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User: Gablar

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Comments · 87

  1. Stirling engine? on Toyota Describes Combustion Engine That Generates Electricity Directly · · Score: 1

    To me this design wants to be combined with a sterling engine.

  2. Human Computer Interaction on Professors Rejecting Classroom Technology · · Score: 1

    Lets remember, most of today's professors experienced most of their learning using pen and paper, chalk and blackboard. When they were learning such things as video lecture or interactive blackboards weren't even invented. Efectively using IT in the classroom not only require tech savvy, but a much faster pace of cognition on their part.

      These are professionals, experts on their respective fields but to be an effective teacher it is not only necesary to pocess a mastery of the subject it is also necessary to be be effective at communicating it by any means.

  3. This is BAD on Australia Is On So Much Fire, You Can See It From Orbit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course this has nothing to do with the fact that the north pole melted to record small levels this years. This is an isolated incident of freak weather, as was Sandy.

  4. Tipping point? on Urbanization Has Left the Amazon Burning · · Score: 1

    Sounds to me like we have reach a tipping point where the "Rain" part of the rain forest is not enough to overcome the intense heat from the tropical sun. If that is the case we are royally fracked.

  5. Re:Issues on Why Do So Many Liberals "Like" Mitt Romney On Facebook? · · Score: 1

    Frankly, anyone working (or able to work) should be working AND...have to pay SOME federal tax..I don't care if it is $10 or so....just as long as everyone has some skin in the game, eh?

    Everyone has some skin in the game, even if a person owes no taxes at the end of the year. Our major contributions to society, are the decisions that we make everyday at every moment. Taxes are only the way we pool our resources together for the benefits of all (in theory). In our society we believe that the whole is better when all the parts are doing well, so perhaps the $10 dollars is not much for you but for someone that might be significant. Everyone already pays sales taxes anyways.

  6. Re:The challenge of getting past c on Mathematicians Extend Einstein's Special Relativity Beyond Speed of Light · · Score: 1

    "We just consumed all the energy in the universe and collapsed into a blackhole business back there!"

    If anything consumes everything, does the anything becomes everything?

  7. Re:The challenge of getting past c on Mathematicians Extend Einstein's Special Relativity Beyond Speed of Light · · Score: 1

    Instead of thinking about the speed of light as the universe's speed limit, you can think of it as a peculiarity, like the sound barrier but more fundamental.

  8. Just 2 Words on PAX Prime: An Extra Day In 2013, and Plans For Australia · · Score: 1

    Acquisitions Incorporated

  9. Re:News Flash on Study Shows Marijuana Use In Teens Correlates To Decreasing IQ · · Score: 1

    Thanks man, I'm attempting to quit right now. I just tried your suggestion and it helps a lot!

  10. Technology on its infancy. on Bill Gates Says Tablets Aren't Much Help In Education · · Score: 1

    Kids that were born under the dactile input instead of mouse are just reaching Kindergarten. Prosessing speeds of tablets are just coming online with low power laptops. This technology is part of the technological evolution of education. What it is lacking seriously behind is the training of teachers and software that takes full advantage of the multimedia capabilities of tablets. I was hoping that MS Surface would be the next step. That is a very disappointing statement from Mr. Gates.

  11. Re:Questions that come to mind on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 1

    I agree, but at some point humanity needs to gain something more tangible than knowledge or value, we'll have to bring stuff down. Now, it doesn't have to be even a piece of the meteorite, I'll settle for orbital power beaming.

  12. Re:A bad idea that "sounds good". on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 1

    wouldn't this have to be a huge meteorite, I mean much larger in scale than a 500 ton rock?

  13. Re:It's even dumber than that. on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 1

    Mining the moon scares me a whole lot more. I mean the tides are important!

  14. Re:Compared to the moon on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 2

    But the issue really is distance. And the Moon is a LOT closer than the asteroids.

    Asteroids are differentiated. Some are mostly pure nickel-iron. Never heard of that being available on the moon.

    Why wouldn't there be a vein of iron ore on the Moon? There are veins of it on the Earth.

    Sure, you might have to dig a bit for it. But digging on the Moon means a LOT less travel than scouting the asteroid belt.

