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Offtopic group for casual talking about anything. @rules_for_python still apply (except for the ontopic rule)
Current policies are changing after USA moved into less immigrant friendly stance. Pro immigration is one of point on some parties run. it’s here to stay.
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You need to do some research. Texas is nice but energy policies allow data centers build there.
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I am a mechanical engineer, and I also have a small business that I can run from anywhere.
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And what are your options from your research? What do you mean by problems from huge servers? What are your studies to get a job and get a visa for the USA?
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Is anyone here from America? I want to settle there permanently, so could someone suggest which place in the U.S. would be best?
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Rule 🔟: Job posts are SPAM unless they meet the requirements. Read the rules for details.
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https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/66455/google-interview-riddle-and-scaling-arguments
And I don't feel like being the next Kiraa, so I'll let Stack Exchange do it for me.
Yeah, that's one good way. It interests me how, as we become denser at penny-size, the blades' vortex pushes us outwards rather than spinning us towards and around. At this stage they describe air as honey.
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move to the corners coz a penny is too thin to be reached by the blades
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If you stopped for 10 days, will this group ever be the same?
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All he did was whining about politicians didn't get my point
I'm speaking from non-globalist point of view
It is reasonable to escape and leave as clouded says but
"It's for few only" and by escaping what will happen to the land in decades or so?
The time tests nations,
And why should a foreign country be kind towards you?
Yeah but your business is irrelevant for getting a Visa to get a visa you need a company to sponsor you. Unless you have a big company and want to make business but you won't get a permanent visa with that
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I don’t have actual knowledge about places. I think Austin, Texas, Vermont, Colorado, etc. so I thought I should take people’s opinions
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I’ve heard that people living near large data centers in some cities are facing problems.
I am an engineer, so I think it will help me in getting a visa there.
I want a clean environment, high safety, low population density, strong natural beauty, a place where I won’t face problems from huge servers in the future and good options for long-term settlement. My goal is a peaceful life.
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So you prefer to not post your job offer instead just following the requirements?
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@space_soup, heard this before? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90RLzVUuXe4 @brain3ater; I'm good (Blue)
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Say, "Imagine that you're shrunk to the size of a penny and put into a blender that's about to start in 30 seconds, what will you do?"
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No.
The immediate damage: everything not anchored to Earth's crust would start moving at whatever velocity it had relative to the center of gravity. That's orbital velocity for satellites, rotational velocity for the atmosphere and oceans (roughly 1,000 mph at the equator), and "static" objects would simply float off the surface in straight lines.
After one second, gravity resumes. You now have:
- Atmosphere: most of it is gone — ripped into space or dispersed into a thin, high-altitude cloud. Earth's surface pressure drops to near vacuum.
- Oceans: massive tsunamis from water sloshing back. The sudden return of gravity pulls the displaced water back down, causing planet-wide flooding and subsequent retreat.
- Solid ground: buildings, mountains, tectonic plates shift on a scale we can't model. Everything is now in ballistic trajectory; when gravity returns, it all crashes down, effectively pulverizing the surface.
- Satellites: gone. Most burn up on reentry, but the ones that don't are now on highly elliptical orbits or are flung into interplanetary space.
- The Moon: continues at 1 km/s tangentially. Gravity comes back, but now its orbit is wildly elliptical. Expect massive tidal forces and a likely collision on next approach.
- Solar System: everything — planets, asteroids, comets — loses its orbit. After one second, they all resume, but every orbit is now a chaotic, unpredictable ellipse. Expect collisions, ejections, rearranged orbital planes.
The long-term outcome: the Solar System never stabilizes into anything resembling the current configuration. The inner planets may merge, get flung out, or fall into the Sun. Debris from shattered Earth forms a new asteroid belt.
Verdict: the universe continues to exist, but it's a different, hotter, emptier place. Life is extinct. No, it would never be the same again.
Caveat: if "gravity stopped" means spacetime itself stopped curving — that's physically impossible under General Relativity. Gravity isn't a force you turn off; it's the geometry of spacetime. Turning off gravity is like turning off length. The scenario breaks physics before it starts, so any answer is a thought experiment.
If gravity stopped for one second, would the universe ever be the same again?
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