Comment Re:Big problem here... (Score 1) 151
No, the desalination will require more energy than you get out of this method. Conversely, if you have freshwater, why use desalination?
No, the desalination will require more energy than you get out of this method. Conversely, if you have freshwater, why use desalination?
Sounds like a perpetual motion device to me.
Oblig.: In this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!
to automatically take selfies.
4"? Where does that nonsense come from?
The root cause problem is letting for-profit corporation define these tests. They're probably copyrighted - wait for the DMCA take-downs. Pearson is well known for that.
These have to be created by educators, not by some low-paid clerk at Pearson.
Just wait for the next big oil crisis, due by the early 2020s at the latest. The vast majority of not-young-any-more people seem to refuse to believe reality. I guess they're too steeped in business-as-usual and propaganda.
Having the task bar at the side makes perfect sense on modern aspect ratio displays.
Unless you use multiple systems (with synergy) side by side. That makes any panel on the screen side a nonstarter.
So the carbon that you "sequestered" is returned to the atmosphere.
What happens with your body after you die?
What will happen with the sugar (which is where the carbon ends up)?
What happens with the food that you ingest?
That would mean returning it to the atmosphere.
What will you do with the carbon that the plants sequestered? Especially so that it won't rot and be returned to the atmosphere?
Yup. "How much does it cost compared to other methods of generating energy?" is the question. And the answer is "More than solar and wind, making coal uncompetitive."
Work expands to fill the time available. -- Cyril Northcote Parkinson, "The Economist", 1955