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Irish Company Claims Free Energy

raghus writes "An Irish company has thrown down the gauntlet to the worldwide scientific community to test a technology it has developed that it claims produces free energy. The company, Steorn, says its discovery is based on the interaction of magnetic fields and allows the production of clean, free and constant energy — a concept that challenges one of the basic rules of physics." I can't wait until I can use this free energy to power my flying car and heat my aquarium of mermaids.

98 of 1,125 comments (clear)

  1. You can tell something about these people by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They talk in circles and can't provide any definite explanations as to how something like this would work.

    About 7 years ago I worked with a fellow who absolutely was buying into some black box he would just plug things into and it would harvest energy from the earth's magnetic field. Sounds about the same thing. If there was enough density of magnetic fields to run a toaster, odds are you'd be suffering some serious and potentially fatal side effects.

    "What we have developed is a way to construct magnetic fields so that when you travel round the magnetic fields, starting and stopping at the same position, you have gained energy," McCarthy said.

    Moving around in circles to gather energy, what a neat idea! Um, where do we get the energy to run around in circles? Sounds like that net forces thing, the sum of all forces acting upon my car at the moment are zero, but if I could just remove those coming from one direction, it should move in that direction, right? Hey, how about something that runs on gravity, since there's an unending supply of that, eh?

    I'm also of the opinion if we started using something which was naturally in abundance, like earth's magnetic fields, it would cumulatively and ultimately affect something we'd regret later.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:You can tell something about these people by snowgirl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "What we have developed is a way to construct magnetic fields so that when you travel round the magnetic fields, starting and stopping at the same position, you have gained energy," McCarthy said.

      I have to agree with you here. To me it just sounds like electromagnetic induction. Move a wire through a magnetic field, and boom! It makes electricity.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    2. Re:You can tell something about these people by nizo · · Score: 4, Insightful
      From this article:



      In order for such a revolutionary technology to have the public support needed for it to become used widely, McCarthy says that confirmation from the academic community will be crucial. "That is our focus at this point," he said.

      McCarthy declined to specify how many prototypes they have built, or how long they have run, how much power they produce, and other details of the design.

      All of this documentation will be presented in full to the jury of twelve scientists that are soon to be selected to analyze the technology. As of the time of this writing, 1,300 people have expressed interest in serving on the jury of scientists; and 15,516 people have signed up to be notified of the results.

      The selection of the jury will screen out anyone who has past involvement or other indications that might be construed as showing support of the technology in some form or other. "We want cynics," said McCarthy.

      "We are not seeking validation from the court of public opinion. What we need is validation from the academic world," he said. Once that has been achieved, then the public can know.


      It really sounds to me like they want outside verification, and are willing to pay for it themselves. Shouldn't we let that take place before we fry them in oil?

    3. Re:You can tell something about these people by uradu · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ah, magnets...the never-ending source of fascination for crackpots in need of remedial highschool science. If you just arrange them in the right configuration that no-one before has tried, align them just right... After all, you can push pins and stuff around with a magnet THROUGH a table top, there has GOT to be magic in there.

    4. Re:You can tell something about these people by LurkerXXX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No. It sounds like they are looking to do some advertising, so they can rope in some not-too-smart-but-greedy venture captial investors.

    5. Re:You can tell something about these people by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 5, Informative

      The process (assuming it work as described based on their publicised info) appears to have a simple energy source, magnetic fields.

      Of course, any first year electronics or physics student should be able to tell you that when you pull/use energy from a magnetic field, it still comes from somewhere else rather than being created from nothingness.

      In an electrical transformer, that source is the current passing through the wires and creating the magnetic field. In a rare earth magnet, the energy has been used to properly line up the atomic structure and gradually demagnitizes the source as it's used up. In the case of the very weak Earth's magnetic field, the main source is the Earth's rotation and the magnetic contents that are thus flowing/rotating inside. The Earth's magnetic field has decayed about 10-15% over the last 150 years, so I wouldn't count on that as a long-term source of free energy anyway.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    6. Re:You can tell something about these people by darkmeridian · · Score: 4, Funny

      Technically, the company is correct. Generators produce electricity by moving metal through a magnetic field. The trick is making the metal move through the magnetic field.

      Personally, I'm going to use my perpetual motion device to run my Pentium IV Extreme computer powered by Windows Vista while I play Duke Nukem Forever on the Phantom Labs produced graphics card.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    7. Re:You can tell something about these people by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 5, Funny

      "I'm also of the opinion if we started using something which was naturally in abundance, like earth's magnetic fields, it would cumulatively and ultimately affect something we'd regret later."

      If we were to start tapping into the magnetic field at such a scale it would devastate the field of magnotherapy. When traditional medicine fails you, where will you turn if the magnetic fields were practically gone due excessive exploitation?

      --
      - These characters were randomly selected.
    8. Re:You can tell something about these people by ArsonSmith · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Don't worry, we're going to give the energy away for free but we'll make up for it in volume."

      They would have to be even more "not-too-smart" then the average greedy venture capitalist investor.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    9. Re:You can tell something about these people by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Funny

      You say it's not magic, but it is magic. Ordinary devices like electronics have smoke in them. If you let the smoke out of a CPU, for example, it no longer works. In all of my experiments with magnets I have not been able to detect smoke of any kind! NO SMOKE! It's magic.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    10. Re:You can tell something about these people by thatguywhoiam · · Score: 5, Funny
      I've heard stories about made-up claims of free energy all the way back in middle school. Looks like they didn't pan out. I have little confidence in more of the same. And yet, I'll bet a conspiracy theorist will come along and blame the failure of this magical technology on big oil hitmen.

      You take a sensible approach. After all, the odds that this is real are astronomically low. But if it actually is some new miracle technology, existing energy companies will certainly try to destroy it. So you are covered either way.

      --
      If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
    11. Re:You can tell something about these people by IAmTheDave · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ya know, our (yours, mine, /. in general) skepticism is unquestionably well placed - free energy would collapse some economies, invigorate others, bring about new business opportunities, advance the living conditions of people stuck in third world countries - the actual ramifications are impossible to really get a grasp on.

      My thoughts are twofold:

      1) Man, if it's true, how awesome would that BE?! I'm the kind of person that - as skeptical as I am - always holds out hope for discoveries like this. There is more clean energy in this universe than we'll ever need - harvesting it is the difficulty. If someone discovered a way to do it - man alive that'd be sweet.

