going on here? Casey keeps posting in here in the hopes that it will set one, or all of you off, and the more you respond to it, the more he persists. Everytime you fall for the gimmic, Casey sees it as a victory for 2 reasons.
1. He laughs at this kind of "Drama"
2. He really doesn't give 2 shits what you think about him.
So, if you want the drama stopped, LET IT GO, and don't pay attention to it. Just because he flames you, or anyone else flames you for that matter, doesn't mean you have to be super self-rightous and fight back. You are no better, (in fact, I think you might be worse)than Casey is if you let the arguements persist. This very same thing has been said MANY times in the past, and I find it sad that not everyone has gotten the point.
And THAT is my .02
Also, might I add, I know your previous comment wasn't directed towards me, and I hate the Drama as much as you, but I'm tired of everyone saying they're tired of it and then letting it go on as if they have the right.
Lesson: Learn the REAL problem first, rather than trying to come up with a blind solution.
DON'T RESPOND TO IT!
Do you not realize what's going on here? Casey keeps posting in here in the hopes that it will set one, or all of you off, and the more you respond to it, the more he persists. Everytime you fall for the gimmic, Casey sees it as a victory for 2 reasons.
1. He laughs at this kind of "Drama"
2. He really doesn't give 2 shits what you think about him.
So, if you want the drama stopped, LET IT GO, and don't pay attention to it. Just because he flames you, or anyone else flames you for that matter, doesn't mean you have to be super self-rightous and fight back. You are no better, (in fact, I think you might be worse)than Casey is if you let the arguements persist. This very same thing has been said MANY times in the past, and I find it sad that not everyone has gotten the point.
And THAT is my .02
Also, might I add, I know your previous comment wasn't directed towards me, and I hate the Drama as much as you, but I'm tired of everyone saying they're tired of it and then letting it go on as if they have the right.
Lesson: Learn the REAL problem first, rather than trying to come up with a blind solution.
This post is brought to you by BET...Because it's never too late to desecrate an ethnicity.
<post class="pointless">
That's j, thank you very much. i is AC current.
</post>
That's j, thank you very much. i is AC current.
</post>
A normality test:
+++ATH
If you are no longer connected to the internet, you need to apply more wax to your modem: it'll make it go faster.
If you find this funny, you're a nerd.
If neither of the above apply, you are normal. Congratulations.
+++ATH
If you are no longer connected to the internet, you need to apply more wax to your modem: it'll make it go faster.
If you find this funny, you're a nerd.
If neither of the above apply, you are normal. Congratulations.
That's actually an Electrical Engineering thing. For most people (pure mathematicians included), i is indeed the imaginary constant [= sqrt(-1)]. However, at about the same time all that stuff was coming around, i somehow got designated as current in the electrical world (lowercase usually being AC, with uppercase I usually being DC, but anyway). However, it was quickly found out that complex numbers are extremely useful in Electrical Engineering (mostly due to the Fourier and Laplace transforms and their relationship with complex exponentials and the differential equation models of fundamental passive circuit components), so most Electrical Engineering people tend to use j as the imaginary constant.
Of course, in Computer Science, those letters take on different meanings. i, j, and k are the conventional one-letter iterators for use in tightly nested loops, used in that order.
</offtopic>
Of course, in Computer Science, those letters take on different meanings. i, j, and k are the conventional one-letter iterators for use in tightly nested loops, used in that order.
</offtopic>
A normality test:
+++ATH
If you are no longer connected to the internet, you need to apply more wax to your modem: it'll make it go faster.
If you find this funny, you're a nerd.
If neither of the above apply, you are normal. Congratulations.
+++ATH
If you are no longer connected to the internet, you need to apply more wax to your modem: it'll make it go faster.
If you find this funny, you're a nerd.
If neither of the above apply, you are normal. Congratulations.
*Respectometer rising*MonMotha wrote:That's actually an Electrical Engineering thing. For most people (pure mathematicians included), i is indeed the imaginary constant [= sqrt(-1)]. However, at about the same time all that stuff was coming around, i somehow got designated as current in the electrical world (lowercase usually being AC, with uppercase I usually being DC, but anyway). However, it was quickly found out that complex numbers are extremely useful in Electrical Engineering (mostly due to the Fourier and Laplace transforms and their relationship with complex exponentials and the differential equation models of fundamental passive circuit components), so most Electrical Engineering people tend to use j as the imaginary constant.
Of course, in Computer Science, those letters take on different meanings. i, j, and k are the conventional one-letter iterators for use in tightly nested loops, used in that order.
</offtopic>
-Dan
*changes pants*MonMotha wrote:That's actually an Electrical Engineering thing. For most people (pure mathematicians included), i is indeed the imaginary constant [= sqrt(-1)]. However, at about the same time all that stuff was coming around, i somehow got designated as current in the electrical world (lowercase usually being AC, with uppercase I usually being DC, but anyway). However, it was quickly found out that complex numbers are extremely useful in Electrical Engineering (mostly due to the Fourier and Laplace transforms and their relationship with complex exponentials and the differential equation models of fundamental passive circuit components), so most Electrical Engineering people tend to use j as the imaginary constant.
Of course, in Computer Science, those letters take on different meanings. i, j, and k are the conventional one-letter iterators for use in tightly nested loops, used in that order.
</offtopic>