Not neccessarily.... fuel/air mixture ratios are all electronically controlled. And are tuned based on inputs recieved from other sensors in a vehicle. So there is no guarentee it would be the same amounts of fuel and air still going in... if the engine were inherently that much more efficient in producing power vs fuel spent then the electronics should scale fuel/air ratios down a bit to account.
The real question in my mind is how does "hardening" metals increase efficiency. There is certainly truth to the concept of using cryogenics to make better metals... but I'm not sure how I'd see that transforming into gas mileage. I mean wouldn't we be using all steel engines if there were solid truth to that? But instead the most gas efficient vehicles have engines made out of aluminum as do most cars today.
What they need is to put it together with other things... picture this.
1. The watch - provides processing power, onboard temp and barometer sensors, tracks rate of movement, heartbeat, glucose level, body temperature, time till next urination, time, date, GPS receiver, wireless transmitter, various apps.
2. Prescription Glasses - Has onboard camera, with either right or left or both lenses acting as the monitor, electronic tinting, vga screen 1024x768, night vision, zoom, targeting mode, forward looking radar, laser sighting, microphone.
3. Wallet - Contains "floppy" zip drive(or a jaz drive if you wear a purse), small "Palm" like screen, a small atm/printer(once again floppy), so you won't need ATM no more, small magnetic strip(to replace the atm/credit card), a more cellular like wireless transmitter, and a thumb print reader.
4. Shows - Contain electricity generators. Water cooled.
5. Earpiece - for listening
6. Certified TechnoWarrior stamp on your butt.
Or maybe even just a
/dev/null ?
cat light >
Not neccessarily.... fuel/air mixture ratios are all electronically controlled. And are tuned based on inputs recieved from other sensors in a vehicle. So there is no guarentee it would be the same amounts of fuel and air still going in... if the engine were inherently that much more efficient in producing power vs fuel spent then the electronics should scale fuel/air ratios down a bit to account.
The real question in my mind is how does "hardening" metals increase efficiency. There is certainly truth to the concept of using cryogenics to make better metals... but I'm not sure how I'd see that transforming into gas mileage. I mean wouldn't we be using all steel engines if there were solid truth to that? But instead the most gas efficient vehicles have engines made out of aluminum as do most cars today.
Please direct me to the list of truly secured software.....
What they need is to put it together with other things... picture this. 1. The watch - provides processing power, onboard temp and barometer sensors, tracks rate of movement, heartbeat, glucose level, body temperature, time till next urination, time, date, GPS receiver, wireless transmitter, various apps. 2. Prescription Glasses - Has onboard camera, with either right or left or both lenses acting as the monitor, electronic tinting, vga screen 1024x768, night vision, zoom, targeting mode, forward looking radar, laser sighting, microphone. 3. Wallet - Contains "floppy" zip drive(or a jaz drive if you wear a purse), small "Palm" like screen, a small atm/printer(once again floppy), so you won't need ATM no more, small magnetic strip(to replace the atm/credit card), a more cellular like wireless transmitter, and a thumb print reader. 4. Shows - Contain electricity generators. Water cooled. 5. Earpiece - for listening 6. Certified TechnoWarrior stamp on your butt.