      2) If it's true, someone will patent it and it won't be free - on the contrary, it will still somehow cost me as much as energy does now, as greed seems to outpace progress these days.

      Since it's probably BS, I don't really have to worry about either one of those two thoughts, but seriously - #1 - how cool would that BE??

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    12. Re:You can tell something about these people by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 5, Funny

      Shouldn't we let that take place before we fry them in oil?

      That depends. How much energy is required to fry them in oil? Is this energy free?

      --
      "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
    13. Re:You can tell something about these people by susano_otter · · Score: 3, Funny

      Actually, people think of more efficient ways to do work all the time, with the result being that things are constantly getting cheaper, and the savings are being passed on to you, because of human greed.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    14. Re:You can tell something about these people by ConsumerOfMany · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think its great that everyone thinks Venture Capitalists are complete idiots. If thats true then where did they get the money to invest in the first place? If venture capital never had any returns, then venture capitalist would not exist.

    15. Re:You can tell something about these people by hcdejong · · Score: 4, Funny

      In all of my experiments with magnets I have not been able to detect smoke of any kind!

      You must have not been applying enough power.

    16. Re:You can tell something about these people by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 5, Funny

      From the article:

      "For the first six months that we looked at it we literally didn't believe it ourselves. Over the last three years it had been rigorously tested in our own laboratories, in independent laboratories and so on," he said.

      Roughly translated:

      We can't *believe* how fscking stupid our neighbors are...we ran a power cord from their external outlet 3 years ago, and they haven't even noticed!

      Dude....free energy!


      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    17. Re:You can tell something about these people by snowgirl · · Score: 4, Funny

      Vacuum energy comes close enough to being. Now if only we could figure out how to harness it.

      I actually make very effective use of vacuum energy while I'm vacuuming my carpet...

      OH, you mean that other vacuum...

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    18. Re:You can tell something about these people by Ironsides · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's believed to be due to an upcoming polar switch (North and South switch polarities). It's nothing new, it's happened many times in the past.
      National Geographic
      NG#2
      CNN
      Space.com
      New Scientist

      Oh yeah, magnetic north (and probable south as well) is moving at an accelerating rate. The Magnetic North Pole is leaving Canada on it's way to Siberia.
      CNN

      Enough sources for ya?

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    19. Re:You can tell something about these people by AugstWest · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm sorry, but did you sleep through the 1990s?

    20. Re:You can tell something about these people by back_pages · · Score: 5, Informative
      2) If it's true, someone will patent it and it won't be free - on the contrary, it will still somehow cost me as much as energy does now, as greed seems to outpace progress these days.


      If "it" is a natural phenomena, it is not subject to patent in the United States. Manual of Patent Examination Procedure - Section 2106 If "it" is a machine that converts a natural phenomena into traditional energy like electricity, then that machine could be patented but nothing stops you from developing improvements to it or an entirely different machine. Regardless, the patent for that machine would expire 20 years from its filing date and would then become public domain.

      If you have a computer system on your desk, there are probably at least 100 different patented products on your desk. That hasn't barred you from owning and enjoying the technology, however. There would be an incredible demand for "free" energy, and therefore market forces would provide ample incentive for competing scientists to develop non-patented devices to harness that energy. Sure, there might be some nasty legal battles, but in the end the original inventor will be able to patent at best what he has contributed to the technology.

    21. Re:You can tell something about these people by antifoidulus · · Score: 4, Funny

      where do we get the energy to run around in circles?

      Gerbils dude. Lots and lots of gerbils.

    22. Re:You can tell something about these people by frisket · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I'm as skeptical as the next nerd, but it's still essential for respected scientists to conduct the tests, do the math, and come up with an answer, even if just to debunk it formally.

      Anything less is a negation of what science is supposed to be about, and reduces scientists to the level of the Holy Office of the Inquisition, condemning a theory without testing it.

    23. Re:You can tell something about these people by hackstraw · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think its great that everyone thinks Venture Capitalists are complete idiots. If thats true then where did they get the money to invest in the first place?

      Their father.

    24. Re:You can tell something about these people by Kadin2048 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If it's true, someone will patent it and it won't be free - on the contrary, it will still somehow cost me as much as energy does now, as greed seems to outpace progress these days.

      Right; because damned if human greed hasn't kept the price of those computer chips right up where they always have been, $60 per 1000 transistors [1], keeping all the profits for themselves. Corporate bastards.

      [1] Intel 8080 retailed for around $360 IIRC and had 6,000 transistors. http://www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/quickreffam.ht m#i486

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    25. Re:You can tell something about these people by Alan+Hicks · · Score: 4, Informative
      In modern society, the best and easiest way to acquire large sums of money is to inherit it.

      While inheriting wealth is certainly the easiest way to be rich, it isn't the "best" way as the vast majority of wealthy people did not inherit their money. From a quick google search I found this from globalpolicy.org.

      The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index rose 24% last year, while many overseas markets rose even more, accounting for much of the gains for the wealthy. In the U.S., the Bush tax cuts, which included a reduction in the top tax rate, as well as reductions in taxes on estates, capital gains and dividends, also helped bolster the fortunes of the fortunate. A 2002 study by Capgemini found that more than half of the high-net-worth individuals in the U.S. were "new money," or self-made millionaires. Inherited money is declining as a share of wealth in the U.S., according to the study, accounting for less than 20% of high-net-worth individuals in 2002.
      So 80+% of all millionaires in America are "new money".
      --
      Slackware, what else when it must be secure, stable, and easy?
    26. Re:You can tell something about these people by ConsumerOfMany · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm glad you were able to pull out such a specific rebuttal, but my point remains. The mere fact that venture capital money is still around means that it is pulling returns greater than its inputs, regardless of pets.com and other attention grabbing headlines shoved out by the media. Just because some lost money on dot.coms doesn't mean more made it on biotech and others...

    27. Re:You can tell something about these people by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...patent for that machine would expire 20 years from its filing date and would then become public domain

      Yeah, just like Disney's copyrights!

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    28. Re:You can tell something about these people by DerekLyons · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Validation in the academic world, free or even cheap power has never done well because it's not money. Since the 1900's there have literally been thousands of perpetual motion and free power devices. Who's to say that every single one is bunk,

      Who is to say? Anyone who paid attention to the their physics classes in High School.
       
