There is no reason to believe that the air and the water around the iceberg are the same temperature or otherwise in a state where melting would be completely uniform. This changes a somewhat scientific simulation into an unscientific toy.
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Try not to draw perfect lines. At first the iceberg has the two tops standing out, which is fun, then as it melts and starts breaking a part around the thinnest parts, it is super fun to see how it reacts. Eventually you will end up with a bunch of slim topice floating on the surface.We already have version 15 in beta testing. It’s the Arctic. Melting seems to have gone too far. Should be fixed in the prod release.
This is just another toy built on top of a toy.
I tried it with this one, and yes, that issue is still there, though it seems to be better. Now most of them split into two icebergs, but some just jump away..
Try it..
Bug: countries from the Southern Hemisphere are mirrored left-to-right. AFAICT NH countries are ok. Something
You can say that again.
On the other hand, Great Britain "includes islands, such as the Isle of Wight, Anglesey, the Isles of Scilly, the Hebrides and the island groups of Orkney and Shetland, that are part of England, Wales, or Scotland".
Even your quote starts with "Great Britain is an island", though it later goes into "Politically, Great Britain refers to the whole of England, Scotland and Wales in combination".
So realistically its correct both ways - you can use it as a geographical term excluding islands or a political term including islands
https://www.irishpost.com/news/star-trek-the-next-generation...