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Let's talk about Artificial Intelligence
facthunter replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
That only happened with the LUST batch of Robots they Made..Nev -
Nah I just Like to Talk FACTS with thinking people. Politics is often Fact free and a dangerous subject anytime in Most Places..I've had an interest in it from about the AGE of 11 (Because it is SO important to get it right) so I'm a bit unusual in that respect. . Nev
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It's probably FAKE pic. Most of this sort of thing is NOW, Nev
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The climate change debate continues.
facthunter replied to Phil Perry's topic in Science and Technology
To turn the Ore into Fe you need Coal and Lime in gigantic fire brick lined Blast furnaces. We shut our Facilities to do this down in Newcastle and Port Kembla years ago. Cruise ships use a lot of Bunker oil also as do Coal and Gas (and everything else) transporting ships. Nev -
I don't know what Trump has to do with this, or the amount of O2 in the atmosphere. After googling it, it appears that 30% of the weight of the ore is o2. This means for every 100,000 tonnes of ore we send overseas the ships are displacing 30,000 tonnes of o2. This weight is how much extra water the ship needs to be displacing so it is quite a significant number burning a lot more bunker oil. These ships carry between 180,000 and 400,000 tones of ore by the looks of it. The useful part of the ore is the iron!
- Today
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Are you referring to unsolicited phone calls? I totally agree. They are an insult to our intelligence. But we cannot blame the politicians for it, no matter what political party is in power. Further, I cannot stand the businesses that persist in using foreign call centres. Or A.I. voice prompts. But I still cannot blame politicians for such business decisions that create poor customer service (even the big profitable banks are often guilty of it).
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gotta larf. Just displays the level of Amerikan ignorance for the world to see. But the world doesn't neen any more proof. of course I question 'is that pic real?' These days truth challenges irony a lot.
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There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
nomadpete replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
Like all 'end of use' engineering stories....... I'm still waiting to hear all about the grand innovative car tyre recycling plan. or the grand plastics recycling plan......... or the innovative nuclear waste recycling plan. We hoomin beans are not very innovative when we finish playing with our toys. -
There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
randomx replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
Yeah right, be great if they could find some way of doing something with them. -
Well I wish Indians were refrained from making phone calls to strangers, trying to understand their Indian English is almost impossible. Why do companies do that? Why don't they employ people who speak plain understandable English?
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I know they were late, but over 100 years late?
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I've heard a lot of Sky News talking points and very few facts in this discussion. If you want to come back to me with some validated statistics of exactly how our current immigration numbers are making life worse here, then I'll listen. Until then it's all just hot air.
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There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
Marty_d replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
Recycling the blades is a challenge. Cement co-processing seems to be the best option currently. There'd have to be some innovative reuses of them - there was a story in ABC recently of someone making surfboards out of them. I'd have thought they could be incorporated into fences, walls, roofs etc. https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/15/14/2414 -
There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
old man emu replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
Like all new things, if they create a problem, eventually a solution will be found. I heard that solar panels are hard to do anything with, but how long have we have lots of them? I bet people are working feverously to develop ways to get something useful from the junk. I have faith in the fact that someone eventually finds a way to utilise the smell of a turd. -
The climate change debate continues.
randomx replied to Phil Perry's topic in Science and Technology
And sadly the wildlife , which we seem hell bent of wiping out too. -
There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
randomx replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
Earlier in l didn't mind wind farms. But through Vic now, west side anyway, they're all over the place and still popping up. lt's not a practical solution bc 1, sounds like they'll need a lot more than this to make much of a dent at all but there's already too many. 2nd thing l've read, is that the props blades only have a 10-15yr life, then what do you do with those. The US already has 1000s of acs of old props stacked up, saw pics. Far as l know there's not really anything they can be recycled into . -
There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
old man emu replied to old man emu's topic in Science and Technology
Here's a link to the project's website: https://milpullingwindfarm.com/ -
Just to clarify teh matter of the US entry into WWII. The actions of the Japanese Empire were as a result of the USA's trade embargo on oil to Japan. Therefore Japan set a goal of capturing the oil fields of Borneo. Like all good politicians, Japan camouflaged its goal by declaring that its actions were to liberate colonial South-East Asia and establish an economic zone controlled by Asian peoples. The attack on Pearl Harbour and invasion of the Philipines and South-East Asia would have brought about a war between the USA and Japan. However, Hitler buggered things by declaring war on the USA a few days later. If he had pulled his head in, the USA might not have entered the Eurpoean war. Not likely, I suppose, since the USA was arming Britain. But who knows? There would have been two separate wars. If there had been two separate wars, the USA might not have come out of the period as economically powerful as it did and Europe and Japan so weak. That would have made the modern world a different place. One could say that Hitler's declaration of war was the "sliding door moment" in human history.
