User talk:San Saber
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Please leave a message after the beep. San Saber 23:04, 4 October 2010 (CEST)
- [BEEP!] Uh, hi, I... uh. call me. [CLICK!] Aki 16:00, 5 October 2010 (CEST)
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You told me that you didn't understand my Goof in The Late Philip J. Fry . What it was, was that I suggested a way to get the time code back. Since the problem of the episode was to come back to 3010, I considered it a goof because no one used it.
Review of how to get the time code back:
Future Bender comes back from the future and tells Present Bender the time code. Present Bender jumps back in time, becoming "Future Bender", and gives Past Bender the time code, which would become "Present Bender" of that time. Now we are left with one Bender, with one time code.
Fun fact:
001100
010010
011110
100001
101101
110011 the time code, by the way, turns out to be thirteen billion, one hundred ninety-four million, eight hundred ninety-four thousand, one hundred ninety-five (13,194,894,195) in binary. Each of the lines are 12, 18, 30, 33, 45, and then 51 from top to bottom. Also, it is symmetric, and if divided in half, the left side is the numbers from 1 through 6 (which is how I remembered it). The preceding unsigned comment was written by Columbus8myhw.
- I think it's a bit stupid of the writers to completely overlook the time code. Even if the trouble was that they couldn't use the code because it'd been erased from Fry's butt and Bender in the movie, they could've at least mentioned it. "It's a shame we don't have the time code now." That'd be a possibility.
- However, you can't say the fact that they didn't write the story in a certain way is a goof itself. I think we should just list the crew not using the time code as a plot hole in the Goofs section, and move the rest to the Trivia section. But that's just my opinion. San Saber 20:19, 16 October 2010 (CEST)
Ein (sounds like an RPG, doesn't it? Maybe I just think of Eon...)
I gave you a reply at my talk page, fella. Aki 02:13, 5 December 2010 (CET)