    I think distance is not the real issue, the real issue its efficiency. Maybe there is a meteorite out there who's orbit and mineral concentration make it a particularly good target for resource extraction. If we can get those resources down safely, and cheaply it would be like a new, world wide, gold rush.

    Besides, extracting 500 tons of anything from the moon sounds extremely costly compared to some solar powered ion engine designed to over the years alter the orbit of an asteroid.

  15. Re:Questions that come to mind on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 1

    True, perhaps I should add

    1. How are they suppose to get 500 tons of anything to the ground in a controlled manner.

  16. Re:anyone surprised? on Whistleblower: NSA Has All of Your Email · · Score: 1

    Actually, I have never understood why so many people wouldn't t vote for someone who didn't stand a chance to win. Whether a candidate has a chance to win shouldn't weight in your decision at all. Weather you can trust the candidate or not seems like the most important element when voting. Personally, I would vote for Obama, he seems a heck of a lot more trustworthy than Mitt "etch-a-sketch" Romney, but at state level I'm voting for a third party, because I can't trust the two main parties. I know my governor candidate won't win, but at least I'll have a clear conscience.

  17. Re:Asteroid Defense? Orbital Construction? on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 1

    Using it for orbital construction sounds great but processing all that ore up there might be expensive. I wonder how efficiently could be done.

  18. Questions that come to mind on Billionaires and Polymaths Expected To Unveil a Plan To Mine Asteroids · · Score: 1

    1. How are they suppose to get 500 tons of anything to the ground? 2. What would be the best resource to get? Gold? for what it would just cause a drop in the gold market. Perhaps some resource that can be used in a massive scale to lower the cost of launching the mission ( both energetically and monetary) 3. How cheaply can they do it? Space X might simplify the math but it would still be in the hundreds of millions just to get stuff up. 4. how many times an already launched vehicle can be re-used?

  19. Teachers not ready for this technology on OLPC Project Disappoints In Peru · · Score: 1

    If a teacher have been using pen, paper and textbooks as the primary means for input and output of information you can't expect them to be proficient at teaching using electronic means for input and output. A simple seminar or continuing education program is simply not enough to bring the technological skills of a teacher that has been teaching with pen and paper for who knows how many years up to par. Rigorous training and a willingness for change from the teacher are also required. The idea is noble but it couldn't even be implemented in the US in a large scale.

  20. Re:The extraordinary conclusions? Only one move! on Rybka Solves the King's Gambit Chess Opening · · Score: 1

    they probably are

  21. Re:I don't think so. on Conservatives' Trust In Science Has Fallen Dramatically Since Mid-1970s · · Score: 1

    OK I have an issue with #3

    Any design can be improved given enough effort? If that was true then a perpetual motion machine would be possible and we all know it is not, well at least according to science.

  22. Re:Completely inexplicable... on Historic Heat In North America Turns Winter To Summer · · Score: 1

    Ok did the math and your right, the percentage in volume of oil compared to the volume of the earth atmosphere is minuscule.

    barrel of oil to KM^3= 1.58^(-10)
    BPD=30,000,000
    days in a year=365
    years of sustained production of oil=?? ( it really doesn't mater what the total is it wont be significant enough but I chose 30 just for fun)

    1.58^(-10)*3000000*365*30=51 km^3

      The atmosphere has an estimated volume in the 10^12 km^3 range, so 51 km^3 is indeed insignificant (as far as my argument goes)

  23. Re:Completely inexplicable... on Historic Heat In North America Turns Winter To Summer · · Score: 1

    I'm talking about the mass and energy. We extract 30,000,000 barrels of substance from the ground every single day. It doesn't matter the way we change that substance, it ends up in the surface or in the atmosphere, be it plastics, heat, kinetic energy, or any sorts of matter that we throw up in the air. The point is that we are taking a huge amount of atoms from under the earth and launching a huge amount of them to the atmosphere. It will definitely have an impact it doesn't matter in what form.

  24. Re:Completely inexplicable... on Historic Heat In North America Turns Winter To Summer · · Score: 1

    30,000,000 barrels of oil a day are used by man kind. A bit of it is converted to kinetic energy, the rest of it is thrown up in the sky. It is just naive to think this wont have an impact on the climate.

  25. Re:A little late on Michael Mann Vindicated (Again) Over Climategate · · Score: 1

    Don't forget melts of polar glaciers and mountain peaks in Asia and USA