Here's the resistor color code.
Here's a 220 ohm resistor.
Here's the test. How many squares?! ð
There are billions of people and a version of normal to go along with each one of them. No two versions are exactly the same. There will be hundreds of thousands of little things that make up your version of normal. With any luck you can find people that have close to the same idea of what normal is that you do. These are your friends. Anyone else you try to tolerate as best you can. .... The exact definition of normal depends on who's running the asylum.
13 comments:
Nope. Not even going to try.
I'm passing on this one too. I don't want to inflame my retinas.
Sue - What! And miss out on a fabulous prize?
Kirk - One of those resistors could explode!
This is why I couldn't do Electric Shop in high school ... color vision, y'know.
Begone with ya. Who's got time to figure that one out?
Bill - I knew that but I forgot!
Deb - I was hoping someone else would figure it out for me!
If you were hoping to pass that captcha process, I'd say it's time to request a new one.
I selected them all carefully and then Verify didnt work. Again until I realised it was just a screenshot ðĪŠ
26 squares.
Why do we need to know about the resistor colours?
Kathy - I think the next one was capacitors.
Stu - I think you were supposed to print the screen, circle the resistors, then mail it in.
Where did my comment go? I see 26 squares, but couldn't care less about the resistors thing.
River - Your first post was in spam jail.
This is a Captcha joke. Like finding the squares with stoplights. And there are 16 squares. All of them may or may not have 220 ohm resistors. ð
There are 26 squares. each four squares is contained within another square and the whole image is also a square and so on.
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