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  1. Nope. Not only is geothermal location-specific but it's also quite diffuse.

    The Geysers, the geothermal plant that's been operated by Calpines - mostly - and first came on line in 1960. The whole system, which is distributed across 30 square miles and consists of 22 power plants only produces about 955 MW. Having your production facilities spread across a wide area adds a not-insignificant component of cost.

    That's a fair amount less than any single base load coal, natural gas or nuclear plant and they can be sited pretty much anywhere obviating the need for HVDC power lines.

  2. Oddly... on How Orkney Leads the Way For Sustainable Energy (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    ...the story doesn't mention anything about subsidies and/or tariffed rates. Is this that rarest of beasts, unique in all the world, a commercial wind turbine installation built for the purpose of generating a profit?

    Of course not! https://www.theguardian.com/en...

    "The Scottish government warned this week that if Westminster ruled out allowing onshore windfarms in the Western Isles, Orkney and Shetland to compete for subsidies, £2.5bn of investment would be put at risk."

    Anyone who's worried that wind and solar power will have their morally elevated "sustainability" marred by fiscal sustainability can relax.

    By the way, I wonder what wind and solar (and tidal in the case of the Orkenys) has done to the cost of electricity?

  3. Well heck, if it's a massive government report... on Massive Government Report Says Climate Is Warming and Humans Are the Cause (npr.org) · · Score: 0

    ...that says climate is warming and humans are the cause than that just cinches things up.

    We don't need no steenkin' scientific method when we've got massive government reports. Everybody had damned well better fall in line now because a massive government report means the science is settled and anyone who doesn't immediately begin nodding their heads in agreement is the proper target of invective and threats.

    People have to understand that in the twenty-first century science is no longer encumbered by the need for a demonstration of the validity of a hypothesis. If enough scientists decide a hypothesis is verified than by God, it's verified.

  4. And a world of new possibilties... on Startup Plans To Clean Up Cigarette Butts Using Crows (popularmechanics.com) · · Score: 1

    ...opens up for organized labor.

  5. The history of CARB has been to set unrealistic goals because they can than quietly retrench.

    What's changed, at least from the point of view of the irresponsible people who run CARB is that now there are real electric cars on the roads.

    Never mind they require huge subsidies to eke out a microscopic slice of the market, they're real so CARB can once again flex its muscles and hope not to end up with egg on its face.

    The irony is CARB may actually get what it wants although not via a mighty mandate. Technology and the free market will, as usual, deliver the solution that government's incapable of providing in the form of autonomous electric cabs.

  6. the Sonic Projector on Mystery of Sonic Weapon Attacks At US Embassy In Cuba Deepens (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    Cripes, it's not all that big a secret. Here you go - https://www.wired.com/2007/06/...

    What doesn't make much sense is why it's being done. Keeping the embassy staff on edge must look like a good idea to someone of significant power in Cuba because putting the requisite technology together isn't something that average Cuban could do.

  7. Re:How'd they get there? on The Oldest Known Human Remains In the Americas Have Been Found In a Mexican Cave (seeker.com) · · Score: 1

    Hunter-gatherers live at pretty low density so when the population of an area hits some critical mass the kids find out mom and dad would rather they get their own place. So you pack up your stone tools, shelters, clothes and preserved foods and go where you're pretty sure there aren't any other folks to dispute your desire to settle down.

    If you're in Siberia that means going north and east until you get to where the land curves due east and you end up in Alaska. Getting there's no problem because you use boats to move along shore just like mom and dad do. If Alaska's free of folks who got there ahead of you well, you just keep going. Unless you can kill them of course and take the land they owned.

  8. And this... on SpaceX Will Deliver The First Supercomputer To The ISS (hpe.com) · · Score: 1

    is how Skynet begins.

  9. What's not mentioned in the story... on First-Ever Dinosaur Brain Tissue Found Preserved In a Pebble (sciencemag.org) · · Score: 1

    is the bite taken out of the brain thus proving the long-dismissed hypothesis of dinosaur zombies.

  10. I'm wondering if humans will ever shake off their extremely violent ancestry and wind down the war and militarism.

    A question offered from the prospective of a non-human?

    No, probably not. Rather more likely the question issues from a superior human being who's beyond such primitive reflexes.

    Ah, right. You're linking to The Nation so your intellectual superiority and evolved status have been properly signaled.

  11. Not if the experiment's properly designed on NASA's Impossible Propulsion EmDrive Is Heading to Space (popularmechanics.com) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First off, if the engineers designing this thing are remotely competent there won't be any out-gassing.

    Uncontrolled out-gassing is, and has since the beginning of the space age, been a really obvious problem. So it'll be designed from the get-go to avoid uncontrolled out-gassing.

    It also doesn't have to be brought back to Earth to be weighed. Acceleration, if any occurs, can be measured pretty precisely. The degree of acceleration is a product of the mass and velocity of out-gassing.

    If there is any observed acceleration you just have to wait until the amount of reaction mass necessary to account for that acceleration exceeds some reasonable amount and we're done - it works. No tour of the solar system necessary.

  12. I, for one, welcome our robot overlords... on Boston Dynamics' Next-Gen ATLAS Sheds the Tether (roboticstrends.com) · · Score: 1

    ...and plan to get rid of all my hockey sticks.

  13. Re:All Jokes aside... on Boston Dynamics' Next-Gen ATLAS Sheds the Tether (roboticstrends.com) · · Score: 1

    You need Old Glory robot insurance. For when the metal ones come....for you!

