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It is currently Fri May 24, 2013 4:48 pm
CERN claims FTL neutrinos
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junk
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2011 4:52 am Posts: 165
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 CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Something quite interesting http://boingboing.net/2011/09/22/cern-l ... vrit=36761(meant it in regards to our discussions of FTL and causality so assumed it would fit into the human tech thread)
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| Thu Sep 22, 2011 3:58 pm |
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Ktrain
Joined: Sat May 07, 2011 5:39 pm Posts: 203
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
We read about this in the gradlab today, let's just say epic nerd conversation.
_________________ One should always read Keynes with alcohol and a cigar: He would have wanted it that way.
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| Thu Sep 22, 2011 7:02 pm |
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Nemo
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2011 6:04 pm Posts: 75
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Im inclined to think its not, I certainly hope it is. That'd be two 'universal constants' down 
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| Thu Sep 22, 2011 7:32 pm |
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Cy83r
Joined: Mon Jun 27, 2011 2:29 pm Posts: 97
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
On person's logical refutation.
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 5:09 am |
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junk
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2011 4:52 am Posts: 165
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Well I think it's nice from them to put up their tests for review and hope they get verified. As to the speed compared to the SN we observed. There could be a number of factors including neutrino type, medium and a bunch of other stuff.
Well we'll see I guess.
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 5:25 am |
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Mjolnir
Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2011 6:24 am Posts: 336
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Neutrinos oscillate between types. In fact, the experiment was designed to measure this. The neutrinos from the supernova would have cycled through all three types. It'd be a suspicious coincidence for one type to be tachyonic and the others to be slower than light by just the right amount to make the overall velocity the expected "just short of c". Also, if I remember the experiments designed to detect tachyons correctly, tachyonic particles would appear to be heading toward the source in their interactions with normal matter, which would be rather more noticeable than a few tens of ns difference in the travel time. It's notable that we can't actually send a light beam along the same path as the neutrino beam, because the neutrino beam passes through the Earth. Their expected time is based on measurements of the distance, largely using radio signals traveling between the surface and satellites, following a very different path through Earth's gravity well. I haven't gone over the paper in detail yet, but my bet is some overlooked GR effect due to Earth's gravity well or rotation, or some issue with clock synchronization. Spacetime near Earth is curved and twisted, and a given path through it isn't exactly as long as you'd expect using Euclidean geometry. 60 ns would be 18 meters, though...a rather large error. The original paper is here: http://arxiv.org/abs/1109.4897
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 8:05 am |
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Trantor
Joined: Sun Mar 06, 2011 6:52 am Posts: 780 Location: Hamburg, Germany
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
 |  |  |  | Mjolnir wrote: Neutrinos oscillate between types. In fact, the experiment was designed to measure this. The neutrinos from the supernova would have cycled through all three types. It'd be a suspicious coincidence for one type to be tachyonic and the others to be slower than light by just the right amount to make the overall velocity the expected "just short of c". Also, if I remember the experiments designed to detect tachyons correctly, tachyonic particles would appear to be heading toward the source in their interactions with normal matter, which would be rather more noticeable than a few tens of ns difference in the travel time. It's notable that we can't actually send a light beam along the same path as the neutrino beam, because the neutrino beam passes through the Earth. Their expected time is based on measurements of the distance, largely using radio signals traveling between the surface and satellites, following a very different path through Earth's gravity well. I haven't gone over the paper in detail yet, but my bet is some overlooked GR effect due to Earth's gravity well or rotation, or some issue with clock synchronization. Spacetime near Earth is curved and twisted, and a given path through it isn't exactly as long as you'd expect using Euclidean geometry. 60 ns would be 18 meters, though...a rather large error. The original paper is here: http://arxiv.org/abs/1109.4897 |  |  |  |  |
And i just say there´s still a lot to discover out there. Maybe even another or other "universes" "above" ours. A guestbook-comment fits it well: "This is the thing I find so fascinating about science. As Tim Minchin put it, "Science adjusts it's views based on what's observed". This discovery could one day change our understanding of the universe and the way in which things work. Doesn't meant previous scientists were wrong; all science is build on the foundation of others work. That's not arrogance, it's a thirst for knowledge."Just have a look on the evolution (aka "history") of science: Compare the middle-ages to 19th century to todays science. Jaja, they were wrong 400 years back, even with their view on planetary motion. But still it worked for them. Like our todays´ physics works for us. Don´t pick on the details, it´s about the bigger picture.
