(yes I listen to the "soft" AFI songs =P)
So, life is sort of confusing atm. Yeah, loads of things going on in my head.
"This is my head exploding from the weight of the thoughts inside
These are my thoughts escaping through the ventilation-shaft
Though my words weight a ton they can hardly ever come out right
This is an emergency call 'cause my head explodes tonight"
Oh, how I love that song ^^.
I started to draw, as I didn't really feel like writing (or writing a blogpost about it niw) . The drawing turned out not to be 100% relevant to these thoughts though, but I still kinda like it.

Ok, I only have a few statements left for this post:
I am seriously wondering how Jamaican Blue Mountain Coffee tastes.
I still have to watch the rest of 300.
Peer pressure can be such a stupid thing. I think some/certain ppl will agree with me on this =P.
Nini loved the poems. Thank you. <3
Aardbeien in 't park? Mmmmhz
Maltesers are devine.
The Interview - AFI is one hell of a shitty song. I really mean it. I seriously dislike it.
Why Hans?
I just found out I'm out of sketchbooks O.o , I only have this blue one left. But that one is rather small...
BITE ME ALIENBOY!
Love,
Stéphanie
My polyamorous friend and the promiscuous girl, what a nice couple ^^.
4 comments:
I've got no idea how far Apeldoorn is from here in a straight line, but according to maps.google.com it's 1132 km (about 1 hour 26 mins) away. (GO GOOGLE!!!)
What's wrong with The Interview? Sure it's kinda boring, but it's not that shitty.
Hehe, Minutes To Midnight rocks!!!
*shifty eyes as Stéph forced me to write here*
"She still there"
*looks around scared*
"She isnt is she"
*peers around the screen*
"Good"
Alrighty, now that we have that out of the way...LOL
As the post is like overly random so is my comment LOL
Laatz,
Ben ;D
Omdat het nog niet random genoeg was....
The word random is used to express lack of order, purpose, cause, or predictability in non-scientific parlance. A random process is a repeating process whose outcomes follow no describable deterministic pattern, but follow a probability distribution.
The term randomness is often used in statistics to signify well defined statistical properties, such as lack of bias or correlation.
Randomness has an important place in science, philosophy, and religion.
The mathematical theory of probability arose from attempts to formulate mathematical descriptions of chance events, originally in the context of gambling but soon in connection with situations of interest in physics. Statistics is used to infer the underlying probability distribution of a collection of empirical observations. For the purposes of simulation it is necessary to have a large supply of random numbers, or means to generate them on demand.
Randomness is an objective property. Nevertheless, what appears random to one observer may not appear random to another observer. Consider two observers of a sequence of bits, only one of whom has the cryptographic key needed to turn the sequence of bits into a readable message. The message is not random, but is for one of the observers unpredictable. One of the intriguing aspects of random processes is that it is hard to know whether the process is truly random. The observer can always suspect that there is some "key" that unlocks the message. This is one of the foundations of superstition and is also what is a driving motive, curiosity, for discovery in science and mathematics.
Under the cosmological hypothesis of determinism there is no randomness in the universe, only unpredictability.
Some mathematically defined sequences exhibit some of the same characteristics as random sequences, but because they are generated by a describable mechanism they are called pseudo-random.
Chaotic systems are unpredictable in practice due to their extreme dependence on initial conditions. Whether or not they are unpredictable in terms of computability theory is a subject of current research. At least in some disciplines of computability theory the notion of randomness turns out to be identified with computational unpredictability.
It is important to remember that the randomness of a phenomenon is not itself random and can often be precisely characterized, usually in terms of probability or expected value. For instance quantum mechanics allows a very precise calculation of the half-lives of atoms even though the process of atomic decay is a random one. More simply, though we cannot predict the outcome of a single toss of a fair coin, we can characterize its general behavior by saying that if a large number of tosses are made, roughly half of them will show up "Heads". Ohm's law and the kinetic theory of gases are precise characterizations of macroscopic phenomena which are random on the microscopic level.
A random number generator (often abbreviated as RNG) is a computational or physical device designed to generate a sequence of numbers or symbols that lack any pattern, i.e. appear random. Computer-based systems for random number generation are widely used, but often fall short of this goal, though they may meet some statistical tests for randomness intended to ensure that they do not have any easily discernible patterns. Methods for generating random results have existed since ancient times, including dice, coin flipping, the shuffling of playing cards, the use of yarrow stalks in the I Ching, and many other techniques.
A random abbreviation generator has proved to be quite....productive in modern high-tech/web-based society..//
Random genoeg..;D
cut copy paste van internet!
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