Kinda unrelated but why is it "Solve [b]for[/b] x"? Doesn't it make more sense to say solve x?
[QUOTE=itisjuly;48564176]Kinda unrelated but why is it "Solve [b]for[/b] x"? Doesn't it make more sense to say solve x?[/QUOTE]
Because there might be multiple variables, so it's saying which one you want to find a value or expression for
Lol nuclear waste does not exactly transform into power, for example somewhere there is 147 boxcars of radioactive water and metal fragments from a time where a b52 crashed into a glacier
But really we should be reprocessing spent nuclear fuel
[editline]28th August 2015[/editline]
But I seriously doubt Google X cares about nuclear fuel reprocessing, they are still silicon valley and most of their projects are straight machine learning or software hardware problems
[QUOTE=itisjuly;48564176]Kinda unrelated but why is it "Solve [b]for[/b] x"? Doesn't it make more sense to say solve x?[/QUOTE]
Solving for a variable means putting an equation in terms of everything but that variable
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