Stop sorting, use Thermal Depolymerization
on
Recycling Is Dying
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· Score: 1
The traditional mindset of "sort, then recycle" imposes a huge up-front cost - sorting is expensive regardless of where you insert it into the recycling process. If they just pulled the metals out then shredded the rest, Thermal Depolymerization would eat just about anything plastic or organic. Maryland's Easter Shore has a huge problem with chicken-shlt running into the Chesapeake. There's way more poop than the local farmers can spread onto their fields as fertilizer. Maryland needs to seed a TDP plant as part of it's initiatives to protect the Bay. Just simply trucking it out costs too much, but converting it into light-crude would change the economics.
Well there's your problem - marketing a Fantasy film as Sci-Fi. You'll annoy the Sci-Fi folks, who will openly pan the movie, and the Fantasy folks won't attend because they don't do Sci-Fi.
County libraries near me are open until 6pm MWF and 8pm TR, along with all day Saturday. Plenty of opportunities to head over after work... assuming you have a job (and if not, you can head over at 10am when they open to look for one.)
But this is just incrementalism at play. To go with the subsidised net service, these poor folks will need a computer... so they get the $145 discounted unit provided by Comcast and their ilk. Then the end user will cruft it up by clicking on every "get rich quick" spam he received, so there's going to be a need for subsidised IT support services to de-cruft theise machines (because they're clasified as "essential services," they can't be denied.) And in the interim, the machines will end up participating in botnets, motivating Comcast (etc.) to petition for funds from Uncle Sugar to build out additional capability to support the increased network load. After all, it's only fair that the government pay for the additional traffic burden imposed by these Lifeline program machines.
Never seen a government program that didn't have a voracious appetite for cash. This one is no different.
Potable water is an essential service. Transportation is pretty damned essential, but I don't see DOT handing out Obamacars. Broadband is far from *essential*, especially considering there are accessible computers in libraries and schools.
Awesome. Can't wait for the additional taxes to cover the increased program expenditures...
Agreed - US residential power is center-tapped single-phase 240V. From the center neutral to each line, you get 120V. The two "phases" are 180-degrees apart. Commercial power often comes in 208V three-phase. Each line is 120V, but phased from the others at 120 degrees. The next power increment is 480V 3-phase, composed of three 277V legs. Most commercial "240V" fluorescent lighting fixtures will be rated for 208-277V to account for the common commercial power options.
This only works if the userbase is 100% cooperative. My observation is that if something is inconvenient, there is incentive to route around it. Good security procedures are necessarily inconvenient.
Further, when you add the imperfectness of the meatbag into the system, it's all too easy to accidentally bring a cell phone into a secure area, or to miss the CD-R in the stack of benign papers that gets taken out of the secure area.
I'm not seeing the significance of this. The rectractable wings are of dubious value, as is the "drag" method of locomotion. Would have more value if it could fly, then walk, then fly again. As mentioned in an earler post, a quad copter delivering a crawler would be a better solution, rather than a multi-modal machine that performs neither task particularly well.
This issue is common to collective storytelling, which I shall summarize thusly: "Everything is fine until someone gets butthurt, then Godzilla shows up and destroys everything." It seems to be a fundamental issue at the intersection of pure democracy and the human condition. The only functional solution appears to be active moderation.
The term "right" has been abused over the years to the point that most people would equate the following two statements as peers:
- I have the right to participate in representative government.
- I have the right to eat Cheetos in my bed.
In the context of this discussion, the right in question is freedom - freedom to secure housing, freedom to seek education, freedom to protect yourself. The State does not have an obligation to fix your bad decisions, nor does it have the authority to do so (because that would infringe on your personal freedom.)
So while you have a "right" (aka "are free") to eat Cheetos in your bed, expecting the State to provide the Cheetos and the bed is ridiculous. You are, however, free to obtain them yourself.
No, our rights are well enumerated, starting with Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.
You do not have a right to protection.
You do not have a right to housing.
You do not have a right to employment.
You do not have a right to education.
You do not have a right to health.
