Garbage & Janitor rooms require an exhaust rate of 1.0 cubic foot per minute for every square foot of space.
if your room or any thing like a room is cold then you have ghosts in you house
PHP does not have any implemented "garbage values," nor are there any hidden meanings behind the phrase. Garbage is typically composed of undesired items. Garbage values could refer to values which are undesired.
Magnesium is not any particular temperature. It can be hot, cold, or room temperature just like any other substance.
There are 2 pieces of GIGO: 1. The garbage 2. The process will produce the garbage (regardless if the input is garbage or not!) Take any one of them out of the equation, you don't have GIGO any more.
They are garbage.
No. It's garbage.
"Garbage in - garbage out" (shortened to GIGO) is a traditional computing term. It points out that if you feed unreliable data (garbage) into the computer, you are going to get unreliable answers out of the computer (more garbage).Unfortunately, people have an inflated trust in any data that has been run through a computer, garbage or not! The same term was used sarcastically and GIGO (Garbage In - Gospel Out)_ was common to identify this unwarranted trust
No. It's garbage.
The coolest Roman artifact is the frigidarium, or cold bathing room, found in any Roman bath.
The words that can be made with garbage are: * bag * bar * Gabe * are * gag I I am not sure about any more!
Probably not. If a refrigerator were in a room so cold that the outside temperature caused the refrigerator to be very cold inside, the thermostat in the refrigerator might not ever cause the device to actually use any energy. For most normal purposes, the refrigerator will be better off in a cooler room simply because the outside atmosphere will not be constantly warming up the fridge from the outside. Think about how much more you need the air conditioning on to keep a room at 70 degrees on a hot day than on a cold one.
"Cold fusion" refers to fusion at (or near) room temperature, rather than the millions of degrees that are normally required. This has not been achieved so far - at least, not to any significant degree.