by Patrick ➕follow (59) 💰tip ignore
« First « Previous Comments 115,387 - 115,426 of 117,730 Next » Last » Search these comments
wanted super high pay
A few watts of power are necessary for lighting at night. The device used in the research generated 50 milliwatts per square meter, meaning just over 215 square feet of solar cell area would be required for nighttime lighting.
richwicks saysThat's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.
Reading the papers from Stanford and U.C. Davis this is still in the infancy stage. Kind of suspect this will get attention worldwide and a mad scramble will be on - there are $$ to be made here.
“The solar cell is a pretty good thermal emitter, meaning it likes to emit heat a bit at night,”
DooDahMan saysA few watts of power are necessary for lighting at night. The device used in the research generated 50 milliwatts per square meter, meaning just over 215 square feet of solar cell area would be required for nighttime lighting.
That's 10 watts. You could light a single light bulb with that or charge a couple of phones. That's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.
DooDahMan saysrichwicks saysThat's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.
But then again, there's madness in hype. Even if you know something isn't feasible doesn't mean you can't cash in on it.
I’ve been watching “The Dropout” on Hulu with the wife. Elizabeth Holmes basically took an idea for a blood test machine and talked a bunch of scientists and engineers into working for her company to design and produce it. She monetized the company with investment after investment while hyping the product that hadn’t even been created yet! This went on for like ten years and escalated so far that she was “worth” 4 billion dollars because she scared up so very much investment in her company. But it was all a fraud and the device was never created, only hyped. And eventually the scheme came crashing down when a whistleblower sounded fraud. She lost it all and went to jail.
richwicks saysDooDahMan saysrichwicks saysThat's a lot of surface area to run a light bulb.
But then again, there's madness in hype. Even if you know something isn't feasible doesn't mean you can't cash in on it.
I’ve been watching “The Dropout” on Hulu with the wife. Elizabeth Holmes basically took an idea for a blood test machine and talked a bunch of scientists and engineers into working for her company to design and produce it. She monetized the company with investment after investment while hyping the product that hadn’t even been created yet! This went on for like ten years and escalated so far that she was “worth” 4 billion dollars because she scared up so very much investment in her company. But it was all a fraud and th...
She's not in jail yet. Sentencing isn't until September 26.
Sure, the fraud was reported and investigated years ago, but for some people the justice system just seems to work for them. She was finally convicted in January, but you know sentencing in September. I think that will get postponed, as well. I'm sure she has coin hidden from the government that she can use for bribes. Probably everything postponed until after her appeals (in a few more years).
Do you really think anything except maybe a wrist slap is going to happen to her?
A Dallas neighborhood that's being demolished for high-rise condos shows how the housing crisis is changing the face of American cities
possession of a machine gun
Middle East oil that now goes to China will have to be redirected to Europe, again spending more time on the water.
Evidently concrete is porous and salt air gets to the rebar, which rusts and expands, degrading the concrete.
But then again, there's madness in hype. Even if you know something isn't feasible doesn't mean you can't cash in on it.
WookieMan saysWho cares?
Going to be some outward ripples here and more than a handful of hopeful people will experience some real financial pain.
One reason Florida has a big Yankee Leave Rate is that neither Trades nor Government Employees get within 20% of their IL/NY/NJ pay.
They do work, but the amount of hydrogen produced is so miniscule ... I'm not even sure it's enough to boost your speed idle by 50 rpm.
I think house prices in Florida will drop when the boomers die off in 25 years.
No. 3 Massachusetts’ reputation for top-notch schools and healthcare is a key lure as it was top-ranked for nurturing. It also scored high for livability (third-highest) and foundation (No. 14). The Bay State had mid-range grades for popularity (21st) and wealth (22nd) tied to its high cost of living.
I'm not aware that people are leaving Florida, it seems to be the contrary.
clambo saysI'm not aware that people are leaving Florida, it seems to be the contrary.
The 30% leave rate is constant, been true for decades.
The locations of the counties with the greatest natural decrease shifts when only larger counties (those with populations greater than 100,000) are considered. Of counties above this population threshold (shown in the table below), Citrus County, Florida, has the highest rate of natural decrease at 10.5 per thousand. Seven of the top 10 larger counties with the highest rate of natural decrease are in Florida.
« First « Previous Comments 115,387 - 115,426 of 117,730 Next » Last » Search these comments
patrick.net
An Antidote to Corporate Media
1,266,234 comments by 15,136 users - AmericanKulak online now