I've always liked the idea of seeding the ocean to create enormous blooms of plankton (both the animal and plant kind). If we widened the base of that enormous food chain a lot of carbon could be both sequestered in their dead tiny bodies at the bottom of the sea OR in a new wave of fish. Considering how much we fish globally if we artifically increased the supply (instead of wank-ass fish farming) we could be solving a few problems with one concerted effort. Let's start by trying to make the ocean's deadzones...undead.
The dragon will be in service much longer than the ISS. SpaceX is playing the long game.
I'm also excited to see a future where returning astronauts no longer have to be plucked out of the ocean (old school capsules) or have a really hard landing in a cornfield (soyuz). The super-draco engines on the dragon v2 are designed to be used as retro-rockets so the capsule could land anywhere (softly!) with pinpoint accuracy. Of course, it still can drop into the ocean safely if the engines aren't nominal.
Just look at voice recognition's progress within the last two years alone. It had reached a plateau of about 80% accuracy, even when speaking slowly, clearly, and without regional accent. Now? I can mutter drunkenly and it'll get it more often than not. I can say very local business words like Phydeaux (upscale pet store) and get the spelling right!
It's called machine learning. The more experience/scenarios etc these self driving cars get, the better they'll be.
I'd say I'm as confident as you (but in the opposite direction) that within 10 years computers will out-drive humans in all scenarios. It won't even be close. 360 degree sub-millisecond informational input versus our meatbag eyes and reflexes??
The cost of fuel is also a large part of his equation. Which could decrease exponentially with fusion/fission derived hydrocarbons on a SF level mass scale. Once the energy is there plentiful and cheap, a lot of economic arguments start getting changed.
What's happened now (fingers crossed for spacex), is that the rocket tech has suddenly become more reusable and puts it closer to on-par with the hardware of airplanes. I could see at the beginning getting a ballistic flight from NY to Sidney in like 2 hours. The dragon capsule lands with retro-rockets on a concrete tarmac.
Look to advertising to be on the cutting edge of what you're describing. They are the best financed and have the most to gain from such deep manipulative techniques.
I'm not disagreeing with your premise at all. Not even with the original shaky evidence of the models. To some degree the more dramatic statements were more from the media reporting than the research itself. Or a university press release.
For every new bit of information we get the models get better. To assume they're perfect to start is silly. To assume that if it slightly wrong it must be completely thrown out is also silly. Incremental improvements!
I offer no evidence to my claims. I don't even claim them as claims, just idle speculation. Personally, I don't care who or what did it or why it's going to happen, but that it will eventually happen.
Could it be possible that the lack of increases in droughts, hurricanes, etc are due to an unforseen buffering effect (or underestimated buffering capacity)? Once the buffer is overwhelmed a whole cascade of 'bad things' could happen in relatively quick succession.
Exactly! I was going to say something along these lines. I truly think it's less about sound quality and more about the experience and tangibility of the records. In this digital age tangible products have a much higher value. You can have 30k mp3s and not really feel a huge attachment to them (and they can all disappear in the blink of an eye). The album art is also actually visible (compared to CD cases). The social experience of dropping the needle and hanging out with friends is also a lot of fun. A stack of records to go through on a Friday evening is great.
Record stores are also a great place to find new music as many have listening stations where you can listen to the actual record you intend to buy. None of that kiosk 30 sec sample of the middle of the song garbage.
I'm holding out for some GM firefly butts to be inserted into my arm and hooked into my nervous system. When I flex or get threatened it'll light up! Maybe electric eel glands in my hands too for some extra oomph?
As much as I love fission, it is FAR away from being an solved problem from an engineering standpoint.
There are some serious material science problems that still need to be addressed for any of the fast/thorium reactors to be ready for production. All the current coolant technologies have serious downsides. Sodium doesn't play nice with water or air, and liquid lead doesn't play nice with pretty much anything.
I think these problems could be solved if we approached the problem as a whole as another Manhattan project.
I always like to think that any suitably advanced civilization eventually develops space-drives that can reach appreciable percentages of the speed of light. The time dilation effects would make traversing the galaxy relatively(heh) reasonable. The only hitch is that relative to all other lifeforms not moving at a such a speed would blink in and out of existence in the time it would take them to burp. Our current sliver of space-time is sooo tiny if you think about it like this.
What if there was a whole...dare I say...confederation of relativistic societies? In order to join you have to catch up. Otherwise you'll be gone in a blink.
Explain your alternative ideology, please.
What about corporations as large/powerful as states? Are they good or bad?
--
Remember, when feeding trolls, be sure to keep your hand flat.
"Our world has survived through periods of extreme levels of CO"
No shit sherlock...will WE survive through that period is the real question.
Your last line though is pretty reasonable.
~
Remember, when feeding the trolls remember to hold your hand flat.
Yet more encouraging news for those of use who ride the donor cycles!
I also do full gear all the time though...so I'm not exactly dumb (relatively) about it.
In a slightly morbid way I kinda look forward to becoming eligible for the front lines of this cyborg future.
I thought it was algae that did that when the bloom died the bacteria population explodes and consumes all the oxygen.
