📧 New 'Biden AI' Now Controls Your Money ❍ Tue, October 31, 2023
Biden's new AI is investing your money in causes you don't support – Without your permission...
Our calculus studies began with encountering a hungry bear. He looked up at us, licked his lips, and charged at us with the fury of a steam-powered locomotive. Being the smart people we are, we ran. What else is there to do? We're not confronting a ravenous bear with nothing but a piece of paper, a pencil, and a graphing calculator. Despite running, we couldn't outrun the hungry bear. We encountered limits, derivatives, integrals, and even some weird things about counting to infinity. We've managed to wrestle our way free a couple times, and the bear decided to leave us alone. As far as we've come, there's no turning back. But we can take a break for a second and enjoy the scenery.
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After chopping our ambiguously shaped, angry blob–his name is Ornery–into tiny bits, we can find how much blob we get in each slice. No wonder he's not happy. He thinks we're going to eat him. We'll learn that, by adding up all those bits, we can find his volume. Although there's nothing for Ornery to be afraid of, he's already warned his friend, Wily the wire. We're coming after him next. While this chapter will help us hone our knife skills, this is not a chapter that will teach us to assemble a masterpiece of a dinner. We won't evaluate integrals ourselves. We will be set up to discuss bigger and better things than the area under a curve, though. With our new-found splicing skills, our imaginations are our only limits. We can begin drawing and understanding our own angry blobs, outraged areas, and crossed curves. Samantha has finished her Ph.d. in meteorology, and has now joined forces with the local Shmoopville weather team. She loves getting in front of the green-screen and showing her weather chops. Sometimes she wears green, pretending to have an invisible torso. Beyond standing in front of the camera, Sam also likes to play around with the weather computers that are used to model the clouds we see on screen. These computer models use changes with respect to time (derivatives) in atmospheric variables like temperature and pressure to guess the weather. Snow in Florida? Tornado in Alaska? There's a model for that. Differential equations are used to organize and figure out complicated problems. All of these derivative variables, along with some regular old variables, can be tossed into a differential equation. Because of differential equations, we can sit inside, eating cereal in our PJ's, and know exactly what to expect it to be like outside all day. ]
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