When you cross a computer and a shark, you get a play on words known as a pun. In this case, the answer would be a "byte" shark, as a byte is a unit of digital information in computing. This type of wordplay relies on the similar sounds or spellings of the words being combined to create a humorous or clever result.
Chat with our AI personalities
you get a rainbow made out of awesome.
you get a sharputer hahahah.
OR
for a math worksheet it is: KILLER_BITES
Oh, dude, you get a hacker. Like, imagine a shark swimming around with a laptop, trying to steal your data and stuff. It's like the ocean's version of cybercrime, but with more teeth.
No, the word Shark is not used in the bible anywhere.
An optical and statistical model is what CASTHY is.Specifically, the model can be found among the Nuclear Energy Agency's data bank of computer program services. The optical model offers calculations of neutron cross-sections in terms of total, shape elastic scattering and compound nucleus formation. The statistical model provides capture, compound elastic, and inelastic cross-sections. The model also supplies calculations for capture gamma-ray spectra and cross-sections of competing processes.Whatever the calculation, the computer language is Fortran-77 and -90.
A cross cable is used to connect two devices of the same type, for example two computers, or two switches. Or, more generally, two devices that have the same orientation internally - for example, a computer and a router.
A hyperbole is something very exaggerated, like, "That shark could have swallowed 100 of me whole!" Obviously, the shark wasn't that big. It's an exaggeration that the shark was big.
A shark will bite of its ben starved, if its provoked, or if it can sense that you are a good source of food for the moment.