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One microfortnight is equal to 1.2096 seconds. [2] This has become a joke in computer science because in the VMS operating system, the TIMEPROMPTWAIT variable, which holds the time the system will wait for an operator to set the correct date and time at boot if it realizes that the current value is invalid, is set in microfortnights.
Bilibili is known for its scrolling danmu (弹幕, "bullet curtain") commenting system. [2] Bilibili also provides a live streaming service where the audience can interact with streamers. Bilibili also offers games, mostly ACG-themed mobile games, such as the Chinese version of Fate/Grand Order and the Chinese game Azur Lane. In the third ...
Destroyed in Seconds is an American television series that premiered on Discovery Channel on August 21, 2008. [ 2 ] Hosted by Ron Pitts , it features video segments of various things being destroyed fairly quickly (hence, "in seconds") such as planes crashing, explosions, sinkholes, boats crashing, fires, race car incidents, floods, factories, etc.
Tech expert Kurt “CyberGuy" Knutsson reveals ways to restore accidentally deleted text messages on your Android phone.
President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday shone a spotlight on the debt ceiling, rejecting a bipartisan government funding deal negotiated by House Speaker Mike Johnson and demanding lawmakers ...
Bilibili Night (New Year Gala) Special December 31, 2019 3 editions 3 hours Ongoing Travel in Time [24] Variety October 18, 2019 10 episodes 45 min. Ended Weekly UP [25] Talk show June 30, 2019 1 episode 30min. Canceled Informal Talks(Season 5) Talk show May 17, 2019 3 seasons 80 min. Ended Pets Hospital [26] Reality May 7, 2019 3 season 30 min ...
Vanessa Williams is taking time off from her Devil Wears Prada performances in London following the death of her mother, Helen Louise Williams.. Vanessa, 61, and her family wrote that Helen died ...
More exactly, the mean solar day is 86.400 002 ks due to tidal braking, and increasing at the rate of approximately 2 ms/century; to correct for this time standards like UTC use leap seconds with the interval described as "a day" on them being most often 86.4 ks exactly by definition but occasionally one second more or less so that every day ...