...or you can just get a butter that's spreadable out of the fridge. Here we have Bregott for instance, which doesn't require a heated knife (still 70-80% butter, and rest mainly water - https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bregott). Don't you get any of those?
He's a jerk - he probably created enough commotion that none of the other guests in the theatre could watch the rest of the movie. Much more of a disruption than the 10-year-old could possibly have caused. (By the same logic that allows beating of the 10-year-old, should he have been beaten up? Recursively?)
That's pretty puny compared to what Mythbusters did - it can't possibly be the "worlds largest". Mythbusters didn't claim theirs was the largest one, either...
I think it would be *interesting* to know if the dog would have anything in common with the original dog. I don't think it's an area where the science is very known.
But so far I haven't heard of any cloning where the clone doesn't have severe genetic defects and dies after a few years. That would also be interesting to see - if it's possible to make a *healthy* clone.
Thanks, Craig. Was trying to find a photo on how it looked from the outside: http://www.unicatamericas.com/photos_show.php?gallery=ex70&pic=photos/ex70/EX70HD-MANTGA6x6.17-560.jpg
That's the command to check and fix the filesystem. It's the chkdsk of Linux. On watson it would probably not even take much time to complete. It will however complain that you're using /dev/sdb1 at the moment and this is not a good idea. (Given that there is a /dev/sdb1 partition to start with...)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xf50EaQGNGY
But so far I haven't heard of any cloning where the clone doesn't have severe genetic defects and dies after a few years. That would also be interesting to see - if it's possible to make a *healthy* clone.
The command you're looking for is mkfs.