You have a right to pursue all of these things, but you are not entitled to them. If you choose to be employed, you need to earn that employment. No business is obligated to hire you simply because you are a wonderful person. Further, you may choose to be unemployed, in which case the State is not obligated to support you to your satisfaction. We have programs in place to support people who become unemployed due to no fault of their own, but these are transitional programs, not lifestyles.
You do have a right to speak up about bad and corrupt government.
You do have a right to vote.
You do have a right to participate in government, at multiple levels.
As for compassion, I do know there will be victims of this situation. However, the vast majority of Detroit residents have been tolerating this disaster of a city for decades, and are now upset that the fairytale they have been spoon-fed isn't coming to fruition. I have trouble being sympathetic for folks who trot mindlessly down a well-marked dead-end road and get upset when the road ends.
This isn't a natural disaster. This is the result of *decades* of mismanagement and corruption. If the system is so broken that is cannot be repaired, and fighting the system is an unwinnable battle, your only viable solution is to leave. And that's what you're seeing here. People are leaving Detroit en masse.
Detroit is a city, but it is far from being an essential resource. If it imploded tomorrow, I doubt it would be more than an interesting news tidbit for the rest of the nation.
Finally, it's clear that you don't comprehend freedom. Freedom includes the ability to royally screw yourself by making one bad decision after another. Detroit has made many bad decisions over the years, and it is completely outside the pervue of the US Federal government to step in and mandate that the rest of the nation support a city or to dictate how a city is run... regardless of how poorly the locals are running it.
Insurance reform needs to happen at a national level. I've been bitching about this since I started driving.
Drivers and cars need to be insured independently. The insurance industry will fight this tooth and nail, because it eliminates their ability to lump everyone in your household into a cost bracket associated with the worst driver. Have a 17-year-old son or daughter? Everyone's rates go up. Why? Because the insurance industry prohibits you from being insured individually.
Insure the car as a car. If it's self-driving, it gets a different policy and rate from one that requires a meatbag in the pilot's seat.
Insure the individual as an individual driver. Have lots of accidents? Your rates go up, but your spouse's rates don't. Same thing with teen drivers (higher rates) and no-accidents-for-thirty-years drivers (lower rates.) None of this BS about raising everyone in your family's rates because one child did something childish.
This resolves a number of "what if" scenarios that currently result in finger-pointing. Borrow your neighbor's car... park it downtown where it gets dinged by a cab. Does the driver's policy or the owner's policy cover the damage? You don't know, do you? That's because the current insurance situation is f'ed-up. With separate car/driver policies, it's clear that the car policy covers material damage to the vehicle, and makes a ton more sense than trying to figure out which person-not-driving has the liability.
I know, it won't happen. The insurance companies will protect their profits at all costs, including destroying the self-driving car.
Well said, citizen. The Federal Network would like to remind viewers that February will be "Kill a Bug Month." Join in, and do your part. Also, remember that Service Guarantees Citizenship.
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, there are approximately 6,937,600 offenders under the supervision of adult correctional systems at yearend 2012. Approximately 2.2 million are incarcerated. The remainder are on parole or under community supervision (i.e probation.) I would suggest that your 50k number is low, by at least an order of magnitude.
Yep, learn the difference between "grid tied" and "grid interactive" systems. The latter will operate locally when the grid drops out; the former will not.
I'm dealing with family members who are obese. You would think, by their reactions, "choice" was the nickname of Satan. I've heard the littany of excuses from the thyroid to the social environment. At the end of the day, the "choice" exists as to what you shovel into your pie hole with your own hand. You might have a metabolism that compels you to eat, but nobody but yourself decides *what* you eat. There is no shadowy figure holding a gun to your head, threatening your very life unless you eat that Family Size bag of Doritos in one sitting.
I've watched an obese family member make and eat an entire batch of cookies because she was feeling bad, and had to suffer through her diatribe about how "it's not my fault" and "why won't someone else solve my problems for me?" crapola. There can be no respect in these situations. And putting these people on continuous medication programs will only further absolve them of responsibility for their actions.
Folks seem to be misunderstanding the purpose of the phone. It's not for your convenience. The phone is a conduit to connect your wallet to a carrier's bank account. That's why *every* carrier is willing to "give" you a phone for a substantial discount. Allowing you to change the phone's capabilities is equivalent to turning off the money stream.