      [snippage tinfoil hat ravings and handwaving nonsense.]
  2. don't think so... by professorhojo · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is ridiculous that anybody is taking this seriously. Look at the team bios or company history - they provide no information that lets you actually look into the history of the company or any individual's work history. Every single person was "at an Irish technology company" or "at a big 4 accounting firm", but never enough to actually do a Google search on them.

    However, they did leave some clues. If I look up the domain registration, the two addresses on the domain registration actually exist. One appears on a patent application from 6 years ago for credit card systems. The application was rejected for failing the "nonobvious" criteria and being too vague. This fits with their story of being a (apparently failed) technology company doing transactions.

    (The other address, by the way, is now the Gay HIV clinic in Dublin - I suspect that the CEO just used to work out of there, and it is now used for another purpose).

    So I'm with this either being a wacky publicity stunt. The names are too perfectly chosen so that nobody can actually research them, and the people look too much like actors...

    1. Re:don't think so... by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Seriously, could someone explain to me the slashdot editors' obsession with junk science, specifically perpetual motion and free energy machines, and the like? This is not news. This is not for nerds, except to laugh at. This certainly doesn't matter, since variations on this crap have come around every few months for millennia.

      This is for idiots.

    2. Re:don't think so... by Cheap+Imitation · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Free energy is the scientific community's equivalent to the "winning the lottery" dream. The odds against it actually happening (to you) are insanely long.

      But the payoff is so huge that the speculation is fun. How would our lives change? What would we do with it all? What COULD we do with it all?

      Sure, it'll probably never happen. But I'll read the articles for the same reason I occasionally buy a 1$ ticket. It's cheap admission for the chance to dream big for a little while.

    3. Re:don't think so... by Red+Flayer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      1) It's funny. Laugh.

      2) If we let it fester, you might never know how quickly an infection of belief growst. Look at ID.

      3) It gives everyone posting righteous indignance a sense of mental superiority that fuels the nerd ego-drive. That, my friend, is a source of 'free' energy.

      And, given your nick 'Mr. Underbridge,' perhaps your grumpiness is due to the fact that you've been out-trolled by the editors, a cut to your own ego-drive?

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  3. Something Very Fishy & Patent Info by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Informative
    I read about this many days ago and tried to register on their site as an academic tester. I never received log in information so I could not partake in reading their white papers. They had posted the challenge in the Economist and on their website, they claim three accomplishments which define their "free energy":
    1. The technology has a coefficient of performance greater than 100%.
    2. The operation of the technology (i.e. the creation of energy) is not derived from the degradation of its component parts.
    3. There is no identifiable environmental source of the energy (as might be witnessed by a cooling of ambient air temperature).
    I hope the coefficient is greater than 0.0001% over 100%. Although all their technology page says is that this alleged free energy solution has to do with magnets. Not much else.

    Furthermore, they claim they approached universities and educational institutions about validating their findings and recieved little or no support from them. Why wouldn't a university be eager to attach their name to it? Is it because of the patent?

    If you're interested in reading their patent, here is the application (pdf warning). If you just want to get the gist of it, visit the Pure Energy Systems Wiki complete with diagram. It looks like a way to block and unblock a strip holding magnets, thus creating magnetic flux around a piece of metal (driving the current I believe).
    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Something Very Fishy & Patent Info by jonnyelectronic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      From a quick shifty of that patent, it looks like it's based around the "If I just block the magnets, I create energy!". Just like the idea that one of the guys in my secondary school got excited about when he's invented a perpetual motion machine. If they are so confident, and having been spending the last 3 years on this project, why haven't they built a big one that outputs a reasonable amount of power, and powered something of a reasonable size. I expect they have been "tweaking" the design, and it's "just under the 100% mark", they just need to deal with some "inefficent" parts of the system. Or maybe they've invented unlimited free power.

  4. Big deal... by rthille · · Score: 5, Funny


    Years ago, I harnessed the energy from the monkeys flying out of my ass, and I haven't paid an electric bill since...

    --
    Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  5. Crackpots and Opportunists say Crazy Crap by Distinguished+Hero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Crackpots and Opportunists say Crazy Crap (perhaps in hopes of securing some cash investments); Film at 11 on You Tube. Why is this on Slashdot?

    --
    Uttering logically derived and empirically supported truths to the disciples of the orthodox establishment.
  6. check the site's forums by X_Bones · · Score: 5, Interesting

    more than a few people think that the whole site is part of another viral marketing campaign by Microsoft and Bungie, this time for Halo 3. Don't take it as gospel quite yet, but it would explain the total lack of engineering and scientific detail that a company of this nature should be showing to the world.

  7. Obligatory Simpson quote by adamy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Lisa, in this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics.

    --
    Open Source Identity Management: FreeIPA.org
  8. Good grief by jmorris42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is it now the policy of slashdot to give headline coverage to every crackpot perpetual motion machine? It might have been mildly amusing had it been filed under humor, but as news? Even the snarky wisecrack from the editor doesn't make up for the misfiling.

    But even as humor it should not have been posted since there was a similar one only a week or so ago and I really doubt anyone has a new joke to make about these assclowns that didn't get used then.

    Listen up you primitive screwheads at /., there is no "Free Energy", no Free lunch, no tooth fairy and there ain't ever going to be flying cars. (We will eventually solve the tech for a flying car but the liability is insoluble.)

    --
    Democrat delenda est
  9. Noether rules the day by Ckwop · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When Noether proved in 1918 that every conservation law must have a paired symmetry, physics was transformed for-ever. From then on whenever you saw a conserved quantity it implied there was a symmetry that could be seen in space-time.

    A lot of physics courses focus on the conserved quality and not the symmetry. Perhaps it's because the maths is a lot neater with conserved quantities than with symmetries. But I argue that the real understanding of the physics is to be had in making sense of the symmetries.

    Conservation of energy implies that the laws of physics are constant over time. This is why breaking the law of energy conservation is important. If even one pico-joule of energy is created from nothing in the universe, it destroys the constancy of physical law.

    The theory of electromagnetism has been verified to factor of 10**-20. I find it highly unlikely they've found something new in theory to allow this.

    The fact they've issued a press release rather than a research paper suggests they're cranks. Nothing to see here, move along.

    Simon

    1. Re:Noether rules the day by Surt · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If even one pico-joule of energy is created from nothing in the universe, it destroys the constancy of physical law.

