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Comment Always wondered.... (Score 1) 348

I got a ticket in Dallas once, and my dad got one in Miami recently. Looking at the pictures, and even the video in my case) you can see the infraction...but you can't see the person in the car. Now I don't have tints or anything, but the video is shot from the back in both of those cases and you can't see me or my father. When I got my ticket (several weeks after the incident), I was honestly not sure if it was me or my then-girlfriend driving my car that day. So how is it legal for them to ticket en masse without verifying identity, only identifying the car itself?

Comment Re:Obama (Score 1) 1912

I don't know why I bother anymore, but: It's not a bailout or a handout. The first draft Paulson tried to ram through was pretty close to a handout, but now the gov is taking stakes in banks.

Is it a handout when I buy stock in a bank, expecting to make a return? Now obviously there are other motivations than profit here for the government (i.e. to steady the credit markets, prevent failures, etc) but they MAY come out in the black on this. Buffet made this point clear when he said he'd gladly take a 1% stake in this given the chance. He supported it.

Feed Engadget: Genepax shows off water-powered fuel cell vehicle (engadget.com)

Filed under: Transportation

We've seen plenty of promises about water-powered cars (among other things), but it looks like Japan's Genepax has now made some real progress on that front, with it recently taking the wraps off its Water Energy System fuel cell prototype. The key to that system, it seems, is its membrane electrode assembly (or MEA), which contains a material that's capable of breaking down water into hydrogen and oxygen through a chemical reaction. Not suprisingly, the company isn't getting much more specific than that, with it only saying that it's adopted a "well-known process to produce hydrogen from water to the MEA." Currently, that system costs on the order of ¥2,000,000 (or about $18,700 -- not including the car), but company says that if it can get it into mass production that could be cut to ¥500,000 or less (or just under $5,000). Head on past the break for a video of car in action courtesy of Reuters.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Genepax shows off water-powered fuel cell vehicle

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