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discoutdynamite

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discoutdynamite
·hace 8 meses·discuss
This isnt exactly new. This is a obvious and predicted effect of ECE Theor. I'm surprised that neither the article nor any other commentor mentioned it yet.

tl;dr on ECE Theory: Gravity is a curvature of spacetime, electromagnetism is a torsion.
discoutdynamite
·hace 8 meses·discuss
Skimmed the patent. Its 99% a pedantic and exhaustive explanation of a linear motor. The only interesting thing they mention, is this:

The inertial mass of an object varies with the variation of its magnetic field and therefore a variation of inertia can be created

But they provide no explanation whatsoever for how a glorified linear motor is relativistically (or otherwise) affecting inertial mass. This could be operating under a novel application of ECE Theory, wherein they are using magnetism to affect gravity, but I doubt it. They would have claimed so.
discoutdynamite
·hace 8 meses·discuss
My second favorite Johnny story is how he did the math for the explosive lenses on the atom bomb, overnight. What we now call partial derivatives, was not yet rigourously proven and studied, but he signed off on it, and it worked. For the sake of the contention in the article, I am distinctly thinking of Grigori Perelman as almost an echo to this phenomenon. He felt his contributions were useful but not miraculous, and himself almost ordinary, that he was being recognized more for sake of national/racial partisanship.
discoutdynamite
·hace 8 meses·discuss
This almost deserves to be nominated for the AI darwin awards. "Volunteer community destroyed and leadership self-exiled because someone at corporate thought thier machine translation was better than native speakers, of one of the world's most notoriously difficult languages."

I would bet money that Japan has thier own yearly "business fail awards" and this is gonna wind up there. "Just hop on a quick call, never mind the time zone!"
discoutdynamite
·hace 8 meses·discuss
they can do it, but not poetically. not yet. just "contributing" a few, including "strawberry" for the memories.
discoutdynamite
·hace 8 meses·discuss
You may not have a chance. If you did, it would be: 1. Identify the manufacturer stock number for the battery (part number) 2. Investigate the market for said part (may require professional connections) 3. "Salt" your sales offers with the battery part number and condition.

Over/Under goal is a refurbisher or similar middleman buying it just for the battery. Good luck, let us know how it goes
discoutdynamite
·hace 9 meses·discuss
Yep, you get what you pay for. They've started fielding systems that will handle extremes much better, but you dont get that kind of performance without tradeoffs. cascade systems, 200psi r600, 450psi CO2, refrigeration systems are an engineering game irl. They require much more experience to design, setup, and charge correctly. The biggest issue I have with heat pumps for life support heating/cooling, is they have so many single points of failure its scary. Compressors can and will die if anything else in the system goes too far out of the intended cycle. Extreme weather moments or natural disasters can physically break condensors, evaporators, and lines. Electrical surges can and will fry computers, inverters, and controllers. And almost none of those can be serviced on your own.

t. certified
discoutdynamite
·hace 9 meses·discuss
Devil's take: let them die. Having drivers on the road who are not capable of following basic and obvious posted safety rules, is a hazard to everyone. They need to be "not driving" at whatever cost. Its probably not that expensive to let them get steamrolled once, and since its clearly their own fault theres no public liability. Since the safety of cars has increased dramatically over the last few decades, many more bad drivers are not being forcibly removed from the roads. People survive, and frequently without injuries, more than ever before. People have to learn how to behave on public roads, sometimes the hard way is the only way.

t. Professional Driver
discoutdynamite
·hace 9 meses·discuss
How to fix automotive repair:

1. The development and use of "rate books" is de facto price fixing. labor is a cost, and it has a price. Ban them by law.

2. Take the computers away from the engineers. There should be no ability to drag and drop assemblies to reshape them. No ability to make parts that are computed to barely meet requirements.

3. Patent licensing goes to a small flat fee per item per use. How about $1. A modern car can have upwards of 10,000 active patents for all components. All "Design Copyrights" are voided. A good design isnt created, it is recognized.

4. End nearly all "mandatory technologies" and features. Straight from Hayek et al, Incredible Bread Machine on wheels.

t. a Greasy Dirty Technician
discoutdynamite
·hace 10 meses·discuss
interesting work here, worth reading through. This is backed up by Dabrowski's work, also. Perhaps "personality formation" itself is also a subconscious skill subject to overexcitation.
discoutdynamite
·hace 10 meses·discuss
needs a better title. They've 'united', but nothing has been bought back so far.
discoutdynamite
·hace 10 meses·discuss
For reference and comparison, one of the other mental math systems is the Trachtenberg system. Soroban is much faster, but Trachtenberg is quite reasonable to teach people of any age.