South_Cheesecake6316

South_Cheesecake6316 t1_jecrjv9 wrote

Currently the cheapest way to obtain hydrogen is by extracting it from petroleum products, the process releasing carbon dioxide and other byproducts.
Ultimately you'll get less useful energy out of it than if you just used the fossil fuels outright.

Hydrogen is already somewhat expensive compared to other fuel sources, so getting most buisesses to obtain it in environmentally friendly ways would be a challenge.

There's also the issue of storage. Gaseous hydrogen requires large pressurized storage tanks, and ends up being less energy dense in terms of volume than other fossil fuels. Liquid hydrogen of course can be much more energy dense, but requires a lot of energy to cool it to the point where it becomes a liquid state, and further cooling to keep it there.

Although liquid hydrogen has its use as a specialized high energy density fuel, at the current moment, I don't see hydrogen as an economicaly viable fuel.

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South_Cheesecake6316 t1_jecp55k wrote

Currently the cheapest way to obtain hydrogen is by extracting it from petroleum products, the process releasing carbon dioxide and other byproducts.
Ultimately you'll get less useful energy out of it than if you just used the fossil fuels outright.

Hydrogen is already somewhat expensive compared to other fuel sources, so getting most buisesses to obtain it in environmentally friendly ways would be a challenge.

There's also the issue of storage. Gaseous hydrogen requires large pressurized storage tanks, and ends up being less energy dense in terms of volume than other fossil fuels. Liquid hydrogen of course can be much more energy dense, but requires a lot of energy to cool it to the point where it becomes a liquid state, and further cooling to keep it there.

Although liquid hydrogen has its use as a specialized high energy density fuel, at the current moment, I don't see hydrogen as an economicaly viable fuel.

1

South_Cheesecake6316 t1_jecllt2 wrote

We already have neural networks that can create images that roughly resemble what a person is looking at.

I don't think it would entirely be out of the question for people to be able make videos from thought when asked to recall a memory.

However, although the subject and location of these videos would often be correct, I doubt the smaller details in these videos would be at all consistantly accurate or exist at all. I highly doubt that you would be able to scan a person's memory for clues like in some sci-fi movie, because ultimately memory is flawed and peoples brains will fabricate details to fill in the gaps.

Short answer, yes but it won't be a perfect copy of what happened.

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