      It's a good thing not even one pico-joule of energy has been created from nothing in the history of the universe, otherwise we might be here to appreciate this invention.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  10. Yeah, good luck! by Otter · · Score: 4, Funny
    I can't wait until I can use this free energy to power my flying car and heat my aquarium of mermaids.

    For the typical nerd, the outcomes in decreasing order of likelihood are:

    • Perpetual motion
    • A human female
    • A mermaid
    • Multiple mermaids
  11. NO NO Really!!! This Could Work!!! by ElboRuum · · Score: 5, Funny

    I already have the patent on several "free" energy sources, but they aren't strictly free. There's the Feline Buttered Bread Commutator for example. It operates by strapping a piece of buttered bread buttered face up to a cat's back, then dropping it from a height. Since a cat always lands on its feet and buttered bread always lands butter side down, the whole apparatus simply hovers and spins in midair. By adding a wire coil to the cat and by putting a strong magnet in close proximity, voila! Free energy. Of course, it's not that there isn't any loss. For example, the cat needs to be fed and the bread gets stale. The cat tends to vomit occasionally, so there is some clean up involved.

    1. Re:NO NO Really!!! This Could Work!!! by kirkb · · Score: 3, Funny

      Anyone got a dead cat?

      There might be one inside this box...

      --
      Slashdot: come for the pedantry, stay for the condescension.
  12. NOBODY PANIC by RyoShin · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've alerted the authorities, and the Science Police will soon arrest them for breaking the Laws of Thermodynamics.

  13. Coefficiency by Khyber · · Score: 3, Funny

    Most car AC units have an energy coefficiency of somewhere around 400% - for every one watt of power used four watts of heat are removed. So having greater than 100% isn't impossible.

    Actually, my physics teacher demonstrated hos to get energy out of magnets. We took a low-power LED bulb, two magnets, and a stabilizing platform to hold the magnets. We set the magnet's south poles facing each other, and wrapped the whole thing in ultra-thin cooper bell wire, which was atached to the LED and a diode. By simply pushing the magnets together the LED bulb would every now and then try to light up, it would flash but we could never keep the light on.

    Don't discount it. Remember it onyl takes a tiny weak spark to get massive amounts of power out of gasoline. It just depends on what form that 'spark' comes in, and what form of 'gasoline' you're using.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    1. Re:Coefficiency by Otto · · Score: 4, Informative

      Most car AC units have an energy coefficiency of somewhere around 400% - for every one watt of power used four watts of heat are removed. So having greater than 100% isn't impossible.

      No, AC units (heat pumps) are not more than 100% efficent. This sort of incorrect statement is a mistake of terminology.

      A heating unit has a "Coefficent of Performance" (aka COP), which describes the ratio of heat output to the energy input. A resistive heater (say, your toaster) has a COP of exactly 1. Every bit of power going into it comes out of it as heat.

      Your heat pump (a car AC unit is just a heat pump, pumping heat out of the car) has a COP of 3 or 4, thus leading to the "400% efficent" terminology. It's not 400% efficent, it's just 4 times better as producing heat (or rather, moving heat from one area to another) than a resistive heater would be. The reason is can do this is that moving heat around requires a lot less work than producing it does.

      My point is that the terminology is not comparable. This sort of thing is claiming to produce energy without doing work, or at least, to produce more energy than the amount of work actually put into it. Not really the same thing at all.

      --
      - Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  14. Top Irish Scientists by lbmouse · · Score: 4, Funny

    Maybe these guys are related to the scientists that lived in Ireland before Michael McCloud invented a new type of beverage in his basement.

  15. Fry them now by spun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Exactly. Make it look like they are actually serious. How much VC cash do you think they will rake in between now and the test? After the scientific community announces that this is bullshit, they will claim to need more money to "fix" the issues that the scientists raised. The VC fools, not wanting to admit to themselves that they have been swindled with one of the oldest cons in the book, will happily throw more money at them. They will continue with this cycle until enough people wise up and the lawsuits pour in, then they will disappear to the Cayman Islands.

    No, we need to bitch-slap these peckerwoods now, before they fleece too many dumb but wealt- Wait, you know, I think their ideas just might work. Send cash just in case.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Fry them now by Xerxes1729 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It would be nice to give everyone a fair hearing, but at a certain point, you have to just say, "Enough is enough." There are millions of crackpots all over the world who think that they're the next Einstein or Galileo or whoever. If you spend all your time fairly evaluating each of their claims, that's all you're going to be doing.

    2. Re:Fry them now by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, first round verification does not mean a world wide ad campaign to find a panel of scientists to verify this. There are proper channels. Look at their site for God's sake, this is a scam and that should be made painfully obvious to everyone. If it turns out it isn't, we can apologize later, after the world-wide fucking revolution this kind of technology would cause.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  16. Re:Is it marketing by XMyth · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, the site is still up from a Slashdotting...which is quite suspicious.

  17. Pshaw by srussell · · Score: 3, Funny
    I can't wait until I can use this free energy to power my flying car and heat my aquarium of mermaids.
    Duh! Everybody knows there's no such things as flying cars.

    --- SER

  18. They are a web marketting company! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    http://blogs.chron.com/sciguy/archives/2006/08/ste orn_and_free_1.html

    Quote: "Recall that Steorn is a former e-business company that saw its market vanish during the dot.com bust. It stands to reason that Steorn has re-tooled as a Web marketing company, and is using the "free energy" promotion as a platform to show future clients how it can leverage print advertising and a slick Web site to promote their products and ideas. If so, it's a pretty brilliant strategy."

    1. Pretend to invent an impossible technology that nobody will believe in.
    2. Promote the heck out of it on the internet.
    3. ???
    4. Profit.

    Well, the infamous missing step three is "Demonstrate to your web-marketting customers that you can market even such a preposterous idea as free energy successfully and they will flock to your doors".

  19. How you can tell this is bullshit... by Xerxes1729 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    ...without having to know anything about physics.

    During 2005 Steorn embarked on a process of independent validation and approached a wide selection of academic institutions. The vast majority of these institutions refused to even look at the technology, however several did. Those who were prepared to complete testing have all confirmed our claims; however none will publicly go on record.

    Please. Any physicist who figured out how this miraculous technology worked would be more revolutionary than Einstein or Newton. Showing how to violate conservation of energy would be an instant Nobel Prize. If their data really support this, why won't they go on record and become famous? They could win at least $2,000,000 (from the Nobel committee and from James Randi).

    "What we have developed is a way to construct magnetic fields so that when you travel round the magnetic fields, starting and stopping at the same position, you have gained energy," McCarthy said.

