I started reading it. Despite the earlier version, this is very well written
and documented - and worth anyone's 4 bucks. I like the large font for easier
reading so Kindle is the way to go.
As Nick sez there is important older historical stuff that may have been
vaguely known to specialists,
It was new to me! Amazon.com did not bring it to my attention previously.
Maybe the Kindle version is new?
- Jed
They're not new. I've had copies for several years (at least 3). They are
hugely detailed. Notable is the history of anomalous stuff noted 100 years
ago that got forgotten once fission got discovered.
Nick Palmer
On the side of the Planet - and the people - because they're worth it
On Wed, 19 A
Terry Blanton wrote:
> If it's a new book, why are the reviews dated 2017? And "John
> Smith"...siriusly?
Hmmm let;s see
1) LENR warps time2) Pocahontas was also a big LENR fan
If it's a new book, why are the reviews dated 2017? And "John
Smith"...siriusly?
On Wed, Aug 19, 2020 at 3:45 PM Jones Beene wrote:
> Jed Rothwell wrote:
>
> See: Fusion Fiasco, by Steve Krivit
>
> https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01N2TDWIY
>
> "draw on formerly inaccessible archives"
>
>
>
>
Jed Rothwell wrote:
See: Fusion Fiasco, by Steve Krivit
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01N2TDWIY
"draw on formerly inaccessible archives"
Anyone know the details about these "archives" ?
Sounds like reason enough to order the Kindle version, which I did but cannot
get to it for a f
See:
Fusion Fiasco, by Steve Krivit
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01N2TDWIY
Blurb:
Steven B. Krivit's *Explorations in Nuclear Research* three-book
series (*Hacking
the Atom, Fusion Fiasco, Lost History*) describes the emergence of a new
field of science, one that bridges chemistry and phy
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