Comment Re:North, South and Reversal (Score 1) 346
Don't be ignorant.
Don't misrepresent what I said...
The GP was talking about a theoretical collapse, which I clearly quoted, not geomagnetic reversals.
Don't be ignorant.
Don't misrepresent what I said...
The GP was talking about a theoretical collapse, which I clearly quoted, not geomagnetic reversals.
Conceivably they could 'collapse' by becoming too close. The magnetic field would appear to go away
I really hope not. We'd fry and so would the communication satellites if the magnetosphere vanished...
I'm not trolling here, but explain to me exactly why this is so terrible?
So what if someone else makes stuff for you? You could say we should all be making our own food, because each person needs food, and if they don't make their own food they're in danger of starving...
As far as I understand it, it was the very fact that moving away from subsistence farming that allowed modern society to flourish.
How is this any different?
The trouble is a project of that size usually requires some level of state/federal organisation or funding to secure the necessary investment from private funding and the power to buy the land. Which in the USA seems to cause foaming at the mouth and long rants about the evils of communism.
(I'm assuming here a new high speed railway would require a new less bendy track than already exists)
I think this is part of the confusion really. The banking systems in different countries are quite different and have different charging models. They are just trying to get rid of what is a free service in the UK for personal accounts. I know a few small business owners that use personal accounts for their banking precisely because they don't charge for transactions.
I have to wonder what UK bank the GP is using as I have accounts with three major banks and they all charge around £25 to transfer money between them. I've found the easiest way to change money between accounts is to drive to the bank, withdraw in cash and walk across the street and pay it into the other bank. (luckily all three banks have branches next to each other) Stupid in the 21st century, but it's the quickest and cheapest way for me to do it.
This is a US site;
I always find this a slightly strange assertion, being a user from the UK. Yes the site was started by someone in the US, and a big chunk of the userbase is in the USA, but stories are submitted from a global audience and link to content that is hosted globally.
It's a bit like claiming the whole Internet is american, because well that's where it started, or that the web is british, because a british guy invented it. It's all a bit silly really.
As various people here keep saying, you have to consider the whole lifecycle.
I'm not defending the entrenched oligarchy of providers in the US, as they probably are gouging customers to an extent and not being as flexible as they could be. However when quoting all the amazing price deals available there, you have to consider how this is linked to pay levels, because to a certain extent the amount you pay is going to be affected by how much it costs to run the infrastructure, and paying people is a large part of that.
There are also probably far fewer regulations on cell tower placement and power. Building anything probably costs less because labour is again cheap and there are fewer building regulations, environmental regulations and labour laws to comply with. It all costs money.
I wonder why it took until now, for something that’s still worse to come out.
Worse in what aspect? While that is an impressive mpg for any car, the lotus engine has addressed several specific deficiencies with traditional 2-stroke engines, principally the requirement to mix oil with the fuel to lubricate the engine. This has a significant impact on the emissions. It can also run on a variety of fuels. This is one heck of an achievement
oh and
Ford built a Fiesta with a two-stroke engine that achieved 1.4l/100km (that’s 168 mpg!) in 1996!
[citation needed]
I'm no eco weenie, but this is total madness... the manufacture of a car creates SIX TIMES the CO2 that the average car will emit in its lifetime... the government should be encouraging people to keep their cars for longer, not pointlessly bail out a few failed car makers...
Living on Earth may be expensive, but it includes an annual free trip around the Sun.