Kleis
Electron
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2016
- Messages
- 791
- Nebulae
- 1,658
This shit actually knows it's an album wtf
oh
Sehnsucht is way too good, yet I've still have to wonder if it was good enough to sell all those copies. Maybe they did? I guess that would mean those copies would have been sold if he could have been a full time member of the band and not some one of those fake fans that have the band covered all night?
Or perhaps even that those other versions would have helped the record sell more? Maybe in terms of promotion it was better in terms of making sure everyone knew about it? There's only one question left, and that's whether they can make that next step before they die? (For this one I'm a little curious and I could be proven wrong.)
As far as if it's the best thing that ever happened to a band, well let's face it this is going to become the new trend. That's about my honest opinion anyway. I like to believe in bands having something to prove to the industry, if they continue to exist after the fact they tend to disappear for good in my book without a trace. Of course we know that not everyone that buys a bootleg of it will
oh
Hitler was right after all: if the German economy needed "a new structure, a more efficient way of production," then Hitler was right when he offered the idea.
There are two problems with the current economic system. First of all, it fails to provide the middle class with more than what it has already created. The rich aren't even benefiting much if they are getting more money for working fewer hours. That's in part because most working hours aren't being recorded—the unemployment rate is still higher than most countries on Earth, and many countries are also implementing high-skill training programs such as those offered by Germany's high-tech sector. If these incentives weren't so heavily subsidizing the richest, they would be much more difficult to reverse.
Next we need to address the middle class's dependency on the economy—it requires people to work harder and harder to avoid unemployment and poverty because the working-age population has no choice but to accept it. In other words, it isn't the jobs or the incomes, but the inability of the middle class to keep up with their rising living costs that is the problem. The system needs to
The Schrödinger equation fails at relativity, quantum physics and general relativity, and at higher fundamental rates, which are still too large to be realized by modern computers. It is only at higher levels that it becomes possible to verify its correctness, and also to provide further justification for its applicability. It is not, of course, a perfect explanation, but it does give an answer to one of the major questions of modern physics: What properties should apply to all possible processes of quantum nature.
The Schrödinger equation does this without having to take account of the peculiar behavior of matter and energy, which are normally independent of each other. Quantum effects have the property of taking advantage of each other, but the physical behavior of matter cannot possibly follow the Schrödinger equation.
What, then, does the Schrödinger equation tell us about the properties of the quantum world? If a classical computer cannot solve the Schrödinger equation correctly, what properties are necessary to obtain a stable quantum state, in any of six fundamental realms? These are: (1) the state on the one hand, where every electron