Too bad we can't opt-in for something like that in the 'States. Then we can just all create one email account that moves everything to/dev/null and get a discount on our postage.
There's gotta be some sort of "universal constant" for atomic structures, and though I'm not a chemist, wouldn't it be possible to map out the structure of ANY sort of radioactive material? I mean, not the complete structure of the waste itself, but just enough on the walls or something such that it won't take up millions upon millions of dollars AND it will warn the scientists studying the place in the future that what's inside these doors is not "a slow and painful death" but "materials composed like this and you can draw your own conclusions".
By the time a future civilization, provided we blow ourselves up to kingdom come in the next ten thousand years, discovers the waste disposal site in the mountains of Nevada, if we're really interested in preventing them from entering the place on the count that there are hazardous radioactive materials that won't be safe for about 90,000 years after we've all gone the way of the dodo, wouldn't it be more feasable to warn them about the actual dangers of the place instead of a glimpse into our screwed-up civilization?
That 150K a year will be in "cost of living" wage increases alone.
Dan Rupert at Rancho Bernardo High School has been using the students in his CAD classes to design and build his Bots for years now.
Too bad we can't opt-in for something like that in the 'States. Then we can just all create one email account that moves everything to /dev/null and get a discount on our postage.
Karma is a bitch. Kazaa had it coming. Piss off the RIAA/MPAA? That's a given. Piss off your users? Sooner or later, you're screwed.
...had he been using an OpenGL wallhack.
By the time a future civilization, provided we blow ourselves up to kingdom come in the next ten thousand years, discovers the waste disposal site in the mountains of Nevada, if we're really interested in preventing them from entering the place on the count that there are hazardous radioactive materials that won't be safe for about 90,000 years after we've all gone the way of the dodo, wouldn't it be more feasable to warn them about the actual dangers of the place instead of a glimpse into our screwed-up civilization?