I've always liked the idea of seeding the ocean to create enormous blooms of plankton (both the animal and plant kind). If we widened the base of that enormous food chain a lot of carbon could be both sequestered in their dead tiny bodies at the bottom of the sea OR in a new wave of fish. Considering how much we fish globally if we artifically increased the supply (instead of wank-ass fish farming) we could be solving a few problems with one concerted effort. Let's start by trying to make the ocean's deadzones...undead.
I mean, what could possibly go wrong?
The dragon will be in service much longer than the ISS. SpaceX is playing the long game.
I'm also excited to see a future where returning astronauts no longer have to be plucked out of the ocean (old school capsules) or have a really hard landing in a cornfield (soyuz). The super-draco engines on the dragon v2 are designed to be used as retro-rockets so the capsule could land anywhere (softly!) with pinpoint accuracy. Of course, it still can drop into the ocean safely if the engines aren't nominal.
Man will you be surprised in 3-5 years.
Just look at voice recognition's progress within the last two years alone. It had reached a plateau of about 80% accuracy, even when speaking slowly, clearly, and without regional accent. Now? I can mutter drunkenly and it'll get it more often than not. I can say very local business words like Phydeaux (upscale pet store) and get the spelling right!
It's called machine learning. The more experience/scenarios etc these self driving cars get, the better they'll be.
I'd say I'm as confident as you (but in the opposite direction) that within 10 years computers will out-drive humans in all scenarios. It won't even be close. 360 degree sub-millisecond informational input versus our meatbag eyes and reflexes??
I'm with you!
The cost of fuel is also a large part of his equation. Which could decrease exponentially with fusion/fission derived hydrocarbons on a SF level mass scale. Once the energy is there plentiful and cheap, a lot of economic arguments start getting changed.
What's happened now (fingers crossed for spacex), is that the rocket tech has suddenly become more reusable and puts it closer to on-par with the hardware of airplanes. I could see at the beginning getting a ballistic flight from NY to Sidney in like 2 hours. The dragon capsule lands with retro-rockets on a concrete tarmac.
That would be one hell of a ride!
All the more reason to let robots/A.I. handle government.
Look to advertising to be on the cutting edge of what you're describing. They are the best financed and have the most to gain from such deep manipulative techniques.
"We won't really be immortal, as humans will still die from accidents "
I call that 'Golden Sonic' immortality.
I'm not disagreeing with your premise at all. Not even with the original shaky evidence of the models. To some degree the more dramatic statements were more from the media reporting than the research itself. Or a university press release.
For every new bit of information we get the models get better. To assume they're perfect to start is silly. To assume that if it slightly wrong it must be completely thrown out is also silly. Incremental improvements!
I offer no evidence to my claims. I don't even claim them as claims, just idle speculation. Personally, I don't care who or what did it or why it's going to happen, but that it will eventually happen.
Could it be possible that the lack of increases in droughts, hurricanes, etc are due to an unforseen buffering effect (or underestimated buffering capacity)? Once the buffer is overwhelmed a whole cascade of 'bad things' could happen in relatively quick succession.
Exactly! I was going to say something along these lines. I truly think it's less about sound quality and more about the experience and tangibility of the records. In this digital age tangible products have a much higher value. You can have 30k mp3s and not really feel a huge attachment to them (and they can all disappear in the blink of an eye). The album art is also actually visible (compared to CD cases). The social experience of dropping the needle and hanging out with friends is also a lot of fun. A stack of records to go through on a Friday evening is great.
Record stores are also a great place to find new music as many have listening stations where you can listen to the actual record you intend to buy. None of that kiosk 30 sec sample of the middle of the song garbage.
I have a windows 7 three monitor setup with one of them in portrait mode and the other two in landscape. Maybe it's a graphics card issue?
Good point. Can you please translate into a car analogy though?
I mistakenly posted in a previous /. story that .ee worked. It does not.
I hope TPB does come back though. It's inability to stay down for long gives me hope wrt the freedom of the internet.
I take that back...looks sketch...
http://thepiratebay.ee/
Works for me!
aka Lovejoy's Law
I'm holding out for some GM firefly butts to be inserted into my arm and hooked into my nervous system. When I flex or get threatened it'll light up! Maybe electric eel glands in my hands too for some extra oomph?
I look forward to our genetic engineering future.
haha, you think Clinton is extreme left wing? You need to recalibrate, she's moderate right wing if anything!
As much as I love fission, it is FAR away from being an solved problem from an engineering standpoint.
There are some serious material science problems that still need to be addressed for any of the fast/thorium reactors to be ready for production. All the current coolant technologies have serious downsides. Sodium doesn't play nice with water or air, and liquid lead doesn't play nice with pretty much anything.
I think these problems could be solved if we approached the problem as a whole as another Manhattan project.
I'm sure a large reason for this roll-out is the insane amount of money these ambulances can charge. This healthcare system rules! USA USA USA /sarcasm
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12...
I always like to think that any suitably advanced civilization eventually develops space-drives that can reach appreciable percentages of the speed of light. The time dilation effects would make traversing the galaxy relatively(heh) reasonable. The only hitch is that relative to all other lifeforms not moving at a such a speed would blink in and out of existence in the time it would take them to burp. Our current sliver of space-time is sooo tiny if you think about it like this.
What if there was a whole...dare I say...confederation of relativistic societies? In order to join you have to catch up. Otherwise you'll be gone in a blink.