  14. That's all very sad but... on Study: Standardized Tests Overwhelming Public Schools (washingtonpost.com) · · Score: 1

    ...the public education system's spent the last fifty or so years frittering away the faith of the public so something's going to result. Testing's one the results but there are more then a few others.

    Charter schools, now in forty-four states are probably the most widespread result but testing is right up there. Coming up pretty quickly is vouchers/education savings accounts.

    The days of the school district as the one solution to the problem of educating the next generation are coming to an end.

    Get used to it.

  15. Re:Ironic on Mini Ice Age: Nothing To Worry About · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Well sure. Phil Plaitt assures us that the sun has essentially no effect on the Earth's climate and hey, that's good enough for me!

    I understand that 98% of climate scientists also agree that the sun has essentially no effect on the Earth's climate so there you are. Case closed.

  16. Re:What a coincidence! on Kim Jong Un Claims To Have Cured AIDS, Ebola and Cancer · · Score: 1

    Wind turbine. I win.

  17. What a coincidence! on Kim Jong Un Claims To Have Cured AIDS, Ebola and Cancer · · Score: 4, Funny

    I also cured AIDS, Ebola and Cancer. What are the chances?

  18. It's a multirotor on The Hoverboard Flies Closer To Reality · · Score: 1

    Electrically powered, computer stabilized just like a twenty dollar Cheerson CX-10 but a lot more powerful.

    A couple of years ago Hobbyking ran a contest called the Beer Lift Challenge and the last year they ran it, 2013, the unlimited winner lifted a 58.7 kilogram (130 pound) payload along with, obviously, its own weight. So here we are two years later, better batteries, motors, speed controllers and flight computers, and someone's bumped up that record to enough to lift a man.

    I wonder how long it'll be till the second one's built?

  19. Dr. James Tooley... on Zuckerberg and Gates-Backed Startup Seeks To Shake Up African Education · · Score: 1

    Is mentioned in the Wall Street Journal article although his book, and what he found in the poorest, third-word slums, wasn't. What he found was tiny, ramshackle private schools just about everywhere. Dr. Tooley's book "The Beautiful Tree" covers the phenomenon and how widely-spread it is.

    Seems poor people, when the government schools are lousy enough, or non-existant, simply set up their own schools. Whoever has the entreprenuerial grit and enough education to convince very poor parents they might be able to education their child, simply goes into business.Sometimes in contravention to laws meant to maintain the government school monopoly.

    I imagine Messrs Zuckerberg and Gates must have some knowledge of Dr. Tooley's findings else they'd have gone through the government education bureacracies as so many charitable organizations before them. Government education agencies are inevitably inefficient, typically corrupt and never accountable. I imagine both Mr. Gates and Mr. Zuckerberg, with their experience of trying to breath some life into the American public education system, understand the futility of trying to improve the performance of third world education bureacracies.

    The Bridge model seems to be following in the footsteps of those tiny, private school Dr. Tooley discovered and while the article doesn't specifically mention them it seems pretty likely that the people who've opened their own private schools already will be among the first to see the value of working with Bridge.

  20. Re:Science by democracy doesn't work? on Science By Democracy Doesn't Work · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How does one determine when science has "fully resolved" a question? When the hypothesis has experimental/observational verification. Policy based on any other standard, like a consensus of dubious objectivity, is a crap shoot.

  21. Re:it is the wrong way... on Australia Repeals Carbon Tax · · Score: 1

    We over and over do exactly the wrong thing to save the world.

    In view of the fact the world hasn't ended perhaps it isn't quite as desperately in need of saving as you seem to believe?

    Alternatively, perhaps what you believe to be the wrong thing to do is, in view of the continued existance of the world, the right thing?

  22. I eagerly await... on Powering Phones, PCs Using Sugar · · Score: 2

    ...the first commercial example. Until then I'll forget about this annoucement since a laboratory curiosity can take a long time to wind its way to commerical production if it ever makes it that far.

  23. Re:Horrible for the public school system on How Good Are Charter Schools For the Public School System? · · Score: 1

    1) No they don't. Charters are public schools. Period. Since charters are public schools they can't very well take money from public schools.

    2) In fact, it's district schools that can be explicitly and unapologetically selective. They're called magnet schools and unlike charters they generally require entrance exams, require the maintenance of grades above some minimum and can boot kids out for a variety of infractions.

    3) Feel free to provide support for this contention. Charter schools are public schools and operate under all relevant, state-level rules and laws. If the state's signed up for Common Core then charters are just as much on the hook to abide by that decision as are district schools.

    4) Again, provide some support for this contention.

    Since charters aren't, by law, allowed to select their students there's no selection bias. As for "the companies that run them", charters do a good enough job to get the approval of parents. The one glaring difference between charters and district schools is that parents select charters. If parents don't care about funneling public school funds to the companies that run them why should anyone else's voice speak as loudly? You got anywhere near as much at stake as those charter school parents?

  24. Re:The big question is... on Earth's Orbit Reshapes Sea Floor · · Score: 2

    I'm a bit unclear on how this scientific consensus works.

    What if the percentage of the world's climate scientists who agree with anthropogenic global warming were lower? Would they still be right? Say, if the percentage were 50%? Would that still establish anthropogenic global warming as scientifically valid?

    Where's the cut-off exactly?

  25. More important then the fact they're pointing... on Mystery Alignment of Planetary Nebulae Discovered · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... is what they're pointing at.

    Notice how that's left out of the article. Coincidence? I think not!