    To me, this sounds a lot like a generator. You know, rotating a wire loop through a magnetic field to generate an electic current. That's only been around for, what, 180 years?

  20. It may work, but here's the catch by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What Steom is actually claiming is quite possible, but uninteresting. Steorn is making three claims for its technology:

    1. The technology has a coefficient of performance greater than 100%.
    2. The operation of the technology (i.e. the creation of energy) is not derived from the degradation of its component parts.
    3. There is no identifiable environmental source of the energy (as might be witnessed by a cooling of ambient air temperature).

    The coefficient of performance is not efficiency. It's the reciprocal of efficiency. Most refrigerators and heat pumps have a coefficient of performance greater than 100%. 200-350% is typical. The coefficient of performance of an ideal heat pump, and the efficiency of an ideal heat engine, both working between the same temperature difference, will have a product of 1.

    So Steom can meet its claims with any off-the-shelf heat pump.

    Since they talk about "magnetics" so much, they're probably fooling around with something exotic like a magneto-caloric heat pump. This is a cute idea that's been around for a while, requires very strong magnetic fields, is sometimes used for cyrogenic cooling, and has been considered for auto air conditioners. There are buzzword friendly papers like "Preparation of Superferromagnetic Lanthanide Nanoparticulate Magnetic Refrigerants" on the subject. If they've made that work, they may have something with product potential. Maybe. But it's not "free energy".

  21. The Emperor's Clothes by snowgirl · · Score: 5, Funny

    The VC fools, not wanting to admit to themselves that they have been swindled with one of the oldest cons in the book, will happily throw more money at them.

    The magnets have no clothes! They're naked!!! *averts her eyes out of embarassment*

    --
    WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
  22. I have one and it works by Flying+pig · · Score: 5, Funny
    basically a set of permanent magnets that are rotated inside a wire framework. When the magnets complete one full revolution, no less than 6 rectified pulses are produced. Just by turning it at a few thousand RPM, I get 45 amps out at 14 volts - that's nearly a horsepower.

    What's more, it's easy to operate. I just have it on a bracket on my car engine and spin it up with a simple little rubber belt. Mind you, the Mk 1 has a few problems to iron out - I need to find a way of enabling it to keep running when the engine stops, at the moment it stops when the engine does and I think this might be the braking effect of the drive belt. Anyone got any ideas, or know where to get in touch with Mr. Bosch whose name is on the side of it?

    --
    Pining for the fjords
  23. You know a company's honest when..... by MrAnnoyanceToYou · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They're in the tech industry claiming revolutionary results and their, "About" page contains no less than five pictures of the CEO, three of the marketing manager, two each of their finance and operations managers, and NONE of their tech people.

  24. Re:Bah, how can it be so hard...? by jmorris42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > Just create the devices, let's say five of them. Take them with you. Plug in normal devices.
    > Let them run uninterrupted for weeks. Keep watch while they're running.

    Exactly. Hell, just demonstrate more usable energy come out of a black box than could be supplied by an equal volume/mass of gasoline + generator and you could attract investors as long as they could stuff a meter up it's bum and make sure it wasn't a radiothermic generator. Because even if it weren't 'free energy' there would still be a pretty good chance of it being something commercially viable, at least for some extreme segment of the market.

    But these perpetual motion con artists never do that, for fairly obvious reasons.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
  25. Now you're just talking crazy... by ElboRuum · · Score: 3, Funny

    Of course it works... Both the cat and the bread WANT to LAND... It's what bread and cats DO... It's like... their overarching purpose or something.

    While you're correct in theory, the problem is one of simple common sense.

    Have you ever tried strapping a piece of bread to a cats paws without

    a) cleaving the bread in twain?
    b) the cat licking the butter off the bread?
    or
    c) the cat scratching the shit out of you?

    If you have, well then you know what I'm talking about. Yessir.

  26. No they don't by Silent+sound · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It really sounds to me like they want outside verification, and are willing to pay for it themselves.

    Uh... no, if they wanted outside verification, they'd just plain go out and get some. This "jury" thing, on the other hand, is proof they DON'T want outside verification, because the whole thing is clearly designed specifically with the intent of presenting the appearance of allowing outside review of their technology while minimizing or eliminating the chance anyone will actually get a chance to see what it is. Seriously, they're inviting the world to come join a lottery in which the winners get to be told what their invention is after a long dramatic pause of unspecified length while public hype builds? And you think this is a form of public review?

    What this "jury" thing actually DOES do is allow them to handpick people to give a dog and pony show to, afterward leave the world still unsure what their supposed invention actually is, and beforehand allow them to generate a gigantic mailing list of people to pitch to later on. The most important element is that "jury" thing allows them to brag-- as they do in a huge box on the front page of their site, as they do in your blockquote-- about the large number of people who have signed up to be on the jury, thus presenting the impression of great public interest in their invention. It's a hype-generating trick, and you have fallen for it hook line and sinker.

    And did you not notice this piece of garbage on their website?

    During 2005 Steorn embarked on a process of independent validation and approached a wide selection of academic institutions. The vast majority of these institutions refused to even look at the technology, however several did. Those who were prepared to complete testing have all confirmed our claims; however none will publicly go on record.

    How can you possibly take seriously someone who writes a paragraph like that? If you look at archive.org you'll see that Steorn didn't even have an active web page in 2005.

    Shouldn't we let that take place before we fry them in oil?

    Shouldn't THEY let it (the academic verification) take place before they expect us to do anything OTHER than fry them in oil? Seriously, giving these people the time of day makes about as much sense as halting, before you delete your spam, to wonder whether maybe that e-mail really WAS sent by a Nigerian prince. The perpetual motion machine is after all one of the few scams that's been around even longer than the Spanish Prisoner.
    1. Re:No they don't by shess · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Uh... no, if they wanted outside verification, they'd just plain go out and get some.

      Or, you know, just hook up to the grid and start selling power. Admittedly, it would be easier to get tens of millions of dollars and jumpstart things, but ... you hook it up to the grid, and start generating revenue at a couple cents per kilowatthour, round the clock. Since it's "free", your revenue is operating profit, and should add up FAST. After a couple months you build another unit, and another, and pretty soon you've bootstrapped yourself into a real company.

      Well, unless your current prototype doesn't, you know, really provide free power. It will only do _that_ after you've built the $10M version, of course.