Now, if they could get a piece of the action, that's a horse of a different color.
I am currently an officer of the ""He-Man Women Hater's Club." As a private club, I may deny you and anyone else admittance to said club, for pretty much any reason - I don't like your hair; you have the wrong color eyes; it's Tuesday. My behavior may be unfair, or even discriminatory, but it's not illegal*, and you may pound sand.
*Note that certain establishments, like restaurants, do come under legal scrutiny because they have an interaction with the public. There are many other examples where discriminatory behavior is prohibited, but a private horse registry ain't one of them.
Monopolies are bad. I'm not contesting that. However, it's completely specious to claim "monopoly" on the basis that the American Quarter Horse Association controls the American Quarter Horse Association Registry. Of course they do, it's their registry. The statement "none of the other horse registries accept clones either." tends to indicate that there are multiple registries... aka "not a monopoly." I suspect these registries won't allow you to register your cheeseburger, nor your motorcycle. I'm sure several of the My Little Pony characters are quarterhorses. Can they be registered too?
Now, if the registries are colluding in an oligopolistic fashion, and are taking anti-competitive measures, then there is actionable stuff there. However, if the AQHA has a policy of not registering cloned animals, so be it.
The quarter horse association, which has a registry of 751,747 animals, stated in court that it is a private organization and has the right to decide its membership rules.
I'm with the Quarter Horse Association on this one. They're not the government. They have no "fairness" obligation to everyone. I don't see how they can be accused of holding a monopoly when "no other horse breeding registry allows cloned animals..." indicates that they ain't the only game in town. Start your own damned registry if you don't like the current offerings. If the incumbents run you out of Dodge on a rail, then you have an actionable claim based on anti-competitive business practices. But I don't see how you can claim "monopoly" simply because you don't like a private organization's rules.
Hey, I just started the "No Clones Alllowed Horse Registry." Can these two horse breeders sue me and force my no-clones registry to accept their cloned animals?
The traditional mindset of "sort, then recycle" imposes a huge up-front cost - sorting is expensive regardless of where you insert it into the recycling process. If they just pulled the metals out then shredded the rest, Thermal Depolymerization would eat just about anything plastic or organic. Maryland's Easter Shore has a huge problem with chicken-shlt running into the Chesapeake. There's way more poop than the local farmers can spread onto their fields as fertilizer. Maryland needs to seed a TDP plant as part of it's initiatives to protect the Bay. Just simply trucking it out costs too much, but converting it into light-crude would change the economics.
Well there's your problem - marketing a Fantasy film as Sci-Fi. You'll annoy the Sci-Fi folks, who will openly pan the movie, and the Fantasy folks won't attend because they don't do Sci-Fi.
County libraries near me are open until 6pm MWF and 8pm TR, along with all day Saturday. Plenty of opportunities to head over after work ... assuming you have a job (and if not, you can head over at 10am when they open to look for one.)
... so they get the $145 discounted unit provided by Comcast and their ilk. Then the end user will cruft it up by clicking on every "get rich quick" spam he received, so there's going to be a need for subsidised IT support services to de-cruft theise machines (because they're clasified as "essential services," they can't be denied.) And in the interim, the machines will end up participating in botnets, motivating Comcast (etc.) to petition for funds from Uncle Sugar to build out additional capability to support the increased network load. After all, it's only fair that the government pay for the additional traffic burden imposed by these Lifeline program machines.
But this is just incrementalism at play. To go with the subsidised net service, these poor folks will need a computer
Never seen a government program that didn't have a voracious appetite for cash. This one is no different.
Potable water is an essential service. Transportation is pretty damned essential, but I don't see DOT handing out Obamacars. Broadband is far from *essential*, especially considering there are accessible computers in libraries and schools.
...
Awesome. Can't wait for the additional taxes to cover the increased program expenditures
Agreed - US residential power is center-tapped single-phase 240V. From the center neutral to each line, you get 120V. The two "phases" are 180-degrees apart. Commercial power often comes in 208V three-phase. Each line is 120V, but phased from the others at 120 degrees. The next power increment is 480V 3-phase, composed of three 277V legs. Most commercial "240V" fluorescent lighting fixtures will be rated for 208-277V to account for the common commercial power options.
