Axil--

I generate my own power in my house by solar and have no grid power within 60 
miles.  Many people do.  I would love a home style Rossi heat source, 
particularly, if it had a thermionic electron generator or even a simple 
thermocouple hookup.  I looks to me like Bill Gates, Woods, etal.,  have a 
patent on such a thermionic source.  

Bob
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Axil Axil 
  To: vortex-l 
  Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2015 4:44 PM
  Subject: Re: [Vo]:two answers from Bazhutov and current LENR news


  The personal home based LENR reactor is not going to sell. But a utility 
based high output LENR generator station will be readily accepted by the 
utilities. DGT and Rossi are wasting time in developing a home based unit. 


  Personal power generators are only installed in a few well to do households. 
Everybody else uses the GRID. This is true now and into any foreseeable LENR 
future.


  The future of LENR is a grid based   20 Gigawatt LENR utility power station.


  On Sat, Jan 17, 2015 at 4:30 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote:

    Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote: 
      But somebody must lose in this picture. The big question mark: can the 
upcoming tidal wave be stopped by OPEC/Big Oil … or is it too late for them?


    My answer based on history:


    No, it cannot be stopped by them, and yet, no, it is not too late. What I 
mean is, if they act now they might slow it down, stop it, or co-opt it, but 
history shows they will probably ignore this development until it is far too 
late. Look at similar examples such as:


    The replacement of local passenger railroads by automobiles, circa 1920 - 
1930.


    The replacement of long distance passenger trains and ocean liners by 
airplanes 1945 - 1960. This led to the final collapse of the Pennsylvania 
Railroad, which was the biggest and most powerful corporation on earth in 1920.


    The replacement of mainframe and minicomputers by personal computers, 
software, and by MPP small computers such as the Googleplex, 1980 - 2000. This 
bankrupted DEC, Data General and it almost bankrupted IBM, which was an 
astounding turn of events.


    The destruction of the steel industry and the recent bankruptcy of GM, both 
caused in part by legacy problems such as large numbers of retirees. This 
problem was entirely foreseeable, but it is hard to think of a way it might 
have been circumvented.


    There are many less well known examples. Very often, the most powerful and 
prosperous corporations in one era have been destroyed in 10 or 20 years by 
changes in the marketplace or by new technology. The usual narrative is that 
the new technology was unforeseen, but in fact, if you read accounts of these 
eras, in most cases the new technology was widely predicted, and in some cases 
it was even invented by the companies it later destroyed. The IBM PC is a good 
example.


    If, today, a power company or an oil company were to invest in cold fusion 
and bring it to fruition, I have no doubt this would end up destroying that 
company. But they might not agree with me, so they might do it. If you had told 
an IBM executive in 1980 that the contract they just negotiated with a two-bit 
company called Microsoft for a minor product -- an operating system -- would 
nearly bankrupt the company in the 1990, that executive would think you are 
crazy.


    The book "The Black Swan" is full stories of events that supposedly came 
out of left field and surprised the experts. The author is wrong. Most of the 
ones relating to technology did not come out of left field, and did not 
surprise the experts. Most of them did not surprise me, personally. I knew more 
about some of these developments when they happened than the author does now, 
and I spotted several mistakes in the book. Complete surprises are rare in 
technology. Cold fusion was a complete surprise, but after 1991 it was obvious 
that it might become a practical source of energy. If it does, people who are 
surprised will have only themselves to blame. They should have paid attention, 
and they should have stopped inventing ridiculous reasons to deny the facts. 
History shows that the people running oil companies and the like will probably 
not look closely or take the technology seriously until it is too late.


    It will be too late when the public becomes aware of the fact that cold 
fusion is real and that in the near term it has the potential to save every 
person thousands of dollars a year. Once that becomes generally known, no power 
on earth will be able to stop the research, development and deployment of cold 
fusion. People such as the Koch brothers will spend billions of dollars trying 
to stop it with PR campaigns and by buying Members of Congress, but they will 
overwhelmed by a tsunami of public opinion.


    - Jed



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