      -scott

  27. YAPM - Yet Another Perpetuum Mobile by drolli · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Science - since a long time is based on the principle that you publish your information, and no matter who the other person is - he or she can criticise you (peer review). And, since theories can only be falsified (or to put it in words of a physicist: you can explore in which limit the theory holds), you have to provide openly what you want to falsify. The measure of acceptance for a theory in physics is how many people had the chance to falsify it.

    What these guys so is the opposite. They do not publish any information WHAT they acually do. They do not go to a conference ans seek the open criticism. Thy do not go with this discovery to a peer-reviewd journal (this discovery would ensure the Nobel price to the scientist when it is accepted by the peers). No they want to set up a closed jury which they select. Are these people the advisory board or should they just convince the bank? If this circle is closed - may they report on a failure or are they, after beeing selected to be the "jury" only alowed to write positive things about the company. Do they have any kind of NDA? Wre they allowed to disassemble the technology? Will they have financial interests to say yes? Will they be taken to a brainwashing show in a nice hotel in the mountains or will they be sent to the lab? Open questions.....

    They claim that Energy conservation does not hold. This either means that the Noether does not hold (and it holds since it is a mathematical law) or that space is not time invariant. An they are right. If you are moving some parts in circles the space is not time invariant. Thats the principle of a generator. But the thesis that the overall energy conservation does not hold is ridiculous - if stated in that way.

    Perpetuum mobile exist for a long time and never any Joule of energy was won - still a lot of them are patented. That is because you can apply for a patent without proving that it works.

    BTW.: I find it embarassing that perpetuum mobiles are even mentioned on slashdot.

  28. Recreating their results by drgroove · · Score: 3, Funny

    requires drinking approx 6 pints of Guinness, at which point the core concepts of thermodynamics begin to blur a bit with the game of darts you're playing at the pub.

  29. Announced April 1st? by Zildy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    http://www.steorn.net/en/coverage.html

    Press Coverage
    Steorn Announce "Free Energy" Technology

    Irish company Steorn have announced a revoloutionary free energy technology. More
    The Guardian | 1 April 2006

    --
    Karma: Excer..ex...excellahhh...realll good (mostly affected by drinking not done in moderation)
    1. Re:Announced April 1st? by CyberLife · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good catch. The press release was issued on April Fool's Day. Did the submitter or anybody at Slashdot check to see whether this was intended as a gag?

  30. My personal free energy invention by popo · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... involves the opposing forces of:

    (a) Smoke, and
    (b) Some mirrors.

    Oh, and I'll also actually need (c) A curtain.

    Please send all VC monies to my address in the Caymans.

    Thank you.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  31. Why the hostility? by Forge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't see why the hostility.

    These guys claim to be doing exactly what a layman should do when he thinks he has discovered technology which challenges a fundamental scientific principle.

    Invite as many credible scientific experts as you can find to test it and report the results of such testing in peer reviewed scientific publications and on the Internet.

    Free energy is one of the biggest discoveries that people are seriously searching for. That and intelligent extraterrestrial life.

    And yes, apart from free energy there is the promise of virtually free energy. I.e. If you could create a small (as in portable) device that can separate Water molecules into the atomic components and burn the resulting Hydrogen for energy, cool. If the energy generated in that process is significantly greater (1.5X to 2X) than what is required to run the machine, viola. Virtually free energy.

    Bonus points if it runs on watter too impure to drink and still maintains a positive balance even with the purification process.

    So let them be. If it's bogus that will come out in the testing. This has happened before, without the invitations. If it's legit. Whoopee. countries like mine which produce mineral raw materials (bauxite) but import all our energy needs could see a an economic bump.

    A bump our politicians will work feverishly to squander, but that's a different story.

    --
    --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
    1. Re:Why the hostility? by flibuste · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is no such thing as "free" energy. What you get is what you've spent somewhere else. The FA says their thing generates "energy" (electricity) when you move something around a magnetic field. The energy carried by the electricity generated by magnetic induction (moving a conducting object within a magnetic field induces an electric field in your object) is the energy you spent moving the object around the magnetic field. No gain, no loss.

      What seems strange is that, without naming it, the FA says they've found something that seems to break the conservation of energy. I bet you scientific scrutinity will unveil a source unaccounted for in the first place.

    2. Re:Why the hostility? by The_Wilschon · · Score: 3, Funny
      viola. Virtually free energy.
      Ack! I hope we don't have to get free energy from violas! Those things sound awful!
      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    3. Re:Why the hostility? by Angostura · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Except the guys aren't doing that: They aren't inviting as many credible scientific experts as possible to test it - they are asking people to apply, from which they will select 12. What a layman should do (other than attempt to publish in a peer-reviewed journal) is supply the information needed for anyone to try to duplicate the machine and its results.

      Personally, I think this is more likely to be viral marketing for a game or something daft like that.

    4. Re:Why the hostility? by lbrandy · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you could create a small (as in portable) device that can separate Water molecules into the atomic components and burn the resulting Hydrogen for energy, cool.

      Except that we're destroying the planet's water supply to get it.

      Uhm, hello? My name is high school chemistry:
      2H2 + 02 = 2H20

      Please note that "burning" hydrogen doesn't "destroy" the water supply. It creates it.

    5. Re:Why the hostility? by DaoudaW · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't see why the hostility.

      What hostility? All I'm reading is a healthy dose of skepticism. Those of us who have been observing the world for awhile, I'm 50, get tired of discrediting hoaxes. This is a hoax and it's unconscionable to encourage scientists to interrupt research which could decrease our dependence on fossil fuels. This is nothing more than a publicity stunt to attract investors.

      According to TFA, (1)Steorn will pay for the research, (2)publish the research themselves and (3) develop products based on the research. Here's a translation: (1) We aren't applying for grant money. We know our "research" wouldn't stand up to the scrutiny required. (2) By publishing the research ourselves, we have complete control over it. (3) Okay, there won't be any products developed but if we can keep the research going for a couple of years, we'll get more victims^h^h^h^h^h^h^h investors.

      This is so predictable... when will Slashdot quit falling for these stories.

    6. Re:Why the hostility? by soft_guy · · Score: 5, Funny

      viola. Virtually free energy.
      Ack! I hope we don't have to get free energy from violas! Those things sound awful!


