kidicarus89
kidicarus89 t1_j7komkp wrote
Reply to comment by FrankieMint in Grand Canyon South Rim [OC][4640x6960] by supercooper3000
Coming up into the lush greenery of Indian Garden feels amazing after those brutal miles along the Tonto.
kidicarus89 t1_iz9zkv6 wrote
Reply to comment by beef-medallions in Ethereum’s energy switch saves as much electricity as entire Ireland uses | The success of The Merge concept may now serve as a roadmap to enable a switch from Proof of Work to Proof of Stake in Bitcoin. by chrisdh79
Or maybe all crypto is shite and just put your money in a 401k and not worry about this bullshit.
kidicarus89 t1_iz9zda0 wrote
kidicarus89 t1_ixf50ng wrote
Reply to comment by AcademicGuest in Humans are going back to the Moon, and beyond – but how will we feed them? by Gari_305
Shut down the space program. This guy doesn’t want to go to the moon.
kidicarus89 t1_ixdkj7w wrote
Reply to comment by dontpet in Is the future of carbon-capture technology electrochemistry? | Colorado Arts and Sciences Magazine | University of Colorado Boulder by ProFoxxxx
A lot of that power could go to air scrubbing for cleaner air in urban areas as well, which could save thousands of lives globally.
kidicarus89 t1_ix1su3p wrote
Reply to comment by Electrical_Tip352 in Survey on 12,000 secondary school-aged students (12-18Y) shows that although many adolescents are spending considerable time gaming (at least 3.5hours/day),it is not having a negative impact on the wellbeing and 44% of ‘heavy’ gamers reported higher wellbeing than those who play less or don’t play by giuliomagnifico
Since he’s now 12, does his school have sports that he can try out? That always seemed to help me socialize a lot more at that age, with the added bonus of often being too tired to play games.
kidicarus89 t1_ivexwha wrote
Reply to comment by PM_ME_YOUR_STEAM_ID in Rooftop solar trumps all fossil fuels as renewables smash more records on main grid [Australia] by EnergyTransitionNews
Wow, what state are you in? In the Southwest Solar is pretty much a no brainer if you have a new roof. Payoff is usually 4-6 years.
kidicarus89 t1_itb5zpw wrote
Reply to comment by anasui1 in Apple Should Be Giving ‘Acapulco’ the ‘Ted Lasso’ Treatment by rmaloney3
I don’t know why people use broad appeal as an insult
kidicarus89 t1_it3pkh8 wrote
Reply to comment by ShadowController in Aeromine says they have solved many of the problems that have long made domestic rooftop wind power compare poorly to solar panels. They claim their "motionless" rooftop wind generators deliver up to 50% more energy than a solar array of the same price while taking up just 10% of the roof space. by lughnasadh
Imagine endless rows of these on those gigantic mile long industrial warehouses?
kidicarus89 t1_is6mp46 wrote
Reply to comment by marigolds6 in US Federal Reserve sees EV “battery belt” developing as greater than 15 battery manufacturing facilities worth greater than $40 billion are in development in the US by ForHidingSquirrels
There are thousands of refineries, mines, mills, chemical and industrial plants spread across the country. Strong regulations can prevent future superfund sites, so what’s your point?
kidicarus89 t1_iqs137n wrote
Reply to comment by beders in The US's largest ever combined wind+solar/battery electricity plant has opened in Oregon with a generating/storage capacity of 350MW/120MWh by lughnasadh
Nothing. It’s becoming clear that solar and wind will be cheaper, less complex, and faster to build than coal/gas/nuclear plants. The economic argument is becoming harder to ignore.
kidicarus89 t1_iqoeg4b wrote
Reply to comment by killthegrid in The US's National Renewable Energy Laboratory wants to make decentralized microgrids as simple to set up and operate as diesel generators, and has created a prototype that is much simpler than existing microgrid technology. by lughnasadh
That’s the dream right there.
kidicarus89 t1_j7n0o7v wrote
Reply to comment by invent_or_die in New battery seems to offer it all: lithium-metal/lithium-air electrodes by nastratin
No these guys want the kind of science that they know from movies, where a lone scientist tinkering in his basement stumbles upon a revolutionary invention purely through sheer determination and luck.