Hmmmm. . .the geekiest thing I've ever done? It was either being directly involved in a Solar Powered Wii, or beer cooling a PC.
I wish I knew hwat you guys were talking about... But I shall none the less bring you back to this game.stinkychops said:Great, now I've lost the game!Assassinator said:Aw hell you made me lose the game!stinkychops said:The aim of 'The Game' is to not think of the game.Geek@Heart said:Erm care to explain what the game is? I've seen it mentioned once or twice but I don't exactly understand it.stinkychops said:You bastard I just lost thegame. Now I can't stop thinking of the game. I'd gone about two weeks.alloneword said:I *made* a shirt that says "YOU JUST LOST TEH GAME" on the back.McGee said:Buy a shirt from Pure Pwnage that says 1337 on it.
If you think of the game, you lose the game, you then have a 10 minute break before 'the game starts again'. I lost. By reading this you are now playing the game, it works better if you get some friends and family to play it. It works like an in-joke.
It's pointless but somehow fun.
Anyway, I never really do geeky things. I think really long talks about WoW would be the most geeky thing.
I wasnt sure until right now my Geekiest moment...and its understanding this joke. (before last monday I would have been confused)PersianLlama said:I have a tie with a bunch of binary on it that I usually wear to formal events. I also have a shirt that says "There are only 10 kinds of people in the world, those who can read binary, and those who can't"
That seems like a very unusual thing to say, actually. And the cake is still not a lie.ae86gamer said:When me and my friends were at a bakery the lady said "We have cake for you if you would like some."
Well, that's not really string theory. Anyone who thinks string theory is "very simple" is a sick individual.philosophicalbastard said:It's very simple, the theory is derived from the thought that particles could be in more than one place like light (as in you shoot a beam of light into an object that is completely glass and round and you could get any of the same beams of light). So if one particle can be in more than one place this would change history infinetly, thus there are infinete parellel universes with slight variations like the color of your to large like this planet never existed.stinkychops said:Would you care to explain it to me?philosophicalbastard said:I explained string theory to one of my class mates.
(I'm not really sure this is string theory but it's still nice infomation to now.)
Ha, that's pretty nifty.Zombie_Fish said:my geekiest point was understanding the Mozilla Firefox birthday joke.
Basically, to celebrate the birthday of Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft sent them a cake. In response, Firefox sent Microsoft a cake and the recipe.
(Don't get it, look up Mozilla Firefox)
FECK! i lost the game. ¬¬berethond said:Brought The Game to my friends. By the way, you all just lost. Twice.
Grab a spoon, pal. I once gave a lecture on the historical antecedents of an ASCII character... on WoW chat.amazinglettera said:I cosplayed at an anime convention...if there is anything geekier, nerdier or dorkier than that, I will eat my own spleen.
Pikka Bird said:That seems like a very unusual thing to say, actually. And the cake is still not a lie.ae86gamer said:When me and my friends were at a bakery the lady said "We have cake for you if you would like some."
Well, that's not really string theory. Anyone who thinks string theory is "very simple" is a sick individual.philosophicalbastard said:It's very simple, the theory is derived from the thought that particles could be in more than one place like light (as in you shoot a beam of light into an object that is completely glass and round and you could get any of the same beams of light). So if one particle can be in more than one place this would change history infinetly, thus there are infinete parellel universes with slight variations like the color of your to large like this planet never existed.stinkychops said:Would you care to explain it to me?philosophicalbastard said:I explained string theory to one of my class mates.
(I'm not really sure this is string theory but it's still nice infomation to now.)
Ha, that's pretty nifty.Zombie_Fish said:my geekiest point was understanding the Mozilla Firefox birthday joke.
Basically, to celebrate the birthday of Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft sent them a cake. In response, Firefox sent Microsoft a cake and the recipe.
(Don't get it, look up Mozilla Firefox)
Hugh Everett's "many worlds" interpretation of quantum mechanics.philosophicalbastard said:Could you tell me what theory I just explained then?