      Look, it depends on how its played. If I *have* to have someone play a viola in order to power my car to get to work, then perhaps I could chip in for lessons. Or else we could design a soundproof chamber for them to play in, possibly. You have to think creatively - that's what free energy from violas is all about.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    7. Re:Why the hostility? by malfunct · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem is that the laws of thermodynamics say that if you had to put energy into the system there will be a net loss of energy over the life of the process. Means in this case that you are guaranteed not to get back more energy than you used to split the water into oxygen and hydrogen and in all likelyhood you would get significantly less back in a harnessable form. That said the beauty of hydrogen as fuel is that you can take hard to capture energy and store it as easier to use hydrogen. For instance hydro electric power is plentiful (yes it has environmental issues but I'm just being hypothetical) but can't be used to power a car. If it instead powered a electrolysis plant and the hydrogen was used to power the car that is workable.

      Also for those who LOVE hydrogen as a fuel, remember, water vapor is a greenhouse gas.

      --

      "You can now flame me, I am full of love,"

    8. Re:Why the hostility? by Planesdragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem is that the laws of thermodynamics say that if you had to put energy into the system there will be a net loss of energy over the life of the process

      Which means exactly two things.

      1: Any "free energy" device is dependent on a system outside of its physical construction, just like hydropower or solar power is dependent on an outside source.

      2: If (1) isn't the case with this, and the claim is valid, then we need to revise either the laws of theormodynamics or how we apply them. They weren't written by God, they just happen to be the best description of that aspect of physics that we have.

    9. Re:Why the hostility? by shawnap · · Score: 3, Funny

      I like the sound of this new viola energy idea. I much prefer it to the current method of securing energy by implied threat of violins.

    10. Re:Why the hostility? by electroniceric · · Score: 3, Informative
      Also for those who LOVE hydrogen as a fuel, remember, water vapor is a greenhouse gas.
      ... with a 10 day or so residence time. I think your warning is legit, but for different reasons than the ones you cite. While I'm not holding out for a hydrogen economy any time soon (far too much infrastructure would need to be changed), I think the environmental problems you see would be mostly local - the relative humidity in places like Phoenix has already been driven up by the use of swamp coolers in people's house - waste steam replacing CO2 would take that to a whole new and likely detrimental level. But the variability of the hydrologic cycle and the short residence time make water a lot less powerful lever for pulling on the atmosphere than carbon, with it's much more stable cycle and long residence time. Confusion over this what allows people to make the bogus case that because water vapor is the most prevalent greenhouse gas, carbon-driven global warming can't possibly be anthropogenic.
    11. Re:Why the hostility? by It'sYerMam · · Score: 3, Informative

      Slashdot didn't "fall" for it; if you read the blurb at the top there is an equally skeptical slant. Slashdot simply reports the presence of certain unlikely claims.

      --
      im in ur .sig, writin ur memes.
    12. Re:Why the hostility? by eric76 · · Score: 4, Funny
      Free energy is one of the biggest discoveries that people are seriously searching for.

      What most of us are searching for are two women at once. With that, we can generate our own energy.

    13. Re:Why the hostility? by escher · · Score: 5, Funny

      Viola energy is just a repackaged form of string theory.

    14. Re:Why the hostility? by BlueCoder · · Score: 3, Informative

      You said it. From which they will select twelve, their 12. Not famous nobel winning scientists with something to lose. Hence their tech will be confirmed and enough people out of the people that register to recieve the results will be duped into developing the tech. Classic fud.

    15. Re:Why the hostility? by electroniceric · · Score: 4, Informative

      Two reasons:
      One is that it shows that water vapor is a feedback, not a forcing. If the supply wasn't constantly being refreshed it would fall out in a matter of weeks. That's basically saying it's a transient phenomenon representing an adjustment to equilibrium. This is unlike carbon, where if the supply wasn't constantly refreshed it would fall out on timescale far longer than those of present interest to humans (and as far as we know this essentially requires biota to sequester it, hence the Gaia hypothesis). This timescale distinction is frequently used to distinguish between forcing and response in a system (waves generally being considered response, and other changes forcing).

      The second is that on human-centric timescales there is a clearly a large-amplitude "sink" of water (i.e. lots of water leaves the atmosphere). The amplitude of the natural sink of carbon is much lower and therefore we can accumulate a meaningful amount more easily.

    16. Re:Why the hostility? by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Funny

      That "worthless" helium would be very useful to the mixed gas scuba diving market, which currently has to rely on the meager pickings of helium separated from natural gas.

      Man, you guys are missing the most plentiful supply of helium in the world. One word:

      Balloons.

  32. Sell the electricity. by shoolz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the device really worked, there would be no need for scientific verification. They'd just hook 50 of them up to the grid and make millions generating and selling electricity to the power companies.

    If it works, why does it need to be proven? Just go out and make billions with the device.

  33. Mod down odious twat by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm not going to follow in your footsteps by making any assumptions about your nationality, twerp, but here, for your edification...

    Thats a list of credits that includes Boyles Law, high speed photography, modern electrocardiogram, X-ray crystallography, Boolean algebra, the basis of all modern computer arithmetic, the induction coil and discovering the principle of the dynamo, leading a team that discovered a treatment for leprosy, 'Fitzgerald-Lorenz Contraction', 'Stokes Theorem' and Stokes-Navier Equations', the hypodermic needle, Kelvin, aaaaand naming the 'electron' and measured its charge.

    Here is your ass. You're welcome.

  34. FFVF Commutator by spun · · Score: 4, Funny

    My patented free energy device is the "Founding Fathers-Vanishing Freedoms" Commutator. Everyone knows that our Founding Fathers spin in their graves when our freedoms are taken away, so we just add a wire coil and a magnet. Every so often we have to reinstate our freedoms or the whole thing will cease to work. I'm currently investgating other ways to piss off the founding fathers so we won't have any down time.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  35. Not impossible by elgatozorbas · · Score: 3, Informative
    "What we have developed is a way to construct magnetic fields so that when you travel round the magnetic fields, starting and stopping at the same position, you have gained energy," McCarthy said.

    This is quite possible, since the magnetic field is not conservative (=the energy energy is only determined by the position). Example of a conservative field: gravitation, because if a mass goes up and down a hill it has a net energy gain of zero.

    Not so for movement in a magnetic field. You can compare this to a whirlpool: if you drop something in it will spin round and round faster and faster, so clearly its energy is not detemined by the position alone.n In fact this is more or less how electromotors/dynamos work (or could work).

