Jones Beene wrote:
Not to be outdone by the GMs Volt
Could be a major breakthrough
...or not
http://www.engadget.com/2008/06/13/genepax-shows-off-water-powered-fuel-cell-vehicle/
This only makes sense if the electrolysis unit is burning the metal in
them. The metals oxidize and liberate
Jones Beene wrote:
Not to be outdone by the GMs Volt
Could be a major breakthrough
...or not
http://www.engadget.com/2008/06/13/genepax-shows-off-water-powered-fuel-cell-vehicle/
Why is the driver of the jap thing wearing a hockey mask??? Which horror
film rerun is he going to?
On Jun 21, 2008, at 3:12 AM, Michel Jullian wrote:
Nanosolar's 1 GW/yr solar cell printer presented by CEO Martin
Roscheisen here, with a video:
http://www.nanosolar.com/blog3/
If they sell the panels at $1/W as announced, they are aiming at a
$1B annual income, not too shabby :)
Michael Foster wrote:
Ethanol from corn is a crime and people are dying from it.
Sorry Michael but no-one is dieing because of ethanol production. They
are dieing because the things they sell are not valuable enough to pay
for the oil, fertilizer, etc that goes into modern farming and
Michel Jullian wrote:
Nanosolar's 1 GW/yr solar cell printer presented by CEO Martin Roscheisen here,
with a video:
http://www.nanosolar.com/blog3/
If they sell the panels at $1/W as announced, they are aiming at a $1B annual
income, not too shabby :)
Michel
Note also its not just the
Howdy Wesley,
We are looking for a person with proven experience in rainmaking. This
person should have the ability to make it rain in suitable quanities and
time intervals conducive with the type of crop planted.
This person need not hold a degree but must have proven experience in
On Sat, Jun 21, 2008 at 8:15 AM, Wesley Bruce [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry Michael but no-one is dieing because of ethanol production.
That's not entirely accurate.
The doctor's told my grandfather that if he kept consuming a pint of
corn ethanol every day it would kill him.
It did after 88
Sunday mornings may be an better time for belated
three-part harmonies, but Sabato will have to do for
this one. Three years ago, in checking the archives,
Rothwell and Scudder casually mentioned ICCF-11 and a
paper mentioning 'harmonic traps' which drew little
attention; but recently the Arrata
- Original Message -
From: Jones Beene [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: vortex vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Saturday, June 21, 2008 10:33 AM
Subject: [Vo]:He6 Harmonic traps
Sunday mornings may be an better time for belated
three-part harmonies, but Sabato will have to do for
this one. Three
- Original Message -
From: Jones Beene [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: vortex vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Saturday, June 21, 2008 10:33 AM
Subject: [Vo]:He6 Harmonic traps
Sunday mornings may be an better time for belated
three-part harmonies, but Sabato will have to do for
this one. Three
Howdy Jones,
Speaking of harmonic traps.. I don't know , but way back when it was called
Tennessee Gas Transmission TGT and run by real people, it was understood
that a natural gas pipeline could have random hot spots believed caused
by sonics, harmonics and moronics. Nothing new or
On Sat, Jun 21, 2008 at 11:46 AM, R C Macaulay [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
By the way, how is Frank Grimer ?
Alive and well posting profusely on the Steorn forum.
His new email address is
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or you can always post on his group:
Unfortunately Cartwright did not mention the detection of helium,
leaving the readers to ponder the sound of one hand clapping.
Harry
On 16/6/2008 4:52 PM, Jed Rothwell wrote:
Jon Cartwright of PhysicsWorld.com has written a summary of the Arata
experiment:
Setting aside the detection of He for the time being does Oskar
make a reasonable criticism of Arata's temperature measurements?
Oskar: I wonder if it could be a deuterium effect on the thermocouple?
Hydrogen and deuterium are notorious for dissolving in metals (as they are
supposed to in the
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