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  • GOTTA CATCH 'EM ALL
    in other news: server upgrades and additional moderators coming by early next later this week

    File : 1279917041.jpg-(34 KB, 512x384, corgi.pc.jpg)
    34 KB Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:30 No.1468616  
    What is the most scientific thing in your room right now?
    At me it must be the star-scope.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:31 No.1468619
    my computer...
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:31 No.1468620
    myself
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:31 No.1468625
    A V-Cube 6. Or the stack of PopSci magazines
    >> hi 07/23/10(Fri)16:34 No.1468645
    a computer that i turned into a dedicated oscilloscope... complete with my own operating system specifically for this purpose
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:35 No.1468651
    gravity
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:35 No.1468656
    gluons
    >> hi 07/23/10(Fri)16:36 No.1468659
         File1279917381.jpg-(70 KB, 453x342, 1279066787586.jpg)
    70 KB
    >>1468651
    >>1468656
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:38 No.1468666
    >>1468625
    I 1Up you with a VCube 7
    Safety goggles from the university?
    This computer?
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:38 No.1468672
    i have an astronomy book that weighs 15 pounds in the corner of my room
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:40 No.1468678
    Gel electrophoresis setup.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:40 No.1468680
    >>1468666
    youre such a cool guy?
    who doesnt know how to use question marks?
    >> David !4changtcqk 07/23/10(Fri)16:41 No.1468681
    a stack of physics and chemistry degree level books
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:41 No.1468684
    Textbooks

    Physics for Scientists and Engineers ($300k starting)
    Chemistry, and Experimental Science
    Vector Mechanics for Engineers, Statistics and Dynamics
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:41 No.1468687
    >>1468620
    Same here, humans are one of the most complex things in the world we know of
    >> David !4changtcqk 07/23/10(Fri)16:42 No.1468690
    >>1468684
    GET THE FUCK OUT OF MY ROOM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:43 No.1468695
    >>1468684
    Your book cost three hundred thousand dollars huh?
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:43 No.1468698
    >>1468680
    >implying he's not implying they're just being thrown out there as possible answers to OP, not surely the most scientific things set in stone?
    >> Scia 07/23/10(Fri)16:43 No.1468701
    either my astronomy video lectures or my moon colonization textbooks
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:44 No.1468703
    >>1468695
    you new here ?
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:44 No.1468709
    >>1468695
    >hurrdurr
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:45 No.1468712
    The Road to Reality
    2*graphics calculators
    "Essential MATLAB for engineers&scientists"
    65 decapitated mice
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:45 No.1468716
         File1279917950.jpg-(107 KB, 539x971, hp48gx.jpg)
    107 KB
    this
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:46 No.1468719
    >>1468684
    >Chemistry, and Experimental Science
    >Chemistry, and Experimental
    >and Experimental
    >and
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)16:51 No.1468761
    The computer, easily.

    Though I also have in front of me, in real paper form:
    Duistermaat's "Fourier Integral Operators"
    Friedlander and Joshi's "Intro to Distributions"
    Stolk's "On the modeling and inversion of seismic data"

    and about five or six papers on some sort of tomography.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)17:02 No.1468844
         File1279918930.jpg-(413 KB, 1024x1280, Image004.jpg)
    413 KB
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)17:03 No.1468860
         File1279919033.gif-(40 KB, 270x178, chp_particle_beam_accelerator.gif)
    40 KB
    one of these
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)17:04 No.1468863
    >>1468844
    Nice!
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)17:04 No.1468866
    Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia, Fifth Edition

    I wish I could find a picture of it, but the thing is giant - 3 inches thick, 15 lbs, and 2370 pages.

    From the spine:
    "Earth and Space Sciences
    Energy Technology
    Life Sciences
    Materials Sciences
    Mathematics
    Information Sciences
    Physics and Chemistry"

    This one was published in 1976, but the newest edition runs about $600.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)17:04 No.1468869
         File1279919099.jpg-(349 KB, 880x1024, 1277741332616.jpg)
    349 KB
    >>1468860
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:05 No.1470542
    USB microscope... as well as books, many books. Also the computer.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:11 No.1470564
    HRW Fundamentals of physics 8th edition and a really old thermodynamics book from the 1960s.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:12 No.1470567
    >>1468684
    >Vector Mechanics for Engineers, Statistics and Dynamics
    I've got this one too, guessing you're a mechanical engineer? Possibly civil though
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:14 No.1470580
    A toss between the four telescopes and the laser array.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:19 No.1470604
    A book called Principles of Physical Cosmology.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:20 No.1470609
    My brain. BOOM!
    Your mind = blown.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:21 No.1470616
         File1279934483.jpg-(50 KB, 744x567, 1274411993125.jpg)
    50 KB
    My computer.
    >> Xereaux 07/23/10(Fri)21:32 No.1470677
    "The Elegant Universe" by Brian Greene. My wife doesn't appreciate my science things in our bedroom.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:35 No.1470684
         File1279935301.jpg-(51 KB, 400x457, bucky balls.jpg)
    51 KB
    These motherfuckers.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:38 No.1470696
    my textbook collection. Right beside me is Neuroeconomics: Decision Making and the Brain
    >> Niveus !qyCeV9YlYI 07/23/10(Fri)21:40 No.1470712
    >>1470677

