[08:33] morning boys and girls. [12:16] Any of you lot tried this Outlook Premium? [12:22] ...they ask in a linux channel... not sure it trolling or trying to access work email without windows touching your hardware... <_< :-) [12:28] Not trolling. Just wondered if anyone tried it yet. Need a place to host e-mail, don't want to do it myself having done it for many years. Push mail would be great for mobile. [15:35] Hmmh, a female Doctor Who, that'll certainly change things around [15:48] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAhChdgGtHA [15:51] not having watched DW for many years, have they explained how they get to >12 regernerations? [15:57] I think he was given another set of regenerations for helping ending the timewar [17:19] I'm still trying to work out who/what/when the TARDIS was fixed so it went where and when it was supposed to, instead of the random destinations due to a fault with the TARDIS that I grew up with [17:25] probably just a service patch on front of tardis monthly... [17:33] DJones: I think 'when' would be the wrong question for a TARDIS [17:47] penguin42: As the TARDIS is an object that seems to outside space/time, I'd have thought there'd be an external time calculation, same as comparing UK time with UTC, UK time varies but UTC is absolute [17:47] DJones: No, a postcode is a better comparison, being outside of the UK it doesn't have one [17:49] But at some point, there has to be an absolute definition of time and location, all that matters is the starting point [17:49] If you know the start point & time, any location can be defined by distance, angle, time from start point [17:50] Maybe a simplistic view, but works for me [17:50] why does there have to be an absolute definition ? (I don't think there is an absolute definition of location in our universe - there may be of time?) [17:52] I doubt there is to earth, , I guess the thought is that the big bang happened somewhere, anything outside of that location can be defines by distance, time since big bang, angle from original big bang [17:53] If you know the big bang happened at a location, then x million light years from that place at 15 degree's would be the same place no matter what date or time you looked at [17:53] Unless the big bang location moves [17:53] In which case we're screwed anyway [18:02] no, because the universe isn't a fixed size - it's getting bigger [18:03] so 15 meeleon light years will be a different point depending upon the expansion [18:04] it will be the same coordinates, yes, but the actual surroundings will change [18:04] relatively [18:04] and speed is also something to factor. speed, and mass therefore gravity [18:04] gravity changes time [18:04] speed changes time [18:06] and don't forget the green whirly things [18:07] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81W8tG3wH_4 [18:13] and of course: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6zwALJ8TVk [19:49] it just let itself go as it hit middle age... [22:06] This is awesome. I've just found out Google Voice assistant can control my Philips Hue lights. [22:07] Now I feel like I'm living in a episode of Star Trek TNG [22:46] i'm more ds9 with chief o'brien kicking the console... :-)