This only works if the userbase is 100% cooperative. My observation is that if something is inconvenient, there is incentive to route around it. Good security procedures are necessarily inconvenient. Further, when you add the imperfectness of the meatbag into the system, it's all too easy to accidentally bring a cell phone into a secure area, or to miss the CD-R in the stack of benign papers that gets taken out of the secure area.
Are the TLB registers not accessible via JTAG?
I'm not seeing the significance of this. The rectractable wings are of dubious value, as is the "drag" method of locomotion. Would have more value if it could fly, then walk, then fly again. As mentioned in an earler post, a quad copter delivering a crawler would be a better solution, rather than a multi-modal machine that performs neither task particularly well.
This issue is common to collective storytelling, which I shall summarize thusly: "Everything is fine until someone gets butthurt, then Godzilla shows up and destroys everything." It seems to be a fundamental issue at the intersection of pure democracy and the human condition. The only functional solution appears to be active moderation.
The guy yelling in the second image appears to be BallChinnian.
SkyRunner looks like a decent solution. It certainly fits the needs of ranchers who would otherwise be using helicopters ... poorly.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
The term "right" has been abused over the years to the point that most people would equate the following two statements as peers:
- I have the right to participate in representative government.
- I have the right to eat Cheetos in my bed.
In the context of this discussion, the right in question is freedom - freedom to secure housing, freedom to seek education, freedom to protect yourself. The State does not have an obligation to fix your bad decisions, nor does it have the authority to do so (because that would infringe on your personal freedom.)
So while you have a "right" (aka "are free") to eat Cheetos in your bed, expecting the State to provide the Cheetos and the bed is ridiculous. You are, however, free to obtain them yourself.
No, our rights are well enumerated, starting with Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.
You do not have a right to protection.
You do not have a right to housing.
You do not have a right to employment.
You do not have a right to education.
You do not have a right to health.
You have a right to pursue all of these things, but you are not entitled to them. If you choose to be employed, you need to earn that employment. No business is obligated to hire you simply because you are a wonderful person. Further, you may choose to be unemployed, in which case the State is not obligated to support you to your satisfaction. We have programs in place to support people who become unemployed due to no fault of their own, but these are transitional programs, not lifestyles.
You do have a right to speak up about bad and corrupt government.
You do have a right to vote.
You do have a right to participate in government, at multiple levels.
As for compassion, I do know there will be victims of this situation. However, the vast majority of Detroit residents have been tolerating this disaster of a city for decades, and are now upset that the fairytale they have been spoon-fed isn't coming to fruition. I have trouble being sympathetic for folks who trot mindlessly down a well-marked dead-end road and get upset when the road ends.
This isn't a natural disaster. This is the result of *decades* of mismanagement and corruption. If the system is so broken that is cannot be repaired, and fighting the system is an unwinnable battle, your only viable solution is to leave. And that's what you're seeing here. People are leaving Detroit en masse.
... regardless of how poorly the locals are running it.
Detroit is a city, but it is far from being an essential resource. If it imploded tomorrow, I doubt it would be more than an interesting news tidbit for the rest of the nation.
Finally, it's clear that you don't comprehend freedom. Freedom includes the ability to royally screw yourself by making one bad decision after another. Detroit has made many bad decisions over the years, and it is completely outside the pervue of the US Federal government to step in and mandate that the rest of the nation support a city or to dictate how a city is run
Insurance reform needs to happen at a national level. I've been bitching about this since I started driving.
... park it downtown where it gets dinged by a cab. Does the driver's policy or the owner's policy cover the damage? You don't know, do you? That's because the current insurance situation is f'ed-up. With separate car/driver policies, it's clear that the car policy covers material damage to the vehicle, and makes a ton more sense than trying to figure out which person-not-driving has the liability.
Drivers and cars need to be insured independently. The insurance industry will fight this tooth and nail, because it eliminates their ability to lump everyone in your household into a cost bracket associated with the worst driver. Have a 17-year-old son or daughter? Everyone's rates go up. Why? Because the insurance industry prohibits you from being insured individually.
Insure the car as a car. If it's self-driving, it gets a different policy and rate from one that requires a meatbag in the pilot's seat.