_________________ sapere aude.
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 8:52 am |
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Trantor
Joined: Sun Mar 06, 2011 6:52 am Posts: 780 Location: Hamburg, Germany
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
...or in other words: 
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:40 pm |
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Arioch
Site Admin
Joined: Fri Mar 04, 2011 9:19 pm Posts: 785 Location: San Jose, CA
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
"Cold fusion."
_________________Outsider
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 12:52 pm |
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Trantor
Joined: Sun Mar 06, 2011 6:52 am Posts: 780 Location: Hamburg, Germany
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
_________________ sapere aude.
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 3:54 pm |
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Absalom
Joined: Fri Sep 23, 2011 9:33 pm Posts: 231
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
I can see a couple ways this could go: 1) CERN goofed. Easiest solution. 2) We learn a little bit about time. Conventional thinking says that going FTL == going back in time, but these results don't say that, suggesting that perhaps 'negative time' manifests in other ways (Mjolnir, do you know if neutrino conversions are 1-way?). 3) Photons are not the ultimate carriers of causality, but instead a 'sub-carrier' of causality. Though ANY genuine FTL physics would probably require this... 4) Remember that 'fake' FTL signal effect from a few years back where they built a complex waveform that transformed itself into the 'data' signal at the receiver, before the photons that had been sent AS the actual signal arrived? Imagine that, but with probability fields instead of photons. This could actually even be useful, unlike FTL neutrinos themselves.
As far as the 'this could apply to space travel!' bunch goes, I half-remember the Scientifica (as in: the Language Of Science!!!11!1!) phrase "Produced in a particle accelerator" translating to the Engineeria phrase "Too energy-intensive for production use", so... useless.
Seriously, what are we going to do with the actual find itself? Use it to build FTL 'radio' receivers, so that we can hear aliens talking about how they have too many Reality-TV-analogues on TV, and their MTV-analogue doesn't show music videos anymore? This isn't especially useful.
Anyways, can anyone think of some other possible implications of this?
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 10:00 pm |
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Nemo
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2011 6:04 pm Posts: 75
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
I figured thats too much of an error for it to be a special relativity affect alone, that it is most likely some obscure combination of hardware/code and the earth quake that happened after they calibrated. But, it looks like they really dotted i's/crossed t's on this one. They detailed clock timings into ns for relevant reference frames, hardware lag times, included earthquake shifting their target's position etc. Im still doubtful that it shows what it apparently shows, just too much to go wrong too easily, but it is funny enough to make me hope its right anyway. Spoil sport. Oh and someone solved LENR, he just wont let anyone see how. But he will sell you a 1 megawatt reactor, requires "complimentary" power source, some assembly required.
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 10:04 pm |
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Mjolnir
Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2011 6:24 am Posts: 336
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
This doesn't say much about how FTL would relate to time travel, as the emitter and detector are in very similar frames. As for the neutrinos...my understanding is that neutrinos are a mixture of states, oscillating between electron, muon, and tau states as they travel. They don't really change into different types of neutrinos, they just roll through different aspects as time goes on. (which requires that they experience time, which is why they're expected to have nonzero mass and travel slower than light...) In this case, only some of them interact as tau neutrinos instead of the muon neutrinos they were emitted as, the main goal being to pin down details of the oscillation. Paraphrasing, our value of c is low. Light doesn't travel at c, it travels slightly slower. Neutrinos in this experiment would then just be traveling closer to c. Nice and neat, preserves relativity and causality. It seems extremely unlikely though, simply due to the sheer amount of energy we pack into protons in accelerators like the LHC and Tevatron. We've stacked up quite a few 9's of c, and never seen a proton reach 1.0c. Indeed. Instrument/experiment error seems the most likely explanation, but it's quite a subtle one if so (or so blindingly obvious that we'll all feel like idiots when it's figured out). I wonder how hard it'd be to do an experiment timing actual EM signals traveling across analogous paths above Earth's surface, but cutting through its gravity well in a similar way, being timed using the same techniques. If it turns out to be real, well, we'll have our first tachyonic particle, or at least a sometimes-tachyonic one, which might be weirder. The universe just got a good bit stranger, as causality is not exactly preserved. Neutrino radio won't take off...over the long term, we know neutrinos do travel at the expected average speed, or those supernova neutrino observations would have been early by years. It does open the possibility of FTL communication and sending messages back in time, especially if a tachyonic particle is found that's easier to handle and doesn't oscillate through slower-than-light states. It'd probably start off a whole new direction of research looking for more tachyonic particles and trying to work out the implications of causality violation.
