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Busy Building! (by Gemma/Star)
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Alfador
Alfador's Gallery (172)

Science! (by Zee-Zee)

Lupiko and Zelampago (by Cloversix)

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by Alfador
Busy Building! (by Gemma/Star)
Lupiko and Zelampago (by Cloversix)
As reward for solving a math problem, Zee-Zee put me in this picture of cubs having fun at a science museum! I'm trying to set a toddling speed record! =^_^=

Keywords
male 1,187,889, female 1,077,570, cub 273,434, fox 246,954, wolf 192,413, rabbit 138,169, diaper 77,388, squirrel 30,668, kitsune 18,022, toddler 10,723, genderfluid 2,478, science 2,257, carrot 1,669
Details
Type: Picture/Pinup
Published: 12 years, 5 months ago
Rating: General

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6 favorites
15 comments

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skunktronix
12 years, 5 months ago
Hooray for world's biggest carrot too! :D And it looks like a certain clever squirrel needs to visit the potty very soon. ;)
Alfador
12 years, 5 months ago
According to comments in the original posting, he didn't make it. >:3
EmmetEarwax
11 years ago
The body functions of any child under 7, and I refer to normal children, not just  impaired, are not to be depended on.
  
In fact, one public swimming pool ,within walking distance of my home, banned any child under 7 from using it.Every day for a whole week, they had to shut down and drain the pool after some kid, who didn't get to the restroom in time, had a b.m. in the pool. That was when they instituted a BAN on kids under 7 from swimming in it.
JunkBox
12 years, 5 months ago
That "Dinosaur" sign has the arrow pointing the wrong way. Tape recorders got much smaller when the cassette was invented. I do remember playing with a reel-to-reel machine once - finding tapes and reels was getting difficult by 1992.
Alfador
12 years, 5 months ago
Well, where else would you expect to find one but in a museum? Just ask Indiana Jones where it belongs! XD
EmmetEarwax
11 years, 1 month ago
He was talking about a large ornate crucifix that a plunderer stole from an archaeological site. He finally managed to secure it tho with tremendous difficulty, years later.
" Alfador wrote:
Well, where else would you expect to find one but in a museum? Just ask Indiana Jones where it belongs! XD
TellyLittle
11 years, 12 months ago
Pretty cool, science is great.  I like the plasma globe and the tread mill.  Is the fan just to make it feel like your running faster, or just to cool you down?
Alfador
11 years, 12 months ago
Some of each, I think!
EmmetEarwax
11 years, 4 months ago
I've been in science museums. One of them,in Lomdon, gave me the best hearing test I ever had. There were gaps in my hearing, as I have an unusual hearing loss since childhood. I am imperfect, maybe worse.
EmmetEarwax
11 years, 1 month ago
Alfador, a note from a nerd:

I tried posting the above in FurAffinity, but they are in readonly mode, and are dragging this out. I only have limited patience.

ZeeZee stated that these toddlers are being rewarded for solving quadratic equations. The formula for that is fairly simple. For Cubic and Quartic (3 and 4) equations, the formulae are rather long & cumbersome. Curiously for Quintic equations (5), there are NO finite formulae to evaluate X.

The proof of that is always dismissed by math books as "beyond the scope of this book" same as Godel's Undecidabitily theorem (related in incompleteness theory) or Abel's proof that while just about any function can be differentiated, not all functions can be integrated . Thus getting the definite integral of certain functions sometimes is a challange. Taylor and Fourier expansion of functions , to solve an integral, is subject to the validity of the series expansion.

At this point, I blush to realize that I've probably gone way over your head , and for that I sincerely apologize. But since the death of Mary Rule, a good friend of mother's (also deceased), I can not find anybody to talk to about calculus. They are either good patient listeners or inwardly annoyed at my chatter.
Alfador
11 years, 1 month ago
Nah... not over my head really--though I never worked with quintics, there was a poster about all sorts of solutions to special cases on the wall of the Olympic College math department back when I was in high school.
EmmetEarwax
11 years ago
Special cases - yes ! But a general formula for ALL quintic equations  can not be found, This was suspected when efforts to find it proved an uphill battle and finally giving up in bloody defeat. Abel proved the nonexistence of any such general formula. The same applies for sextic, septic , octic and higher equations.

Just like it was finally proven, tho with extreme difficulty, setbacks, et al, that Fermat's Last Theorem was true.
EmmetEarwax
10 years, 11 months ago
I favorited this because the program is too quick to remove comments.
GreenReaper
7 years, 1 month ago
Wow. I gotta get me one of those carrots! ^_^
Alfador
7 years, 1 month ago
They are huge!
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