Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Gwil on
Wed Mar 17th 2004 at 4:16pm
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i suppose he could have done the continents... then frag could have been in Asia, with a few other people as well I believe (?)
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Orpheus on
Wed Mar 17th 2004 at 4:38pm
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without going into detail, i am sure you know what a tree stump is, and its approximate height it renders you if stood upon.. i am also sure you can extrapolate the rest, if you have cows facing north, and you are on the southern end with your stump.
anywhos, its a running joke around here, to own your own stump broke bovine :smile:
jokes that involve religious objects from other countries, sometimes go astray, so i was posting it with some trepidation fragman :smile:
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by fraggard on
Wed Mar 17th 2004 at 4:41pm
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'tis okay... I'm not the religious sort myself. Oh,and that's why I said I didn't want to know... your reputation preceeds you here :razz:
*Edit: My rating just dropped a point.... Come out and fight like a man you coward-who-rated-me-a-3 !
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by gimpinthesink on
Wed Mar 17th 2004 at 5:28pm
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Theres a coupple from australia I know Des and Diablo are and theres a coupple more I just carnt remember who.
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Gwil on
Wed Mar 17th 2004 at 6:15pm
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wil5on, diablo, desplesda.. 2dmin/2-bits (sorry, your names are easy to confuse) - are all australian as well I think.. yeah...
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Cassius on
Wed Mar 17th 2004 at 6:32pm
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Just voted to make it even.
USA all the way, bitches.
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Crono on
Wed Mar 17th 2004 at 8:02pm
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USA, USA, Give-Oregon-Back-Their-Water-And-Electricity-Because -It-Drove-Up-The-Unemployment-Rate , USA...
lol, sorry.
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by DesPlesda on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 3:15am
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Am I the southernmost member here? I'm at 42? 53' south.
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 4:46am
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I'm rather suprised that we Americans outnumber the brits!
CJ, I'm against most southwestern states on general scientific/environmetnal principle. It simply does not make any sort of sense to put huge cities in the middle of the deasert.... of course.. I'm very glad you all don't live up here :biggrin:
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 5:18am
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I hear ya Orph, but there are some serious issues with wind power. I think they ought to just build themselves some breeder reactors like they use in france. bingo no more energy problem.... only issue is, they produce weapons grade plutonium, and have a much higher potential for meltdown than american designs :sad:
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by scary_jeff on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 8:05am
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Only 15 years until we are using fusion reactors isn't it? They start work on the prototype in either japan or france sometime soon, which they expect to have finished in 10 years, after which they can make a production version.
I was always a bit worried though about the idea of a fussion reactor losing containment and burning off our atmosphere... not sure if it's a real possibility or not though? (I'm looking at you when I ask that, TB :smile: )
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Cash Car Star on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 9:08am
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Profit has nothing to do with product efficiency, only production efficiency. Car manufacturers in particular are notorious for inefficient designs that force you to continue purchasing new products.
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Myrk- on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 12:53pm
Posted
2004-03-18 12:53pm
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Wait a sec, US own that crappy piece of land next to canada?! I thought Canada owned all that ex-Russian land (they bought it ages ago for like $1,000,000 didn't they?)
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by gimpinthesink on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 1:00pm
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No the us has had it for 100 odd years
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Gwil on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 1:16pm
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Didnt the Soviet Union sell Alaska to the USA for like $50 million or something?
It was USSR to USA though... Canada keep themselves to themselves generally :razz:
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by gimpinthesink on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 1:20pm
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I dont think it was the bolchviks that sold it cos I think that the US got it neer the end of the 19th centuray
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Orpheus on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 1:21pm
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the USA got alaska from russia. for pocket change, something like 6 cents an acre :rolleyes:
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Cash Car Star on
Thu Mar 18th 2004 at 10:47pm
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Seward's Folly, or Steward's, something like that. It came out cheaper than the Gadsen Pruchase; who knows why we spent so much on just a small portion of new mexico and arizona.
In the video games/car comparison - I don't think that programmers are intentionally creating inferior engines to sell more video games. In fact, it runs on a very fast cycle of obsolescence where the old technology is constantly being surpassed, thus prompting gamers to purchase new games. On the other hand, very few significant improvements have occured on car engines within the past twenty years to make them more fuel efficient or resistant to wear and tear so that they last longer - completely the opposite problem with very little obsolescence happening at all. In fact, due to the rise of SUV's, overall gas mileage for the entire US-purchased automobile fleet has been on the decline since 1987 (I did a report on this two weeks ago, the date is right).
