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Comment Human trials go awry! (Score 1) 66

Interviewer: Did it work?
Researcher: Yes. But we had to discontinue it.
Interviewer: Why?
Researcher: Because what we thought was memory stimulation was actually a memory encoding and replay system.
Interviewer: And that makes a difference...why?
Researcher: Because our test subjects were highly disturbed by "memories" of getting their freak on with female mice...
Interviewer: ...eww...
Researcher: Indeed...

Comment The Jack LaLane Ammendment! (Score 1) 851

If you're eating something and it tastes good, SPIT IT OUT!

Notice that the old fucker still died anyhow.

We need to stop with the nanny state bullshit like this.

EVERYTHING out there is bad for you when not taken in moderation.

Personal fucking responsibility!

Comment Re:Deceptive wording (Score 1) 259

Yeah. 10 years.

Look at the actual number of times the battery can be drained and recharged. With regular use, how much capacity do these units lose over time?
And how soon into the battery's life-cycle will a replacement be needed to continue meeting the needs for which it was bought?
Incurring, yet again, the cost of replacing the battery.

As for how long Tesla's batteries are sold out for? Who cares? It's code-speak for "They'd be great...if we could get one..."

Comment Re:Deceptive wording (Score 1) 259

"it won't be long" is usually rah-rah-speak for "yes it will be"

The current limits on number of charge cycles for newer battery tech is a major problem. One that rules them out, currently, as some sort of actual storage medium. Because they'd be getting replaced on roughly an annual basis. And I don't care who you are or how much money you have. They aren't THAT cheap.

Comment Re:Deceptive wording (Score 1) 259

Again, I'm not being negative. I'm saying that the phrasing and usage is deceptive (the whole Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics thing).

And I acknowledge that solar has achieved new milestones in adoption. For that, I'm glad.

What I'm saying is that trying to compare it to another power generation sector that's producing 40-50x the power is misleading.

For Solar to be a truly major contender, they need at least an order of magnitude in growth. And I'm somewhat pessimistic that the US can actually achieve that level of growth. Even over a longer term.

As for "total renewable energy". I'm just going to laugh derisively and leave it at that. Quite simply, with our ever-growing energy demands, renewable energy quite simply CANNOT support the entire energy industry. You could carpet the US in PV cells and toss up solar thermal and wind farms willy nilly, and it still wouldn't cover it.

Geothermal and Hydro *might* cover baseload "right now". But remember that we're pretty much at peak hydro in the US right now, for environmental reasons. And geothermal isn't something you can just drop everywhere. So they can't grow to keep up with demand.

Realistically, some sort of solution that includes nuclear is our best option.
Sure, nuclear is dirty in its own way. But it's a way that can be managed and minimized. And you're not blowing the byproducts up a stack and into the environment.

Comment Re:Deceptive wording (Score 1) 259

The thing is, they're NOT talking about installs. They're comparing number of installs versus base installed capacity and trying to draw a correlation with the number of installs versus installed capacity in a different sector of the power industry. One that is supplying over 40x the power that total solar does, in facilities that take longer to build and are generally more energy-dense than solar is.

It's apples and pears.

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