Photeaushop?
Riddles

The shot went wrong direction - he closed his account.
Hey, boy, you in vain closed your account . Do come back.


The shot went wrong direction - he closed his account.
Hey, boy, you in vain closed your account . Do come back.
I don't understand you, owly

The shot went wrong direction - he closed his account.
Hey, boy, you in vain closed your account . Do come back.
I don't understand you, owly
Sometimes a spoon can be as dangerous as a gun...

How is this possible?
You're right, pdela! The arrows are different and there's a circle in the reflection! Weird...

How is this possible?
You're right, pdela! The arrows are different and there's a circle in the reflection! Weird...
hahahahaha... idiot! ;)

ok, like nobody is taking this seriously I will provide an answer. Our vision? (view?) doesn't tell us about the "present" state of the things, this is because we see the rays of light which are reflected from an object, but the speed of light is finite equal to c, so there is no immediate information transmission (not even in quantum teleportation)
So light comes from the object following two different paths:
the light last more time in reaching the camera from path 2 (there is a delay), so the screen reflects a "reality" (boy with eyes open) which precedes the "reality" which has been captured by the camera device (boy with eyes closed). In general, the more far that you look the more you go into the "past"

Are you being serious with that speed of light explanation? If so, I can assure you that you are very, very wrong.

I thought light had a decay factor!
http://www.chess.com/forum/view/off-topic/has-light-got-a-decay-factor

If you look at the handwriting in the diagram, without being an expert it looks like it was written by someone with a split-personality. Pdela is trying to say that he is the boy in that picture. Any untrained eye would come to that same compelling conclusion.

The effect might work if his eyelids were moving at around 1-1000th the speed of light. (That would be about seven hundred thousand mph.) You'd be lucky to get it on camera though.
How is this possible?