Here’s the link to the original one. From there you can hover on the comic, and a message from Zach will show up. Also, click the red button at the bottom of the comic for a bonus short comic (he does this daily with all of his comics). https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/bins
Hey! How come all the STEM folks wear glasses but not the mover? P.S.: I don’t get it either – but having moved a number of times, those movers can sure pack a truck as dense as a neutron star.
The key word (for me anyway) is “bin”; packing stuff in bins is an NP complete problem. All NP problems can be reduced to an NP complete one. Prime factorization is an NP problem (apparently not complete, but the math is clearly over my head).</>
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 5 years ago
Gonna need an Explain SMBC for this one.
VictoryRider over 5 years ago
Here’s the link to the original one. From there you can hover on the comic, and a message from Zach will show up. Also, click the red button at the bottom of the comic for a bonus short comic (he does this daily with all of his comics). https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/bins
poopsypoo Premium Member over 5 years ago
Huh?!!!
poopsypoo Premium Member over 5 years ago
I don’t get it
saje49 over 5 years ago
Hey! How come all the STEM folks wear glasses but not the mover? P.S.: I don’t get it either – but having moved a number of times, those movers can sure pack a truck as dense as a neutron star.
bonob over 5 years ago
Wasn’t immediate to understand either.
The key word (for me anyway) is “bin”; packing stuff in bins is an NP complete problem. All NP problems can be reduced to an NP complete one. Prime factorization is an NP problem (apparently not complete, but the math is clearly over my head).</>
Spock over 5 years ago
Illogical.
CougarAllen over 5 years ago
If it were the density of a neutron star, their stuff would be too small to see without a powerful microscope.