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 11:07 pm |
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Absalom
Joined: Fri Sep 23, 2011 9:33 pm Posts: 231
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
I think you misunderstand what I was suggesting. The normal interpretation of 'negative time' is that you travel back in time. What if negative time instead means that you continue traveling forward in time, but all the various particle interactions preferentially run backwards (I don't care to speculate about anything higher level), e.g. muon neutrinos transition into electron neutrinos instead of tau (assuming that there's a one-way sequence in the first place, this could be used as a test: you test the side effects). That is what I was suggesting with 2: a completely different interpretation of 'negative time', one that doesn't provide a means for the grandfather paradox & co to work. Don't have a clue if it could work with relativity though, any thoughts? Also, it's a shame that even if true it would probably be in the 'still useless' realm, due to the unavoidable energy requirements of getting stuff up to those speeds. The only way we're going interstellar distances at any rate really is to find (a) shortcut dimension(s).
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 11:44 pm |
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Arioch
Site Admin
Joined: Fri Mar 04, 2011 9:19 pm Posts: 785 Location: San Jose, CA
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
The most obvious problem with this new observation is that cited in the article referenced by Cy83r, which is: we've been studying detected neutrinos for some sixty years. Neutrinos bombard us constantly, both from interstellar radiation and, more importantly, from the Sun. If it were true that neutrinos did travel faster than light, it's very difficult to believe that no one had detected this before now. I'll say it again: "Cold fusion." This experimental report is titillating, but doesn't mean anything until it's confirmed by a separate group.
_________________Outsider
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| Fri Sep 23, 2011 11:54 pm |
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Trantor
Joined: Sun Mar 06, 2011 6:52 am Posts: 780 Location: Hamburg, Germany
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
These neutrinos have their own time. Hammertime. As in E = mc Hammer. And they were happy to finally leave Svitzerland, so they gave some extra gas.
_________________ sapere aude.
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| Sat Sep 24, 2011 6:41 am |
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fredgiblet
Moderator
Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2011 9:02 am Posts: 579
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
I loled
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| Sat Sep 24, 2011 8:41 am |
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Nemo
Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2011 6:04 pm Posts: 75
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
 |  |  |  | Absalom wrote: I think you misunderstand what I was suggesting. The normal interpretation of 'negative time' is that you travel back in time. What if negative time instead means that you continue traveling forward in time, but all the various particle interactions preferentially run backwards (I don't care to speculate about anything higher level), e.g. muon neutrinos transition into electron neutrinos instead of tau (assuming that there's a one-way sequence in the first place, this could be used as a test: you test the side effects). That is what I was suggesting with 2: a completely different interpretation of 'negative time', one that doesn't provide a means for the grandfather paradox & co to work. Don't have a clue if it could work with relativity though, any thoughts? Also, it's a shame that even if true it would probably be in the 'still useless' realm, due to the unavoidable energy requirements of getting stuff up to those speeds. The only way we're going interstellar distances at any rate really is to find (a) shortcut dimension(s). |  |  |  |  |
I said it on another thread, no negative time. No more so than negative velocity. One can change position in space, one can change position in time, one can measure rate of change in position movement, but its always positive. And whats being measured isn't a neutrino decay affect or something, its an oscillation. Think sine waves. Neutrino mass a) exists and b) is variable. Neutrinos having mass at all violates standard particle physics, that mass not being consistent is just baffling. Where does it go/come to/from? Its been suggested before that other constants can supplant c in relativity, and in relation to neutrinos. http://arxiv.org/abs/0909.1856 If I'm not mistaken, the paper was originally in Chinese, and it suffers a bit from translation. The problem they were trying to side step was neutrino rest mass being negative. Frankly, I can't help but wonder what if they're fixing the wrong end, what if it really does have negative rest mass  No no, bad. BAD. Anyway, the thought has occured to folks: http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0009291 Neutrinos as superluminal fermions. And yet the simpler, and therefore more probable answer, is that some bobble head at CERN cant hack it at programming, and used the wrong integer type in some code somewhere for some piece of hardware somewhere.