    get a new wife
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:41 No.1470719
    well me
    then my computer
    then my Britannica series from 1995
    then the selfish gene by richard dawkins
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:41 No.1470721
    >>1470684
    what do anal beads have to do with science?
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:42 No.1470723
    The Logic of Scientific Discovery by Karl Popper.

    Fuck yeah
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:42 No.1470724
    Besides books, probably some of my beer brewing equipment. Looks like it belongs in a chem lab.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:42 No.1470726
    >>1470721

    They're tools used by engineers.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:43 No.1470730
    >>1470726
    beat me to it
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:43 No.1470731
    Scientific calculator. Shit's got science IN THE NAME.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:44 No.1470733
    Stephen Hawking.

    Me and him just figured out that god is real.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:45 No.1470738
    book entitled "the chemistry maths book" RIGHT NEXT TO ME

    BITCH HAS 2ND ORDER DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS AND LINEAR ALGEBRA ND SHIT
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:45 No.1470741
    My computer and about a dozen or so textbooks. A graphing calculator...nothing special. Although the room directly below me contains a 6 foot tall, 300 lb telescope. It's much too heavy to carry upstairs.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:52 No.1470776
         File1279936322.jpg-(85 KB, 640x480, Photo 33.jpg)
    85 KB
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:54 No.1470795
    got a 5x5 rubik's cube
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:55 No.1470805
    >>1470776
    I really love these bookshelf pictures. MOAR
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:56 No.1470818
    A book titled
    Electrical Engineering 101: Everything you should have learned in school...but probably didn't
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:57 No.1470824
    >>1470795
    I didn't know rubiks cubes were 2D
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:57 No.1470826
    As PRevIOusly menTiOned,_these MEssSAgEs_WILL_cOntinUe_Until_yoU pErmANentLy_stOP ATtACKiNg_and_FucKInG_wiTh WWW.anon3Dstalk.se (RemovE_THe_3DS),_rEMOVe_aLL ILlEGAl_CloNes of_iT And lIes_ABOUt It_AnD_donAtE at LeaST a_MIlLion_usd_TO_sysop As coMpeNsATIoN_For ThE mAsSiVe_DaMaGE_You_retArDS HAve_CaUSeD.
    v t ll ols ld w qp hjbce nz c y
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:58 No.1470835
    the most scientific thing would be the computer, which is a tremendous achievement.

    other than that a bunch (12) of technical textbooks 7 of which I am actively reading.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)21:59 No.1470845
         File1279936783.jpg-(44 KB, 446x400, girls-getty_1376498i.jpg)
    44 KB
    >>1470719
    > He thinks the selfish gene is scientific
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)22:01 No.1470869
         File1279936916.jpg-(71 KB, 1422x646, magiccube.jpg)
    71 KB
    >>1470824

    I bet you didn't know they made these, either
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)22:06 No.1470895
    My computer, I guess.
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)22:12 No.1470934
    >>1470845
    Nothing is scientific until people start publishing papers about it
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)22:15 No.1470951
         File1279937719.jpg-(23 KB, 253x598, 253px-Galileo_Thermometer_24_d(...).jpg)
    23 KB
    Galileo thermometer
    >> Anonymous 07/23/10(Fri)22:17 No.1470964
    Either my old CS books on Algorithms or my pocket multimeter that I occasionally use for sciencing.
    >> Hornet !!6tzLRWBa0YF 07/23/10(Fri)22:23 No.1470996
         File1279938211.jpg-(215 KB, 821x912, DSC00783.jpg)
    215 KB
    Where should I start :D

    A ton of lab glassware, eg burettes, erlenmeyer flasks, separatory funnels, soxhlet extractors, and a large number of exotic things I haven't identified yet.

    Winner is probably this analytical balance. The object inside it is a moth in a DVD holder, I was testing the physics thought experiment of whether creatures in flight inside a container still affect the weight. They do.

    Why a moth? Because one flew into my room and started nutting the lampshade, which gave me the idea. Hence the torch and paper, you can roughly control the moth by application of light to the paper, or lack thereof. :)



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