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Comment Re:ah, Tajmar eh? (Score 0) 518

I was primarily reacting to rubycodez post being the 4th or 5th time he said exactly the same thing in this article.

As for Tajmar, he is not the first or the last experimenter who has been in error, it's the nature of science. Remember the FTL neutrinos? As for warp drive, I can find no reference to him making such a claim. I can't even find a wild media claim of that for him.

Comment Re:Believe it when I see it (Score 1) 518

No, healthy skepticism allowed us to realize that the mass of an object won't affect it's acceleration due to gravity in a vacuum and yet not be on repeated expeditions looking for a unicorn nest. Cynicism would have us still believing that an object set into motion remains in motion until it gets tired, then it falls.

Comment Re: Looking more and more likely all the time... (Score 1) 518

But it's not generating thrust by microwave emission. If the thrust is of the form of action-reaction, we have yet to detect what it is pushing against. Hence the wild speculation about virtual particles or the fabric of space. Even those seem more likely than it being truly reactionless but it wouldn't be any less useful if one of those proves to be the case.

Comment Re:What benefit to announcing it? (Score 1) 203

Apple is the best of the bad, Google is slipping and breaking promises and as usual, the carriers are making squishy sounds in the slime pit.

But since the entire concept of the free market depends on well educated consumers, the FTC should make the market stronger by forcing them all to state the service life up front and stick to it. For the good of the market.

Submission + - German scientists confirm NASA results of propellantless 'impossible' EM drive (examiner.com)

MarkWhittington writes: Hacked Magazine reported that a group of German scientists believe that they have confirmed that the EM Drive, the propulsion device that uses microwaves rather than rocket fuel, provides thrust. The experimental results are being presented at the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics' Propulsion and Energy Forum in Orlando by Martin Tajmar, a professor and chair for Space Systems at the Dresden University of Technology. Tajmar has an interest in exotic propulsion methods, including one concept using “negative matter.”

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