A mathematician on board
A mathematician is flying non-stop
from Edmonton to Frankfurt with AirTransat. The scheduled flying time is
nine hours.
Some time after taking off, the pilot announces that one engine had to be
turned off due to mechanical failure: "Don't worry - we're safe. The only
noticeable effect this will have for us is that our total flying time will
be ten hours instead of nine."
A few hours into the flight, the pilot informs the passengers that another
engine had to be turned off due to mechanical failure: "But don't worry -
we're still safe. Only our flying time will go up to twelve hours."
Some time later, a third engine fails and has to be turned off. But the
pilot reassures the passengers: "Don't worry - even with one engine, we're
still perfectly safe. It just means that it will take sixteen hours total
for this plane to arrive in Frankfurt."
The mathematician remarks to his fellow passengers: "If the last engine
breaks down, too, then we'll be in the air for twenty-four hours
altogether!"
Source:
http://www.math.ualberta.ca/~runde/jokes.html
Why did the chicken cross the
road?
Jean Foucault:
It didn’t. The rotation of the earth made it appear to cross.
Buckminister Fuller:
Because we have not yet designed and implemented true, constantly
forwardly/backwardly evolving, energy-transforming living machines which
will enable us to perform all functions from the informedly turbining
hub of a single autonomous in-spiralling/out-radiating network of
space-connected information vector transforms. Had the chicken been
supplied with my Dymaxion Tensegrity Coop, it would have remained at
home, un-tempted by such risky spatial-temporal translations.
Thomas Edison:
She thought it would be an illuminating experience.
Source: http://www.xs4all.nl/~jcdverha/scijokes