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The climate change debate continues.
old man emu replied to Phil Perry's topic in Science and Technology
As I said, I drove down to Sydney last week. For most of the way from Mudgee to Mount Victoria in the Blue Mountains the dead trunks of thousands of trees destroyed by bushfires in 2019 stand as ghostly reminders of the ferocity of our bushfires. While most of the damage was done to native forest, there are hectares and hectares of pine tree trunks marking to path of the fires. -
The point is that Nev is a Grumpy Old man, and we love him for it.
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There's gunna be a windfarm in my neighbourhood
old man emu posted a topic in Science and Technology
We had our local show this weekend. I got the chance to speak to representatives of the mob which is in the process of gaining approval for an eighty-tower windfarm within 20 kms of my place. Eighty towers seems like a big crowd, but when I was shown to proposed location of each tower, I saw that they were separated from each other by close on a kilometre. My first thought when I heard of the proposal was that teh towers would be visible from the Newell Highway which is located to the east of the proposed area. I learned that the closest tower woulod be about 5 kms from the highway, with a line of low "hills" between them. So that's no longer a concern to me. I think I've whinged before that around here it can be pretty windy, nd said that it would be ideal for a wind farm. Seems I'm right in some ways and mistaken in others. I experience wind as air movement within about 10 metres of the ground surface. That air movement is very turbulent compared to air movement 100 metres above ground where the turbine blades are. That turbulence, caused by the moving air particles colliding withthe ground and trees and ricocheting into air particles higher up. These collisions rob the air particles of energy due to loss of momentum. If the air movement is free of the turbulence, then there is more energy for the collision between the moving air and the turbine blades. That's why the towers are so high. I was also told that studies locally have shown that the most consistent air movement begins at these heights after sunset and stay pretty good until just before dawn. That means the turbines are best able to produce electricity at night in complement to solar panels. That sounds good. What about the effects on farm incomes? The builders don't resume the land they need like the government does when it wants to build roads etc. It seems that the land is rented from the landholders at a rate determined by the generating capacity of the turbine. An example was that of a property with two towers on it. Based on the generating capacity of the intended turbines, renting the land for two towers would return $100,000 p.a. CPI-indexed for a contract period of thirty years. That's got to provide a degree of stabilisation of farm income. I bet any landowner would love to get that sort of money, especially in the present circumstance when it looks like a drought is on the way. Why does it take so long to get a windfarm up an running. Would you beleive that it is in part due to the very people who pursue a renewable world? One of the environmental reports required deals with the effect of the turbines on bats and birds. Getting the data required a study lasting two years. Then there are the Native Heritage studies and gaining clearances from the local indigenous community. Then there are the geo-technical studies, planning permissions yadda yadda. We should consider the economic benefits. It is said that the workforce required to create the windfarm complex is about 500 persons. These people will be newcomers who will have to be fed, housed and entertained for several years. Already the local Council has allocated an area for an accommodation camp. Someone has to build it. An extra 500 people will hopefully boost local trade, although the proximity of the City of Dubbo, about 30 minutes' drive away might not do good for my town. Still, it's money coming into the district. In my opinion, there is nothing wrong with this project. Really, it is going to be 'out of sight, out of mind' to teh majority of the population. And kn owing what I know about smart crows and blind bats, I don't envisage too many mid-air collsions with revolving turbine blades. -
It isn't just Trump. The US has always done as it pleases. It used to be "Not our fight" as in only getting in to WW1 in 2017, then in WW2 Roosevelt couldn't get the support of Congress & only got involved after Pearl Harbor. Since then we have honoured the treaties like ANZUS & got involved in Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan sent peacekeepers to other places the US has screwed up. Trump has just insulted every ally the US has ever had as in his comments about Afghanistan. He starts a war then complains NATO won't come to his aid. NATO is a defence treaty, an attack on one is an attack on all, not if one member attacks someone then everyone else attacks as well. Complains Australia won't help with the blockaid on Hormuz when we were never asked. The list of his stuffups and insults is endless & reportedly is considering recognising Argentinas claim on the Falklands as punishment for the UK not supporting him in his crazy actions against Iran.
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The climate change debate continues.
facthunter replied to Phil Perry's topic in Science and Technology
I don't now what quality the Alpine forest is Now because of the too frequent bushfires. There's a lot of Plantation "Radiata"pine which in treated form is used for a Lot of House frames. America's forest quality leaves ours for dead. Cedar is all but gone. Silky oak coachwood, etc also. Pin Oak makes a good timber. A lot was planted in Armadale in NSW I have a few Mature ones here on my block that I planted. They drop a lot of leaves and I am 1500 ft above sea Level. at 36 degrees Lat, so they thrive. No diseases and they don't drop branches, IF you prune them correctly there's no sign of where the Branch was left in the Bark.. Nev -
The climate change debate continues.
old man emu replied to Phil Perry's topic in Science and Technology
And yet Australia possesses 17% of the World's forest.
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