I was a network admin for a small law office, and I named all their computers after medical conditions. I named the senior partner's computer 'IMPOTENCE' hoping that someday he'd come to me and tell me that he was having problems with impotence and that he couldn't get it to come up.
Thermal depolymerization produces 3 things: 1) bio-crude, 2) carbon ash, and 3) biogas. According to the company's website, they use the ash as fertilizer on the feedstock, and the biogas powers the process.
It's not unique. There are quite a few other companies playing with thermal depolymerization right now.
I applied for a programming job there once. A couple of years later, a bunch of them jumped ship and wound up working for the company I work for now. I swear some of the guys over there make normal geeks look like hormone-enraged jocks.
I was a network admin for a small law office, and I named all their computers after medical conditions. I named the senior partner's computer 'IMPOTENCE' hoping that someday he'd come to me and tell me that he was having problems with impotence and that he couldn't get it to come up.
"High heat? Using what, free energy?
Thermal depolymerization produces 3 things: 1) bio-crude, 2) carbon ash, and 3) biogas. According to the company's website, they use the ash as fertilizer on the feedstock, and the biogas powers the process. It's not unique. There are quite a few other companies playing with thermal depolymerization right now.
Old news is old.
So that must be why you replied under the cloak of your anonymous cowardice.
I applied for a programming job there once. A couple of years later, a bunch of them jumped ship and wound up working for the company I work for now. I swear some of the guys over there make normal geeks look like hormone-enraged jocks.