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| Sat Sep 24, 2011 7:53 pm |
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Mjolnir
Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2011 6:24 am Posts: 336
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Also, higher energy neutrinos arrived sooner. Tachyonic particles are expected to behave the other way around, with higher energy particles moving closer to the speed of light and lower energy particles moving faster. These neutrinos appeared to behave like normal positive, real-mass particles, just faster.
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| Sun Sep 25, 2011 11:08 am |
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TrashMan
Joined: Tue Apr 05, 2011 7:01 am Posts: 238
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
I'm a not a beliver in travel back in time. The "cannot move faster then light or it will break casuality" is not a rule I belive in. It's a product of a mathematical equation with immaginary numbers and theorethical constructs.
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| Mon Sep 26, 2011 12:43 am |
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Riess
Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2011 8:22 am Posts: 30
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Not that it's really all that important what would happen in a situation that's by all appearances impossible anyway. Time travel or causality breakage or not, it's simplest to just go with "can't break c without dividing by zero, don't think too much about what would happen on the other side."
_________________Our Intrepid Crew - Space Opera Webcomic
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| Mon Sep 26, 2011 4:30 am |
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TrashMan
Joined: Tue Apr 05, 2011 7:01 am Posts: 238
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Mathematical formulas can sometimes be a hinderance as much as they can be usefull. Why should I be concerned with deviding by zero? Half the math uses immaginary numbers - which don't exist in nature - to get their results. 
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| Mon Sep 26, 2011 6:45 am |
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Mjolnir
Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2011 6:24 am Posts: 336
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
It's a result of time dilation, an effect not only predicted using those equations but directly observed. Without the math you so deride (and which you clearly know absolutely nothing about, wonderfully illustrated by your comment about imaginary numbers not existing in nature), you wouldn't have power grids, radio, or in fact anything close to modern civilization. Please learn at least the barest minimum about things like this before so blindly criticizing them.
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| Mon Sep 26, 2011 9:22 am |
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junk
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2011 4:52 am Posts: 165
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
While I agree that Occam's razor is very applicable in real life, it is still strongly important to not discount the possibilities which would be under occam's razor. Though the application of this find is interesting if it does prove to not be a jinx. It would certainly force some changes in the math which might lead to other things.
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| Mon Sep 26, 2011 10:48 am |
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bunnyboy
Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2011 2:21 pm Posts: 412 Location: Finland
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 Re: CERN claims FTL neutrinos
Is that so? How we define 'modern civilization'? Can we do it without high mathematics and pfysical understanding? - Industrial growth and cheap prices by spezializaion. It had been done even before Rome.- Machines to provide cheap labour and fast traffic. Steam engines could do this and they are made before we had any idea of thermodynamics (although resulting many booms).- Fast communication to provide news and messages even from other side of earth in hours. Telegraph works, only with limited distances and great differences in quality. How much of Marconi work (wireless telegraph) was calculating and how much experimenting?- Datastorages to provide information in minutes from great amount of data. Is there any other alternate than savant librarians?- Personal telecommunication. Mostly in person. No cellphones or equivalent.- Cheap entertainment for masses on your home. Gramophone and magazines. Any idea for hometheater?- Cheap energy to provide light in our houses for staying awake after sundown. Gas or gasoline. Electric too, if you own powerplant or have one in your neighbourhood.- Virtual transfer of wealth. That would work with enigma, but don't except your credit card to work anywhere else than inside of bank.- Aviation. Slow and expensive.- Weather prediction. Mostly your eyes and calendar.- Space advancement. Ballistical.Did I miss something? Now I think that Victorian internet forum would be cool. There would be giant blackboard in San Jose, where everything is written and administrating people were taking and sending messages all day. Just like stock market in century ago. Thank you junk and Mjolnir.
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Last edited by bunnyboy on Mon Sep 26, 2011 2:52 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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| Mon Sep 26, 2011 10:55 am |
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