Facebook killed the radio star. And by radio star, I mean the premise of distributed forums around the internet. And that got got by Instagram/SnapChat. And that got got by TikTok. Where the fuck is the internet we once knew?
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Quote from: MyndFyre[x86] on September 14, 2005, 06:55:06 pmQuote from: Sidoh on September 14, 2005, 05:40:11 pmCO2 is Carbon Dioxide, true. However -- Co2 is not, if you want to get technical.Yeah, but I don't think you'd find Co2, at least, not commonly. Cobalt Chloride comes to mind as a normal compound, but that's CoCl2. Given that cobalt in its normal state has 2 electrons in its outer shell, moving to 4 (having 2 cobolt ions together) would lend instability to the cobalt particle.Quik, what did you edit?Co2 isn't what he wrote though, he wrote Co2, which could indicate Co2, CO2, or Co2 , with the 2 representing a 2+ charge, and assuming that he meant Co2+ is much more reasonable than assuming he meant Co2. But all in all, he probably meant CO2.
Quote from: Sidoh on September 14, 2005, 05:40:11 pmCO2 is Carbon Dioxide, true. However -- Co2 is not, if you want to get technical.Yeah, but I don't think you'd find Co2, at least, not commonly. Cobalt Chloride comes to mind as a normal compound, but that's CoCl2. Given that cobalt in its normal state has 2 electrons in its outer shell, moving to 4 (having 2 cobolt ions together) would lend instability to the cobalt particle.Quik, what did you edit?
CO2 is Carbon Dioxide, true. However -- Co2 is not, if you want to get technical.
I have a programming folder, and I have nothing of value there
Our species really annoys me.
I'd personally do as Joe suggests
You might be right about that, Joe.
Carbon dioxide kay? One carbon, two oxygen. The explosive stuff.
I'd like to join!
How 'bout no, ya crazy Dutch bastard?
How did the "join" thread turned into a science forum?
Quote from: xex on September 20, 2005, 09:28:07 pmHow did the "join" thread turned into a science forum? How did a day of defeat topic turn into a credit card topic? Its just have forums work.
Well, CO2 blows up nicely when its in the little container (for the wooden cars, you know) and gets punctured.
Quote from: Joe[e2] on September 20, 2005, 09:23:22 pmWell, CO2 blows up nicely when its in the little container (for the wooden cars, you know) and gets punctured.That's because it's under extreme pressures, not because it is explosive. Almost any other gas under the same conditions would produce the same effect.
Too true -- we use CO2 for paintball guns too. It's not explosive, but it is stored at high pressure, so in an attempt to reach equilibrium, a lot of high-pressure air moves towards the low-pressure air outside quickly, which causes the paintball to be shot.