On Sun, 03 Apr 2016 02:04:05 +0100, Mark Lawrence wrote: > On 03/04/2016 01:48, Steven D'Aprano wrote: >> On Sun, 3 Apr 2016 07:42 am, Michael Selik wrote: >> >>> Gaming also helps your reaction time. Normally 0.3 ms, but 0.1 ms for >>> top gamers. And fighter pilots. >> >> Does gaming help reaction time, or do only people with fast reaction >> times become top gamers? >> >> Personally, in my experience gaming hurts reaction time. I ask people a >> question, and they don't reply for a week or at all, because they're >> too busy playing games all day. >> >> > I must agree. When you're trying to get the ball away, and 23 stone of > bone and muscle smashes into you, that slows your reaction time. I am > of course referring to the sport of rugby, not that silly "World > Series", which takes part in only one country, where for some reason > unknown to me they wear huge quantities of armour and need oxygen masks > after they've run a few yards. What would happen to the poor little > darlings if they had to spend the entire match on the pitch?
while i agree with your sentiments you have a few minor inacuracies the "World Series" has nothing to do with Poofs In Pads, it is actually Rounders. -- Real programmers don't write in BASIC. Actually, no programmers write in BASIC after reaching puberty. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list