No one has to check where you bought it, just the manufacturing date which is stamped on the case.
And yes, you are an outside the law, as trivial as it seems. For some of us breaking the law is a big deal; we put a large burden on "unjust law is not law" because we recognize that "stupid" "inconvenient" or even "ruinous" law isn't obviously "unjust"
But he explained that shallow pools can be also be fast for fluid reasons, and not for psychological ones (better coupling of the arms for propulsion by using by viscous coupling to the floor?)
Too late to edit, but I think the main point stands, the founders and early employees were all from giants with feet of clay who collapsed because they ignored the consumer market.
But if the ex-SGI employees that started Nvidia have any sense, they'll stick to the consumer market to ensure no upstart can build an enterprise computing empire off of gamers.
My roommate as a postfix was a guy finishing his graduate work in fluids simulations. He was also a former competitive swimmer. He's the first to tell me about fast and score pools.
According to him the answer is no.
Which makes sense, really. The generated surface waves alone are impossible to simulate, never mind the turbulent wake.
The last episode Ive watched of the Simpsons was S13E11, aired in 2002. So it's been a while
(It was so stupid I realized they had long jumped the shark.)