MeteorOnMars
MeteorOnMars t1_je1rw3j wrote
I’d say the odds have significantly increased over the last week.
MeteorOnMars t1_jaq5lkr wrote
Reply to comment by Solid_Anxiety8176 in Figure: One robot for every human on the planet. by GodOfThunder101
That is not arbitrary at all.
It doesn’t mean “8 billion robots”, it means a robot for each person.
This implies that every human has a physically capable ally.
MeteorOnMars t1_j8r1mkd wrote
Reply to Good old fusilli by PaleSubstance2
Get outta here, you joker.
(Repeat)
MeteorOnMars t1_j3gq20s wrote
Reply to comment by amitym in Flying boats and artificial photosynthesis for cleaner shipping by perpetual_C000009A
“Hand on the lever”… I’m going to steal that phrase.
I often try to emphasize with people that the rate of progress in any particular direction is so fundamentally based on how much we care and try.
MeteorOnMars t1_j2inhym wrote
Reply to comment by Alpha-Sierra-Charlie in can someone explain the difference between quantum computing and classic computing in simpler words? how can quantum computing benefit us from a consumer perspective? by village_aapiser
Yes. But, only for some kinds of calculations that are looking at combinations or choices between things.
MeteorOnMars t1_j2hurbf wrote
Reply to can someone explain the difference between quantum computing and classic computing in simpler words? how can quantum computing benefit us from a consumer perspective? by village_aapiser
For some kinds of problems, a classical computer considers combinations one at a time:
ABC
ACB
BAC
BCA
CAB
CBA
While a quantum computer does it all on one step:
ABC/ACB/BAC/BCA/CAB/CBA
This is because, in some ways, quantum particles can be in more than one state at the same time!
Now imagine I had used ABCDEFGH for the example. You would be scrolling all day to get to the end of the classic computer example.
MeteorOnMars t1_j21mu2x wrote
Reply to comment by DynamicResonater in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
I bet his truck uses more electricity per mile than your Tesla does (because refining his gas requires electricity).
MeteorOnMars t1_j21mf2t wrote
Reply to comment by Kidrellik in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
The locality delusion is one of the reasons I advocate cutting fossil fuel use regardless of where you live.
If you don’t buy gas at your local pump, the effect ripples through the whole system and is felt by every supplier.
MeteorOnMars t1_j1ybom0 wrote
Reply to comment by Guiver5000 in Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
Nuclear (fission or fusion) will never scale much beyond what they currently supply. They as inefficient with regards to water usage and have strong water-requirements with regard to access and temperature. With increasing global temperature and water scarcity, these pressures against nuclear are going to keep it down.
Edit: I mean fractionally supply. They might increase moderately in absolute supply.
MeteorOnMars t1_j1ybgib wrote
Reply to Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
For years, when listing the reasons to switch off fossil fuels, I’d mention “bad actor suppliers like Russia and Saudi Arabia”.
But, I kinda gave up trying to convince people this was a serious point.
Then Russia sadly made that abstract argument blindingly obvious.
MeteorOnMars t1_iycg0f0 wrote
Reply to Autism Breakthrough: New Treatment Significantly Improves Social Skills and Brain Function by Shelfrock77
I fact that hyperbaric oxygen therapy is an approved treatment in some really interesting cases has me intrigued. I bet we keep getting studies from these groups on more and more conditions - including effects of otherwise completely nominal humans.
MeteorOnMars t1_ixjfum5 wrote
I bet he is quite abled, actually.
MeteorOnMars t1_isaxqwq wrote
Reply to Solar silicon manufacturing about doubling from 2022 into 2023 - predicted to lead to another cycle of oversupply driving solar panel pricing down by ForHidingSquirrels
Solar is being installed at a rate faster than required to charge every new vehicle (car and truck) as an EV!
MeteorOnMars t1_irx118k wrote
Road oil demand peaking in 2027 or earlier would be fantastic.
MeteorOnMars t1_jeg7ukp wrote
Reply to These little worm dudes have formed a dance circle around this piling by DBreezy867
The post is life The post is truth All hail the post