Insure the individual as an individual driver. Have lots of accidents? Your rates go up, but your spouse's rates don't. Same thing with teen drivers (higher rates) and no-accidents-for-thirty-years drivers (lower rates.) None of this BS about raising everyone in your family's rates because one child did something childish.
This resolves a number of "what if" scenarios that currently result in finger-pointing. Borrow your neighbor's car
I know, it won't happen. The insurance companies will protect their profits at all costs, including destroying the self-driving car.
Well said, citizen. The Federal Network would like to remind viewers that February will be "Kill a Bug Month." Join in, and do your part. Also, remember that Service Guarantees Citizenship.
Would you like to know more?
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, there are approximately 6,937,600 offenders under the supervision of adult correctional systems at yearend 2012. Approximately 2.2 million are incarcerated. The remainder are on parole or under community supervision (i.e probation.) I would suggest that your 50k number is low, by at least an order of magnitude.
Yep, learn the difference between "grid tied" and "grid interactive" systems. The latter will operate locally when the grid drops out; the former will not.
I'm dealing with family members who are obese. You would think, by their reactions, "choice" was the nickname of Satan. I've heard the littany of excuses from the thyroid to the social environment. At the end of the day, the "choice" exists as to what you shovel into your pie hole with your own hand. You might have a metabolism that compels you to eat, but nobody but yourself decides *what* you eat. There is no shadowy figure holding a gun to your head, threatening your very life unless you eat that Family Size bag of Doritos in one sitting.
I've watched an obese family member make and eat an entire batch of cookies because she was feeling bad, and had to suffer through her diatribe about how "it's not my fault" and "why won't someone else solve my problems for me?" crapola. There can be no respect in these situations. And putting these people on continuous medication programs will only further absolve them of responsibility for their actions.
Folks seem to be misunderstanding the purpose of the phone. It's not for your convenience. The phone is a conduit to connect your wallet to a carrier's bank account. That's why *every* carrier is willing to "give" you a phone for a substantial discount. Allowing you to change the phone's capabilities is equivalent to turning off the money stream.
Now, if they could get a piece of the action, that's a horse of a different color.
[facepalm]
That's easy - just have the phones exchange keys over Bluetooth.
There are many laws, including the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, that cover equal treatment of people. Horses are not people, and do not enjoy the same rights and legal protections we do. In fact, horses are often ground up into food and adhesives.
I am currently an officer of the ""He-Man Women Hater's Club." As a private club, I may deny you and anyone else admittance to said club, for pretty much any reason - I don't like your hair; you have the wrong color eyes; it's Tuesday. My behavior may be unfair, or even discriminatory, but it's not illegal*, and you may pound sand.
*Note that certain establishments, like restaurants, do come under legal scrutiny because they have an interaction with the public. There are many other examples where discriminatory behavior is prohibited, but a private horse registry ain't one of them.
Monopolies are bad. I'm not contesting that. However, it's completely specious to claim "monopoly" on the basis that the American Quarter Horse Association controls the American Quarter Horse Association Registry. Of course they do, it's their registry. The statement "none of the other horse registries accept clones either." tends to indicate that there are multiple registries ... aka "not a monopoly." I suspect these registries won't allow you to register your cheeseburger, nor your motorcycle. I'm sure several of the My Little Pony characters are quarterhorses. Can they be registered too?
Now, if the registries are colluding in an oligopolistic fashion, and are taking anti-competitive measures, then there is actionable stuff there. However, if the AQHA has a policy of not registering cloned animals, so be it.
I'm with the Quarter Horse Association on this one. They're not the government. They have no "fairness" obligation to everyone. I don't see how they can be accused of holding a monopoly when "no other horse breeding registry allows cloned animals ..." indicates that they ain't the only game in town. Start your own damned registry if you don't like the current offerings. If the incumbents run you out of Dodge on a rail, then you have an actionable claim based on anti-competitive business practices. But I don't see how you can claim "monopoly" simply because you don't like a private organization's rules.
Hey, I just started the "No Clones Alllowed Horse Registry." Can these two horse breeders sue me and force my no-clones registry to accept their cloned animals?