Chicken talk 2 megaupload




















In turn, chicks will cheep while still in the egg so that mama hen becomes familiar with her babes as well. Communication begins before chicks are even out of the egg! Watching a mama hen with her young is quite fascinating. She will softly cluck to her chicks as she shows them what is good to eat and what to stay away from. Whenever I put a dish of food in with mama and her babies, she will cluck excitedly, calling her young over to check out the dinner that has just been delivered.

If another hen gets too close to the new babies, mama will cluck loudly, calling her babies to her and scooping them under her wings, while scolding the intruder, warning them they were getting a little too close.

I think that it is amazing the way they look after their young and teach them. If your raise chicks without a mama hen, you need to pay attention to the sounds of your little ones.

Quiet trills and coos signal contentment; incessant chirping indicates discomfort…too hot, too cold, no food, no water. Watching, learning, and understanding their chirps is important in raising healthy chicks.

Roosters will crow throughout their day. They are very protective of their hens and will crow to make them aware of potential danger. They even have different sounds to warn of danger coming from a ground predator like a raccoon versus danger coming from above, such as a hawk. They will crow to warn other roosters of their territorial boundaries, to establish dominance, or to celebrate a conquest!

You will notice that they will vocalize when they find some tasty treat that they want to share with their girls, calling them over to have a taste.

I for one, think they like the sound of their own crow. You might notice your hens out in the pasture or chicken run, happily chattering back and forth to one another as they look for food, or sunbathe.

You can also tell when something is wrong with one of your birds. If a normally chatty bird is quiet one day, you might want to give them an second look. Often many of the other hens will join in the joyful chorus and they will continue singing for several minutes.

Every line has a number of chickens separated by spaces. The number of chickens corresponds to an opcode. Trailing newlines are significant, as an empty line will produce a "0" opcode. Instructions are loaded onto the stack and executed there directly, which allows for injecting arbitrary code and executing it through a jump.

Self-modifying code is also possible because the program stack is not bounded. The user is able to supply an input value before executing the program. This input is stored in one of the two registers. The first segment contains two registers. The first register just points to the stack itself by reference.

The second register contains the user input, which is usually a string. These registers are used by the LOAD instruction. The second segment contains the loaded code. For each line of the code there is a cell on the stack containing the amount of chickens on that line. This segment is directly used for execution. It is automatically padded with a single EXIT instruction.



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