>Is this /x/?
yeah that's fair >Can /x/ have this feature built-in?
you mean that something manipulates the randomness?
randomness is itself /x/ as technically it could not exist
so who manipulates it? unless it's your guardian angel, you're shit outta luck, just some entertainment for superior forces that may have other interests than your best
other than that, almost all successful civilizations (Greeks, Romans, even Nigerians who seem to be the most successful Africans) has some form of divination
take it with a grain of salt, though, salt is delicious
dont be an asshole
OP could buy a bunch of dice for the price but he or she is interested in good industrial design combined with the initiative of someone who actually gets a loan from a bank to give jobs to people interested in working for their pay... we need more people like him or her
dont be an asshole
OP could buy a bunch of dice for the price but he or she is interested in good industrial design combined with the initiative of someone who actually gets a loan from a bank to give jobs to people interested in working for their pay... we need more people like him or her
https://i.imgur.com/7NEMrVr.gif
>he trusts a computer RNG
absolutely not going to make it
that is totally not an rng circuit lol
Hey guys, Could you make a list of standard /x/ universal answers to make a random game like the 8 ball? I'll do one with the 8 ball answers as a test. But it will be cool to do another but with answers related to /x/ subculture.
The hard thing is to make the answers vague and cryptic, phrases that could be applied to any situation.
Like ie: "Look at the sign in the sky" and it could be connected to another unswer like "Jupiter is bright" or whatever. But with /x/ keywords like "You need more retention".
I'm just a tourist so I don't know the x lingo in deep detail. I'll be taking notes if you can help to build those answers.
the two transistors may be in circuit but the NGMI post you gave the wikipedia article in called for reverse biased transistors... and if we are there, why don't use a reverse biased diode? sheesh you are NGMI
2 weeks ago
Anonymous
They ARE reverse-biased. Note the arrows. Joining the two gate connections gives you a unified reverse-biased PN junction. This is why the collector on the left transistor is not connected
2 weeks ago
Anonymous
that is totally not an rng circuit lol
I see no reverse-biased transistors in what you posted...
>Is this /x/?
No. It's just a diceroll why would it be paranormal? It's a floating die in water >Can /x/ have this feature built-in?
It technically can yes, just tweak the code for the fortune feature from /b/ like 15 years ago. The question is should it and the answer is no.
>Is this /x/?
yeah that's fair
>Can /x/ have this feature built-in?
you mean that something manipulates the randomness?
randomness is itself /x/ as technically it could not exist
so who manipulates it? unless it's your guardian angel, you're shit outta luck, just some entertainment for superior forces that may have other interests than your best
other than that, almost all successful civilizations (Greeks, Romans, even Nigerians who seem to be the most successful Africans) has some form of divination
take it with a grain of salt, though, salt is delicious
Why don't you buy one?
Why do you think this shithole of a board "needs" to have it as an obligatory feature?
dont be an asshole
OP could buy a bunch of dice for the price but he or she is interested in good industrial design combined with the initiative of someone who actually gets a loan from a bank to give jobs to people interested in working for their pay... we need more people like him or her
What?
Hey guys, Could you make a list of standard /x/ universal answers to make a random game like the 8 ball? I'll do one with the 8 ball answers as a test. But it will be cool to do another but with answers related to /x/ subculture.
The hard thing is to make the answers vague and cryptic, phrases that could be applied to any situation.
Like ie: "Look at the sign in the sky" and it could be connected to another unswer like "Jupiter is bright" or whatever. But with /x/ keywords like "You need more retention".
I'm just a tourist so I don't know the x lingo in deep detail. I'll be taking notes if you can help to build those answers.
Glownagger
Hello federal agents!
>he trusts a computer RNG
absolutely not going to make it
that is totally not an rng circuit lol
>t. zoomer freshman engineer
sorry you guys can't into analog hardware
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avalanche_transistor
I see no reverse-biased transistors in what you posted...
it's the two transistors in the circuit. are you blind?
http://robseward.com/misc/RNG2/
the two transistors may be in circuit but the NGMI post you gave the wikipedia article in called for reverse biased transistors... and if we are there, why don't use a reverse biased diode? sheesh you are NGMI
They ARE reverse-biased. Note the arrows. Joining the two gate connections gives you a unified reverse-biased PN junction. This is why the collector on the left transistor is not connected
your actually retarded
you're*
http://www.psychicreadings911.com/magic-8-ball/
it's just a D-20. just get a 20 sided die, 1-5 no, 6-10 maybe, 11-20 yes
Only if it's possessed by a ghost.
>Is this /x/?
No. It's just a diceroll why would it be paranormal? It's a floating die in water
>Can /x/ have this feature built-in?
It technically can yes, just tweak the code for the fortune feature from /b/ like 15 years ago. The question is should it and the answer is no.
Yes it is /x/
>It's just a dice roll
So I guess a ouija board is just a board game then.
>It's just a floating die in water
>please ignore the 8 ball part
Mattel shills out in full force
We used to have that.
Back in the day.
It was super fun getting out fortune read by our post.