That's still gobbledygook
Feedback is like a driven and under dampened oscillator.
What this means is imagine you have a microphone that is hooked to an amplifying speaker. Any little sound that is picked up by the microphone is the amplified by the speaker. If that microphone is placed in front of the speaker the noise is picked up by the microphone and amplified and then picked up by the microphone and amplified....... Ad infinitum. So the sound keeps getting louder and louder, this is positive feed back.
This is what happens when somebody on a telephone talking to a radio station with that station playing in the background does. The noise is looped and amplified.
I hope that helps.
Feedback is when you say or do something and other people offer their opinions and/or information about it. Example: You wear your favorite comfy shoes and another person says "You should be wearing heels." That's their feedback. Your feedback will probably be: to kick their butt.
OK my next question in this category is, 'Why is the Earth a sphere and not a shapeless lump of rock?'
Apparently it's something to do with space and time and Einstein? Can anyone explain this in layman's terms? I asked my friend Ashlie who's the clevererest person I know and it was just gobblydegook. How does space and time make the Earth into a sphere? I've been drinking wine, so now might not be the best time...
Everything exerts a gravitational pull. It's extremely weak unless the thing is massive - like a planet. Everything that makes that planet wants to fall to its centre of gravity. Everything. When everything falls towards the centre of an object, over time the object will become more and more spherical.
The smaller a body is the less likely it will be spherical. Mars' two moons are much much smaller than ours and are irregular misshapen lumps.
Actually Earth isn't a perfect sphere. As it spins around it bulges a bit at the equator and is a bit flat at the poles.
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Why not read some stories instead
NEW! Want a quick read for your coffee break? Why not try this... Flash Erotica: Scrubber Why before I was married my now wife wanted sex all the time. Now I am married sex has dried up
"Why is the Earth a sphere and not a shapeless lump of rock?"
As I understand it, the earth started of as a shapless lump of rock and over time the force of gravity forces it to compact, and as it does so it shifts around to make thew force equal on all of it, and the only way to do that is by becoming a sphere.
Hmmm... Ashlie said something about gravity making the space-time curve and that's what makes it a sphere. But what does that mean? I don't know any physicists and I accept this question might not have a layman's version type answer, but it really fascinates me.
I am a physicist. I have a bachelor degree in Physics from Kent State University.(Yes, that Kent State.)
Gravity does bend space/time but it takes a very strong gravitational field before we will notice anything. The strongest gravitational field in our solar system(the Sun) barely bends space/time enough so that experimental physicists were able to confirm Einstien's General Theory of Relativity.
Gravity bending space/time has nothing to do with why the Earth is a sphere.
If I had a chalkboard I could graphically explain Special Reletivity and General Reletivity to you and you would understand it. You might need me to explain it to you again but you would see the basic concepts.
I still don't get how gravity makes the Earth a sphere, yet an asteroid is a lump of rock. I get that's something to do with mass and that the Earth is big. So what's the smallest thing in the universe that's a sphere?
Something I think I'll never wrap my head around - the ending of Lost
The simplest way I can think to explain feedback is two annoying people.
One is a microphone, the other a speaker, imagine them in jumpers with their names on.
Now this pair being idiots of the type in dumb and dumber, they got into an argument, what ever the microphone says the speaker says back a little louder. The microphone can hear the speaker so repeats this again a little louder, the speaker then shouts the same a little louder. At some point the word that was said is lost and the important thing is these two idiots are making noise (hence the tone you hear not the original noise repeated), as they can shout as loud as each other, and are stupid enough to not get bored, the only way to stop it is to move the away from each other.
I hope that helps, just remember any idea can be explained, as long as its done right.
Glad I could be of assistance
Curling. Seriously, I have no idea what the hell it's about. I know every single rule and regulation in both American football and ice hockey, (yes, the "tuck rule" was pure bullshit) but despite several Canadian friends attempting to explain the great sport of Curling to me, I'm lost.
"A black cat crossing your path signifies that the animal is going somewhere." - Groucho Marx
Most of the things I learned in chemistry, geometry, and calculus, basically. I really hate numbers and dense scientific stuff. Combining the two? My absolute worst nightmare.
Also, pretty much half the things I learned in advanced economics. How I passed with A- I have absolutely no idea. Oh, right, it's because I worked my ass off to remember everything. I rarely understood the concepts behind a lot of what we learned (and sucked at applying them), and pretty much forgot everything I learned a week after I got back my results.
ETA: Half of what went on in s6 of Doctor Who.
I've always thought curling is like darts on ice. The skip holding the broom at the other end is giving impossible to follow directions. You throw the rock and with weird science/geometry angles you can get it to go where you want, by bouncing it off other rocks. The two schleps sweeping are actually melting the ice to help speed up, slow down and steer the rock.
I forgot the darts part, trying to get closest to the bullseye! You get points for your rocks being closest. This is a very simplistic explantion, but viable
the math behind radio frequency technology... like the kind in your passport or a hotel key card.
Women. No matter how much you try and work them out they still surprise you with something weird and not always wonderful.
The calculus behind String Theory.