Comment Re:Ask the US Postal Service (Score 1) 124
How about not quoting me out of context?
"... and take away that money and then some if they're partially or completely overturned"
How about not quoting me out of context?
"... and take away that money and then some if they're partially or completely overturned"
It doesn't seem like a good idea, challenging patents in court is likely to be a lot more expensive than any patent clerk could ever be.
> Again this would lead to corruption with patent pre-screening and favoured people getting patentable stuff and unfavoured people getting junk and working for free.
No, I'm not saying that they would get paid only for passing patents. They would get paid for examining patents. It's just they would get paid more for being successful patent clerks; for passing patents that are enforceable and novel.
And the patents could be assigned randomly from the pool of patent clerks that accept the patents.
They should perhaps pay patent examiners some money annually for each patent that is passed, and take away that money and then some if they're partially or completely overturned. That way they've an incentive to work quickly, and a disincentive to do sloppy work.
You seriously think that other sources are free of errors? Newspapers for example??
At least with Wikipedia when errors are found they can be removed.
Also, in any GA/FA quality article there's lots of references; you can actually go to those sources and check stuff.
Just because there's a lot of non GA/FA quality articles in there doesn't make Wikipedia useless, it just means it's still being written.
I mean, Encyclopedia Britannica has been going for more than one century; Wikipedia is only just over a decade old, and is literally a hundred times bigger it covers much, much more; but it's about as reliable as EB.
or send an email to the fire department
I agree, I smell bullshit/vaporware.
Getting a large surface area is dead easy. It's getting the heat to spread out evenly over the surface that's hard, so it's all at a similar temperature.
If you haven't done that, then the cooler parts of the surface are partly or mostly wasted.
Normal fins have a specific shape, tapering, where the thick bit conducts the heat to the thinner bits. This sponge shape doesn't do that.
So, it will have 500 times the surface area, but the effective surface area is going to be a tiny, tiny fraction of that.
Actually, looks like quite thick walls on the pan; so the heat should conduct down to the liquid really quite well; having thick walls avoids that exact problem; and aluminium is a very, very good conductor of heat.
I don't think you quite understand.
Wood is an excellent engineering material, it's widely used in construction, and can and has been very successfully used for ships, aircraft etc. During WWII, even when aluminium alloys were available, British designers used wood, to make very highly successful, fast, and very robust aircraft like the de Havilland Mosquito.
Yes, of course you have to consider multiple properties, but actually, wood is very good under lots of different properties, particularly compression, and wood in general and balsa structures in particular have *surreal* rigidity. See this table:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
so by weight, balsa is the most rigid material known, by a long, long way.
Actually:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Look down the list for stainless steel... then carry on down to 'balsa'.
Yup. Wood has a better strength to weigh ratio than stainless steel. (Only along the grain though but plywood fixes that, and you can put the strength in the direction you need it.)
Although they're not in the table, other woods are similar, but more dense.
Carbon fibers are five times stronger than steel and about a third the weight, so in a head to head competition, no way.
Still, it could compete with (say) steel if it's easier to work, cheaper, and less polluting.
Actually, the fastest dragster, albeit unofficial, ever was a rocket car powered by peroxide.
Rocket dragsters were basically banned for being too fast/dangerous.
Rocket engines very typically ARE internal combustion engines.
The definition of 'internal combustion' is that the pressures from the combustion gases cause the motion. (In external combustion engines, such as steam engines, the heat from the combustion goes through a heat exchanger and the working fluid on the other side of that does the work.)
In a rocket the exhaust gases push directly on the exhaust nozzle, and the interior of the combustion chamber and causes the motion, making it an internal combustion engine.
Some rockets (such as nuclear-thermal or solar-thermal rockets) do have a heat exchanger, and are not internal combustion engines, but not the common ones.
A3 = A6 * B6 + C8
versus:
sum = numberOfItems * costOfItem + salesTax
While you can *force* a spreadsheet to work like that, it's not the default, and the default makes it so very much easier to fuck up.
Yes, isn't believing in the truth of something that has been rigorously proved part of scientific literacy?
What would happen if the ones that don't believe humans evolved were forced to deal with some of the unequivocal data that backs it up, like genetics, would they still deny it and cause practical problems?
Further it raises the question as to who is trying to change the test, and why
What is algebra, exactly? Is it one of those three-cornered things? -- J.M. Barrie