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Comment A solution to a lot of problems (Score 1) 318

A safe, clean, reliable, inexpensive source of energy many orders of magnitude greater than anything we have is (or could be) a solution to many of our problems, economic and environmental. Lowering costs of everything means, well, a lot. Better world standard of living, health care, food supply....it goes on. The future of manned space exploration depends on this. Without a new, very powerful source of energy, we aren't going anywhere. Is fusion the answer? Is it the answer? Is it at least a step in the right direction?

Comment Begin taking bets (Score 1) 412

A 10% vig will cover the stockpiling of books and party materials: single malt scotch, caviar, oysters, fireworks. Newt, you bring the naughty girls. Gladiator fighting for the women. Fidel you're bringing cigars, Party runs until world ends. Anyone leaving early concedes their bet. No guns, knives, poison or explosives. Bets paid after the end of world must paid be in gold or diamonds,

Comment Perfect for a variation on ARM (Score 1) 295

It sounds perfect for a small variation on an ARM device. A very simple sensor could continuously detect the vortexes and their centers, a simple circuit programmed into an FPGA could adjust fins to keep it on course. An easily constructed device would fly straight down the concentric rings and at target radiate spherical pattern of jagged shrapnel, eliminating the device and killing or otherwise neutralizing anyone within about 10 meters. One could acquire the components off the shelf in a city of any size. If you spend a great deal of money developing this you would need to tell the operator to be sure there was no one with an engineering degree at the other end.

Comment Looking for ideas? (Score 2) 67

In the 30-year (or so) old film "Three Days of the Condor", Robert Redford works for a little CIA branch that reads books and magazines looking for ideas. They strike a nerve somewhere and the shooting starts. There's "fantasy" science fiction which is wonderfully imaginative and there is "science" science fiction a la Arthur C. Clarke who described telecommunications and global positioning satellites in the 1950s, Star Trek's "Warp Drive" prompted the idea of the Alcubierre drive which is theoretically but not technologically possible. Of course flying was known to be theoretically possible but not technologically possible until the last century.

Comment So sex would work too (Score 1) 437

By this definition, a good bout of healthy sex qualifies. Get your woman and have at with vigor a few times a week and you should be in good shape. Of course this being for the sake of your health, there can be no slacking! Whether you you feel like it or not you have to get to it! And no cutting the workout short either. You have to put forward that extra effort that made America great.

Comment Shame on the British government (Score 2) 728

I think I can say with little exageration that Alan Turing won the Second World War, invented the computer and was killed by the British Government for being gay. When he died, his work was considered so important that it was kept secret for decades after. Is this how we reward our heroes? Every allied soldier and sailor had Alan Turing behind him supplying enemy locations and intentions. If you don't know what a Turing Machine is, you are illiterate. If anyone deserves the highest honors Britain has to offer, it is Alan Turing.

Comment Planetary cores on gas giants (Score 1) 181

Late in the formation of the solar system it was filled with objects colliding, merging, being blasted apart, etc. The gas giants were rotating around the sun faster. Saturn at one time may have circled at exactly 1/2 the rate of Jupiter. When they came around together, their combined gravity perturbed the orbits of Uranus and Neptune, which are not where they should and may have switched places as #7 & #8. The giants slowed as the result of collisions with and absorbtion of, lots of asteroid type material still bouncing around. Something hit Uranus hard enough to knock it on it's side where it now rotates as opposed to all the other planets. The gas giants may not have rocky cores from birth but a lot of rocky material has dropped in since. We watched a comet plunge into Jupiter just a few years ago. Just another drop in the bucket, but it builds up over time.

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