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Comment As if I'd believe Facebook would delete data! (Score 1) 302

Give FB my photo? Not a chance! They already track my every move. They probably already have my photo. I have deleted my account on FB before, and wonder of wonders, All my old 'deleted' data mysteriously reappeared.

Facebook is a bunch of lying liars who lie with their every corporate breath.

Comment Re:That's funny... (Score 1) 300

I have had very limited contact with LEOs, none of them resulted in the capture of the perpetrators.

I guess I just encountered the lazy or overworked ones, or they just didn't know how to follow up on the leads I gave to them.

I was able to get a quicker response on my own just over the phone, in response to a debit card theft. The local sheriff's department quickly suspended the case. Just not important that my entire bank account had been wiped out. I eventually got all my money back, but without much help from the LEOs who worked the case. It took a couple of weeks just to connect with them to give them my evidence.

Color me 'not impressed'.

Comment Those movies with people & dinosaurs (Score 1) 624

Those movies with people & dinosaurs, they were the future!

The CO2 rises, plant life grows like crazy.

With not so many people around, reptiles and insects start growing huge again.

The few surviving people (named Rubble and Flintstone) must use their wits to survive as they go to work in the stone quarry.

Comment Re: "In"security (Score 1) 271

First, tRump has done NOTHING but support the big corporate and private spenders at every turn of the dial. They are still making tons of cash, and they are successfully getting some of their most important legislation passed, albeit not so well publicized (which is how they really like it). Consumer protection? GONE! Student loan forgiveness? GONE! ACA? Still pumping money into the insurance industry! Tax breaks? Nearly DONE!

Comment Re:military intervention: TOO LATE! (Score 1) 133

There's no possibility of launching anything that could catch up to it now.

Maybe the aliens will come back, but if they do, it will probably only be their Intergalactic Pest Control Team coming to rid the planet of psychotic human infestations before they can spread to the rest of the universe...

Besides, Earth will make a pretty good vacation spot, once it's pet problem is corrected.

Comment Re:Goes back to sleep... (Score 1) 204

Do you even know the difference between the "Arctic Ocean being ice-free" and "a collapse of a major ice sheet in Greenland or West Antarctica could raise sea levels by 20 feet in the near future"?

Those two effects of global warming have a hugely different effect on the sea-level rise:

Since the Arctic Ocean's ice pack is already floating on the ocean, its melting does not affect the sea rise, although it CAN affect the buildup of global temperatures due to the fact that water reflects less and absorbs more of the insolation heat it receives than does the same area of sea ice.

On the other hand, the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica rest on land, and the addition of that melted water DOES create a rise in sea levels because it is effectively adding more water to the world's oceanic basins.

The two effects are connected because the increased heating of the Arctic Ocean's sea after it's ice pack has melted accelerates the melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets.

You can go back to sleep now, but your grandchildren WILL BE TESTED on this material.

Comment The answer to batteries in Puerto Rico (Score 1) 203

Pumped water storage utilizing paired reservoirs of water could serve two purposes in the Puerto Rico crisis:

The kinetic energy of water is an environmentally sound method for storing excess solar or wind energy. Since the central portions of the island are mountainous, there is plenty of height to supply the head pressure for micro-hydro power generation, while the water itself can also be used as a source of a community's water, which would be recharged by utilizing the usual wells or surface runoff sources.

Instead of using expensive, short-lived, and toxic chemically-based batteries to store the energy, the excess power from solar/wind arrays is used to pump the water up to reservoirs in the mountains. This water is used to provide power during the night. If the system is designed with enough overall storage capacity, any water in excess of what is required to meet the demand for electricity can be tapped from the system as needed. Batteries and/or capacitors may still have a place in such a system, to serve as a voltage-leveling buffer. Such a system would be physically more robust during hurricanes since much of the infrastructure could be built on or under the ground.

Systems such as these have been in operation for many years, but the idea has never been used at the scale that would power an island the size of Puerto Rico, which has many small towns separated by difficult mountainous terrain, this could be a viable solution.

It would be relatively easy to set up such a system in the Western USA, such as using the facilities at Lake Meade and Lake Havasu along the Colorado River and connecting them with a pair of pipelines that carry water either uphill for storage, or downhill for power generation.

The Mohave Valley has ample space and wind resources for wind power, which would never have to be stopped due to low peak demands for energy since Lake Meade is so much larger than Lake Havasu there would always be enough storage capacity for the excess wind/solar energy.

Comment It's obvious: Segregation rules the Big Bang (Score 1) 456

It's obvious to me that the matter segregated itself from the antimatter as it formed during the Big Bang, and thus never had the chance to annihilate each other. There must be a mirrored anti-matter universe out there somewhere but we can not see it. All of our experiments are being conducted simultaneously in the anti-universe, so the perfect balance is always maintained.

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