Dear Abd,
I am starting the weekend rush to write my great editorial for the issue no
396 of my wekly newsletter Info Kappa ( I am working for an American
Romanian ISP UPC Romania)
The subject is "primitive" and I will use much of the book "Caveman Logic"
But other things too.

By the way, I like very much what your littel dughter has said it is bright
and I will quote it in a future issue. I will ask you to tell your
daughter;s name and how do you want the idea should presented. It is a great
example of the wisdom of children.

Best wishes,
Peter

PS. If to be intelligent is the ability to work with scarce, redundant,
contradictory, partilly false data than CF is the place where we can
exercise intelligence. It will be simply chaotic only after two steps of
radical improvement. But, to quote myself" The unique ambition of the
Universe is to be interesting". I had a discussion with Freeman Dyson re the
priority of this idea and we have discovered it independently.

On Fri, Mar 26, 2010 at 8:06 PM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax 
<a...@lomaxdesign.com>wrote:

> At 11:27 AM 3/26/2010, Peter Gluck wrote:
>
>> Yes, nanotechnology surely will have a great role. And electrolysis is -in
>> this case a generator of technological nightmares, we have to get rid of it.
>>
>
> Definitely messy. I wouldn't rule it out, though. But gas phase seems more
> likely. I'm not working with it because the level of materials science is
> horrific. If I could buy the material, I might go there. Remember, I want
> kits or something simple. A CO2 cylinder with some of the material in it,
> pressurized with D2. You get, with it, the temperature profile shown as it
> was loaded and sealed. You feel it. It's warm. It stays warm. For a long
> time. But 3000 minutes probably isn't, that's only 50 hours. The Arata
> results show no decline in temperature at 50 hours, so I don't really know.
> As Jed has pointed out, Arata is frustrating. We are starting to get
> independent work that is more fully disclosed.
>
> The cost of that little cylinder is unknown at this point, because it's not
> just the palladium (there was 7 g of palladium in one of Arata's cells, it's
> highly processed and for all I can tell, the processing may be more
> expensive than the palladium.)
>
>
>  A gas phase system is a must, heat generated <100 deg Celsius is low
>> quality energy, >180-200 deg Celsius is OK, you can convert it in
>> electricity via steam.
>>
>
> Actually, hot water heater temperature is fine for direct heating, well
> below 100 C. Say 60 degrees? Central electrical power station, bad idea for
> this. Direct heating is a major consumer of energy.
>
>
>  This is the reason for disappointment that Leslie Case's process has
>> fizzled out. In my 1991 "Topology is the key" paper I have predicted it, but
>> it has died. Lacking imagination,
>> I think it was poisoned..
>>
>
> Could be. However, I'm not sure. It's like a lot of things in this field,
> there are many, many loose ends, caused by people varying the hell out of
> what they were doing, hoping to get lucky.
>
>

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