Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Ok, even giving them the benefit of the doubt (Score 1) 262

"OK, so in your mind, the solution to sucky institutional games is to ban indie software"

Where the fuck did I say ban? I only mentioned requiring a testing phase to ensure shit like this doesn't happen.

Companies have hid behind the "This software comes with no warranty" bullshit for to long and are now using it as a rip-off measure.

Comment Re:Ok, even giving them the benefit of the doubt (Score 1) 262

Actually, I can see a simple bit of legalese solving the problem almost in its entirety (notwithstanding the bullshit DRM can cause.)

"Software, before release, must undergo a period of rigorous testing which utilizes at least 250,000 physical computers of varying configurations of hardware and other installed software, for a period of no less than 60 consecutive days. The tests must be performed by people outside of the company or entity releasing the software."

"I couldn't suppress a chuckle at the thought of a video game recall."

How about a recall of the system itself? Remember the Wii and Smash Bros Brawl, DVD problem?

Comment Re:Alternative? (Score 1) 377

"My contention has always been that the schemes you seem so proud of are not economically viable vs far more conventional"

Oh, let's fix that.

What would also take that same grass crop three weeks in land, you've done in one. So with a 3x faster turnaround time, you're 24x more productive in 1/8 acre.

No, the $0.50 is the market rate per kilogram. Actual cost of production? Far lower, about $0.05.

"I know farm chemicals can be expensive, but I can't imagine how much all that costs."

Dirt cheap. And they last years and years, compared to chemicals which require being bought and replenished much more often. That original building in the UK is still running the original ozone generators and UVC LEDs.

"One screw-up and you'll be looking at total losses. It's bad enough in greenhouses when it happens."

Exact same can be said of land crops. Pay attention to the rice failure in India that recently occurred.

"On a Mars Colony that tech would be absolutely invaluable. Here on Earth it's an economic dead end"

Which is why Toshiba has jumped into the game? Which is why Philips is in it? Which is why I've got companies and people from all over the globe contracting my services in design and specification?

Looks like there's plenty of money there to me. In case you didn't know, food is always in demand, especially on the production side. Food production simply can not be en economic dead end. It is in fact an economic STAPLE.

Comment No surprise (Score 4, Insightful) 474

They released a half-finished game and KNEW it was half-finished. They'd hoped to ride on the sales and issue a patch later. They accomplished this with the review embargo, and they KNEW that was the purpose of the embargo - to allow them to get those initial sales out before the shit hit the fan.

There should be a lawsuit on this fairly soon, I'd imagine.

Comment Re:Alternative? (Score 1) 377

"Were those installs hydroponics or vertical farms?"

Vertically stacked NFT *IS* hydroponics.

"What crops?"

Lettuce, fodder grasses, tomatoes, peppers, typical crops.

"What size instillation?"

1/8 acre building.

"What is their yield?"

Depends on the crop. On average we yield 1 acre worth in 1/8 of an acre growing fodder grasses for livestock.

" What is the cost per bushel?"

Depends on the crop, oh and the rest of the world doesn't go by bushel, they tend to go by the kilogram. Let's take fodder grass, since I'm already on that crop. Roughly $0.50 USD per kilogram. The grass is also grown using a special zero-light technology which the BBC has covered.

"What sort of pest control regimen do you use?"

Most of the buildings are sealed with clean room entrances (the original building in the UK does not have a clean room entrance as it was a prototype/POC building.) Pest control is never an issue. Fungal/mold control is, and we use UV-C LED lighting to treat that, along with ozone generators.

"You'll know those numbers or ones close to it if you are who you say you are, which I don't believe you are."

Meanwhile, in the real world, I keep on designing and testing while you sit around in disbelief and ignorance.

You're the one that hung yourself here.

Comment Re:Alternative? (Score 1) 377

"If your alternatives really were cost effective alternatives, where are the large scale operations producing food and selling it for less than the "chemical-intensive agriculture"?"

Already being used around the world, from Korea to Japan to Morocco to Dubai to Australia to right here in the USA. I just finished building a couple out in Tyler, Texas earlier this year.

And they are cost effective. What takes a full acre can be done in 1/8 acre with said technology. You almost entirely eliminate the need for fuel-burning harvesting machines, which kills fuel/energy costs and maintenance costs on harvesting equipment. You utilize much less water and nutrients to grow an equal crop, so you save more money there, and you help save the environment some as you can control your waste, unlike with traditional chemical+soil agriculture. Newer systems are so efficient energy-wise that they can be entirely solar-powered, and still have a little left over to feed into the grid, so you can get paid for producing power.

Uhhh, what was your inane argument, again?

Slashdot Top Deals

"I've seen it. It's rubbish." -- Marvin the Paranoid Android

Working...