    "The energy isn't being converted from any other source such as the energy within the magnet. It's literally created. Once the technology operates it provides a constant stream of clean energy,"

    This, however is bollocks: classical mechanics and electromagnetism form a pretty closed system. I'm not saying the conservation of energy principle cannot ever be broken (though this would be surprising) but in any way it can never be broken withing the classical system, i.e. using only mechanics and electromagnetism.

  36. And moreso as they published in THE ECONOMIST! by spoco2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yeah, heaven forbid that the challenge be published in a SCIENCE journal, even a POPULAR one like, oh, I don't know, Scientific American or Discover.

    "Steorn has decided to publish its challenge in The Economist because of the breadth of its readership. "We chose it over a purely scientific magazine simply because we want to make the general public aware that this process is about to commence and to generate public support, awareness, interest etc for what we are doing."

    Oh, because the Economist has a broad, far reaching readership, not limited to only those interested in MONEY... unlike the science magazines who have a readership that actually may be interested, and, heaven forbid, know something about energy.

    My god what a load of shite.

  37. Nice guy. NICE GUY?? by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 3, Informative

    That's all you have to say in his defense?
    Mod this down on principle, thanks.

    I'd like to see the field equations where they show you being able to end up with more potential energy than you started with. You know, a time-parameterized finite element analysis in three-dimensional space with suitable boundary conditions. They say they accomplished this on paper "in software".
    WELL THEY COULD JUST VERY WELL RELEASE THOSE RESULTS

    But no. No. They want to do a "demo" with a "jury".

    That's what magicians do in Vegas.

    Utter bullshit. MOD THIS DOWN.

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
  38. Wrong dream. by abb3w · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Free energy is the scientific community's equivalent to the "winning the lottery" dream.

    No. It's the equivalent to the "getting superpowers by being bitten by a radioactive spider" dream. Which is also cool, and great fun to hear about, and if it's going to be told well even qualifies as news for nerds... but doesn't deserve anything but ridicule when brought out in public.

    If they were serious, everyone they were telling about it would be forced to sign some serious blood-oath NDAs. They wouldn't leak this much until they had a small-scale pilot facility ready to run their lab for a while... or perhaps after they had set it up and been selling power to the utilities in the US for a few years. This looks like just another variant on lost treasure maps, forgotten gold mines, wildcat oil wells, and Florida "real" estate.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  39. bugs! by M0b1u5 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No, that's not correct. Scientists have recently discovered bacteria which shit Hydrogen. From memory they eat rubbish too - so they are busy trying to genetically modify these little fuckers to shit more hydrogen, and faster.

    Hell, with the right system, you'd pass your garbage through this system before taking it to a land fill, and the output would be fuel for fuel-cells - for Very Little Money (tm).

    The other nice thing about the bacteria is that they could be used in small scale devices: at home, to reduce reliance on a national grid, and even to send power out of the house when usage is low. This would assist the decentralisation of power generation which is abolsutely necessary to get out from underneath the giant power and oil companies which rule western democracies.

    *sigh*

    Dreams are free I suppose.

    --
    How many escape pods are there? "NONE,SIR!" You counted them? "TWICE, SIR!"
  40. Re:The energy *could* come from *somewhere*... by Glonoinha · · Score: 4, Funny

    They could hook up a big version of the device with some blades or something, let the wind push it around in order to move the different parts through the various magnetic fields - making a net positive return of energy...

    Naw, that would never work.

    --
    Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
  41. Prove or Profit by OverflowingBitBucket · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't know about you, but I'm thinking one of:

    - Prove it. Publish your results and get it peer reviewed. None of this nonsense "people won't even take my claims seriously" nonsense. There is probably a reason.
    - Profit from it. Free energy? Make a big bank of these things. Sell the power. There are plenty of buyers.

    And if neither of these things are happening, I'm thinking one of:

    - Crackpot.
    - Investor scam.

  42. Re:Not a scam, an ad campaign by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm not going to link up everything, especially since the page seems to be well and down just recently, but here's the plot thus far: company formerly specializing in tech promotions and stuff (not any actual development from what I've read) goes underground for a couple years and resurfaces on April 1 for a Guardian article as per their website. This article does not exist in the online archives of the Guardian. Other press releases are all listed as being announced today, even though they ostensibly happened since last Christmas -- this is one ramshackle website for a long-established tech company to be announcing a major technology on.

    There is a website SteornWatch.com that came up seemingly hours after the initial press, was linked to in the forums available on the steorn website (why do they have forums again?), and contains absolutely no useful information or any popular theories about steorn.com. Steornwatch has a disclaimer saying they are not affiliated with steorn, Citigate D.R., or any of their subsidiaries. Who is Citigate D.R.? You'd have no idea from the steorn.com website, but "Citigate Dewe Rogerson is the leading international consultancy specialising exclusively in financial and corporate communications. Its work for clients, ranging from Fortune 500 companies to start-ups, focuses on developing and building corporate brands and actively managing corporate reputations, with all stakeholder groups from capital markets to consumers." How does steornwatch.com know about this firm, and why would they put it in the disclaimer and not mention what it has to do with steorn on their steorn exposé page?

    Where are the actual people who came up with this? Did a group of marketing agents and publicists put their heads together and decide to create a free energy device someday? None of their "key players" is touted as being any kind of scientist or having come up with the machine itself.

    All of this smells fishy even if they had something that wasn't an incredibly controversial scientific breakthrough up for grabs. And with people probing the viral marketing a lot now, this kind of thing is bound to come up. Burden of proof is on them, and so far I'm not impressed.

  43. Read their patent application by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative
    Their patent application number is 20060066428, which you can look up at the USPTO site. The title is "Low energy magnetic actuator"

    "A low energy magnet actuator allows magnetic fields to be turned on and off using a small amount of energy. The magnetic actuator according to the invention generally includes a base suitable for the support of a plurality of magnets. An actuatable shield is positioned in relation to the plurality of magnets so that it effectively blocks the magnetic field when it is positioned over at least one of the magnets. The magnetic fields of the plurality of magnets interact in a manner that allows low energy actuation of the shield."

    It's just a thing for shielding a magnet with another piece of metal. The patent application does not claim an energy gain.

    I was really hoping they'd claimed an energy gain, which might trigger the USPTO's answer to perpetual motion machines. The USPTO has the right to ask for a working model, but they very seldom exercise it. Except for perpetual motion machines and antigravity machines.

    The application has been assigned to an examiner, and is in routine processing.