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Fri Mar 19th 2004 at 8:54am
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On fusion: <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>
1. I think it is much further off as a commercial power source than 15 years. Yes ITER is a big step in the right direction, and they do expect it to exceed the break-even point, but I don't think it is considered to be a viable design. it is still just a research prototype.<o:p></o:p>
2. There is absolutely no potential as far as I know for seriously destructive accidents with fusion plants. the amount of hydrogen being fused at any one time is far to little for a runaway reaction, and if containment failed, all that would happen is that parts of the reaction chamber would be vaporized by the escaping plasma. I'm pretty sure the fusion would cease almost instantly. This is in contrast with a fission plant where if the control system fails (impossible, or nearly so in an American design) the fuel can run away in a chain reaction.<o:p></o:p>
Even if there was potential for an explosion A complete failure of one of these plants would be nowhere near as destructive as a small thermonuclear weapon in any case, and last time I checked, all those tests in the 50s and 60s did nothing more than vaporize a few islands and spread fallout over New Mexico and Nevada.... we still have an atmosphere.<o:p></o:p>
<o:p></o:p>
On Fuel Cells:<o:p></o:p>
Basic thermodynamics: cars cannot use water for "fuel" there is no chemical energy to be had. You can electrolyze water and use the resulting hydrogen as fuel, however, this VERY inefficient process. People have been working for years to obtain efficient catalysts for this process and so far have met with only failure. However, even if this was efficient, you still have to get the energy from somewhere. You cannot get out more energy than you put in? there is nothing magic about fuel cells. Think of them as batteries which have a continuous flow of the required chemicals.<o:p></o:p>
The main question for fuel cells becomes where do you get the fuel? If you reform petroleum to produce hydrogen or methanol they are no better than the systems we already have. They produce just as much CO2, although I suppose you might cut down on NOX emissions.<o:p></o:p>
The only sensible solution is to produce the fuel from biological sources. if the fuel is made form corn or some such source, then any CO2 we put into the atmosphere is then taken out again by the plants which produce the fuel. this is sort of an ideal system, however Fuel Cell technology simply has not reached the point where they are viable for mass power production. The place you will see them first is as replacements for batteries. won?t it be fantastic when your laptop has essentially unlimited run time? Toshiba is supposed to introduce fuel cell powered models sometime next year :smile:
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by DesPlesda on
Fri Mar 19th 2004 at 9:45am
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A fuel cell for use as a battery replacement would be fantastic. The only question is reusability - would a fuel cell, like lithium-ion cells, suffer from a form of memory effect?
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Fri Mar 19th 2004 at 3:37pm
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The most dangerous waste fusion produces is tritium (H-3) which has a half-life of 12.3 years and can be used in further fusion. In addition tritium is a comercialy valueable substance in and of itself and decays into a stable isotope of helium, so even if you just had to store the stuff, it would become completely harmless within 120 years.
Fission plants on the other hand tend to produce long-lived high-level waste such as Pu-239 which has a halflife of 24,110 years. at this rate of decay you would need to store the stuff for ~240,000 years! an impossible feat for todays engineering practices.
If most radioactive waste from fission decayed within 100 years, it would be a nearly perfect energy source! that is an incredibly short period of time. Hence, Fusion is a perfect energy source from every point of view.
1. limitless fuel
2. zero polution
3. huge ammounts of energy per unit fuel
In fact, you would only need 437 metric tons of duterium to meet the worlds energy demand for a year.... that is absulutly awsome!
edit/
Sorry for the attitude about fuel cells Crono. I have the sense that the general public has a terribly unrealisitc impression of how they work and what they are capable of. That little diatribe wasn't really directed at you.
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by KungFuSquirrel on
Fri Mar 19th 2004 at 4:00pm
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What I really love is the paranoia about fuel cells induced by the Hindenburg. "OMG my car will explode!!!"
Damn the humanity anyway, it's not the same method of using hydrogen! We don't need to float our cars around :biggrin: though a helium filled car would make those long rides a joyous time...
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Fri Mar 19th 2004 at 4:08pm
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Yes, and we don't coat our cars with rocket fuel the way the hindenberg was...
Re: Snarkpit's geographics
Posted by KungFuSquirrel on
Fri Mar 19th 2004 at 4:11pm
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Minor detail. We should, really. That'd make it go fast, right...? :biggrin: