Re: Brown's Gas Generators and Mills' Hydrinos?

2006-05-11 Thread Frederick Sparber
Getting difficult to tell the difference. :-) http://pureenergysystems.com/academy/JoeCell2006/ Brown's Gas Generators: http://brownsgas.com/ Randy Mills' Blacklight Power: http://www.Blacklightpower.com/ Argon catalyzed Hydrino Formation in the ICE combustion cylinder? 4-cycle (0.97

Re: Cold Fusion Trend

2006-05-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
Keith Nagel wrote: http://www.google.com/trends?q=%22cold+fusion%22 Better bail faster Jed, the boat is sinking. (grin) That is a weird graph. There is nothing on Y-axis. The 2005 blip may be the effect of the DoE Review, and I will bet the 2006 blip was caused by Taleyarkhan. - Jed

Re: Cold Fusion Trend

2006-05-11 Thread Jones Beene
And how much of it relates to the software package? The encouraging bit is that them main city for downloads seems to be Washington. - Original Message - From: Jed Rothwell Subject: Re: Cold Fusion Trend Keith Nagel wrote:

Hybrids Not The Answer - Yet.

2006-05-11 Thread Zell, Chris
Consumer Reports claims hybrid gas mileage is 19 mpg lower than the EPA says and are among the worst in mileage exaggeration. http://autos.msn.com/advice/CRArt.aspx?contentid=4023460 Given the cost premium over a regular vehicle, it's likely that hybrids are actually wasting more energy thru

'Fire from Ice' the prequel

2006-05-11 Thread Jones Beene
Speaking of Fire from ice and a possible *primordial* solar hydrino population (part of what is known as 'dark matter') the following astronomical observations can give an alternate explanation for the putative excess heat (in the form of EUV) seen by Mills/BLP... not to mention, expose a

Re: Cold Fusion Trend

2006-05-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
At 09:54 AM 5/11/2006, Jones Beene wrote: And how much of it relates to the software package? I think that is usually listed as one word, ColdFusion. When you search for cold fusion with Google, it asks if you mean coldfusion. No doubt there is some crossover. My speculation about the

Re: Hybrids Not The Answer - Yet.

2006-05-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
Zell, Chris wrote: Consumer Reports claims hybrid gas mileage is 19 mpg lower than the EPA says and are among the worst in mileage exaggeration. http://autos.msn.com/advice/CRArt.aspx?contentid=4023460 But they are the best in mileage! According to the Consumer Reports list on this page! It is

Re: OT: Bertrand Russell- In Praise of Idleness

2006-05-11 Thread OrionWorks
From ThomasClark123 ... B.F. Skinner in his book Walden II, shows us how we can all live comfortably working only part-time. If only some rich millionaires had built B.F. Skinners Walden II towns 50 years ago, we would all be living in them today, and working part-time with plenty of

Re: OT: Bertrand Russell- In Praise of Idleness

2006-05-11 Thread ThomasClark123
In a message dated 5/11/2006 11:55:18 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: B.F. Skinner in his book Walden II, shows us how we can all live comfortably working only part-time. If only some rich millionaires had built B.F. Skinners Walden II towns 50 years ago, we would all be

Re: OT: Bertrand Russell- In Praise of Idleness

2006-05-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
I agree with Russell for the most part, but this is a serious error: Modern technique has made it possible to diminish enormously the amount of labor required to secure the necessaries of life for everyone. This was made obvious during the war. At that time all the men in the armed forces,

Re: OT: Bertrand Russell- In Praise of Idleness

2006-05-11 Thread ThomasClark123
In a message dated 5/11/2006 10:43:15 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: [Lloyd Miller Sez:] Skinner was TOTALITARIAN SCUM! Totally opposed by his own explicit words to freedom and dignity. [Lloyd said] [Lloyd Miller Sez:] Bertrand Russell was environmentalist extremist,

Re: OT: Bertrand Russell- In Praise of Idleness

2006-05-11 Thread Harry Veeder
The essay is dated 1932 (at the top), so Russell is referring world war 1. Harry Jed Rothwell wrote: I agree with Russell for the most part, but this is a serious error: Modern technique has made it possible to diminish enormously the amount of labor required to secure the necessaries of

OT: the political economy of energy distribution

2006-05-11 Thread Harry Veeder
In the 24th century there is no need for money in Gene Roddenberry's world of Star Trek. Gene Roddenberry never really explained how such a society could function without money, but a possible system was outlined decades before Star Trek first appeared on television...

Re: OT: Bertrand Russell- In Praise of Idleness

2006-05-11 Thread Jed Rothwell
Harry Veeder wrote: The essay is dated 1932 (at the top), so Russell is referring world war 1. Goodness! I sure missed that one. However, it was true of World War I, albeit to a lesser extent. The British economy was dependent upon US food and weapons production from 1916 to 1918, and they

RE: the political economy of energy distribution

2006-05-11 Thread OrionWorks
Zell wrote: At the risk of being classified as a Startrek nerd, they did use something called gold pressed latinum on Startrek Deep Space Nine. The Ferengis were always after it. The energy certificate concept is interesting, particularly with computer technology in mind. Take

Re: OT: Bertrand Russell- In Praise of Idleness

2006-05-11 Thread Pteranodon
On Thursday 11 May 2006 15:10, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: In a message dated 5/11/2006 10:43:15 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: [Lloyd Miller Sez:] Skinner was TOTALITARIAN SCUM! Totally opposed by his own explicit words to freedom and dignity. [Lloyd said] [Lloyd Miller

Re: The Pappajo engine

2006-05-11 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Wed, 10 May 2006 07:21:33 -0700 (PDT): Hi Jones, [snip] Yes, as I was about to say g hydrinos are likely to be involved but as an agent for an Auger cascade methodology, and perhaps not in the way you are suggesting, based on Mills' published

Re: the political economy of energy distribution

2006-05-11 Thread Harry Veeder
The article does not say this, but I suspect something like capitalism will still be required. A percentage of energy tokens may go unused because many people may be happy to consume less than their alloted share. The job of capitalists will be to compete for these surplus tokens ensuring the

Re: The Pappajo engine

2006-05-11 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Frederick Sparber's message of Wed, 10 May 2006 09:33:52 -0600: Hi, [snip] Robin did an inventory of atmospheric Argon-40 based on the earth's lithosphere-hydrosphere Potassium abundance and the numbers suggest (to me) that Electronium (*e-) formed in K-40 decay (even in rocks) is in

Re: the political economy of energy distribution

2006-05-11 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Harry Veeder's message of Fri, 12 May 2006 00:19:02 -0500: Hi, [snip] The article does not say this, but I suspect something like capitalism will still be required. A percentage of energy tokens may go unused because many people may be happy to consume less than their alloted share.