Happy thread :)

Status
Not open for further replies.

injinji

Well-Known Member
How ya make steel in space from magnetically separated lunar regolith, or how you can make it on earth without the carbon and coke process.

Fossil free steel. Another giant step towards net carbon zero?
This week's Nova was about asteroids. Both avoiding them and mining them. They are not thinking of sending the material back to earth. It is to save the power needed to get it in orbit. Anyway at this point the main thing they are after is water, ie rocket fuel.

 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
People have been stealing dogs lately, there was a case here in NS recently.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No, You Beg
Adopting used to be a good thing that good people could do. These days, you’re probably not good enough.

1627048310068.png

It was a rainy Sunday in June, and Danielle had fallen in love.

The 23-year-old paralegal spent the first part of her afternoon in McCarren Park, envying the happy dog owners with their furry companions. Then she stumbled upon an adoption event in a North Brooklyn beer garden, where a beagle mix being paraded out of the rescue van reminded her of the dog she grew up with, Snickers. It all felt like fate, so she filled out an application on the spot. She was then joined by her best friend and roommate, Alexa, in sitting across from a serious-looking young woman with a ponytail who was searching for a reason to break her heart.

Danielle and Alexa were confident they would be leaving with Millie that day: After all, they had a 1,000-square-foot apartment within blocks of McCarren and full-time employment with the ability to work from home for the foreseeable future. But the volunteer kept posing questions that they hadn’t prepared for. What if they stopped living together? What if Danielle’s girlfriend’s collie mix didn’t get along with her new family member? What would be the solution if the dog needed expensive training for behavioral issues? Which vet were they planning to use?

All of which, upon reflection, were reasonable questions. But when it came to the diet they planned for the dog, they realized they were out of their depth. Danielle recalled that Snickers had lived to 16 and a half on a diet of Blue Buffalo Wilderness, the most expensive stuff that was available at her parents’ Bay Area pet store. “Would you want to live on the best version of Lean Cuisine for the rest of your life?” sniffed the volunteer with a frown. She would instead recommend a small-batch, raw-food brand that cost, when they looked it up later, up to $240 a bag. “If you were approved, you’d need to get the necessary supplies and take time off from work starting now,” the dog gatekeeper said. “And the first 120 days would be considered a trial period, meaning we would reserve the right to take your dog back at any time.” The would-be adopters nodded solemnly.

The friends rose from the bench and thanked the volunteer for her time. Believing they were out of earshot, the volunteer summed up the interview to a colleague: “You just walked by, and you’re fixated on this one dog, and it’s because you had a beagle growing up, but you want to make your roommate the legal adopter?”
 
Last edited:

hanimmal

Well-Known Member

It bums me out I think I only have a rookie card of the other Michigan QB and not Brady's. It is amazing how well his career has been since splitting time at U of M.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
For the optimists out there and those with kids and grandkids...
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Society is right on track for a global collapse, new study of infamous 1970s report finds
A steep downturn in human population and quality of life could be coming in the 2040s, the report finds.

Human society is on track for a collapse in the next two decades if there isn't a serious shift in global priorities, according to a new reassessment of a 1970s report, Vice reported

In that report — published in the bestselling book "The Limits to Growth" (1972) — a team of MIT scientists argued that industrial civilization was bound to collapse if corporations and governments continued to pursue continuous economic growth, no matter the costs. The researchers forecasted 12 possible scenarios for the future, most of which predicted a point where natural resources would become so scarce that further economic growth would become impossible, and personal welfare would plummet.

The report's most infamous scenario — the Business as Usual (BAU) scenario — predicted that the world's economic growth would peak around the 2040s, then take a sharp downturn, along with the global population, food availability and natural resources. This imminent "collapse" wouldn't be the end of the human race, but rather a societal turning point that would see standards of living drop around the world for decades, the team wrote.

So, what's the outlook for society now, nearly half a century after the MIT researchers shared their prognostications? Gaya Herrington, a sustainability and dynamic system analysis researcher at the consulting firm KPMG, decided to find out. In the November 2020 issue of the Yale Journal of Industrial Ecology, Herrington expanded on research she began as a graduate student at Harvard University earlier that year, analyzing the "Limits to Growth" predictions alongside the most current real-world data.

Herrington found that the current state of the world — measured through 10 different variables, including population, fertility rates, pollution levels, food production and industrial output — aligned extremely closely with two of the scenarios proposed in 1972, namely the BAU scenario and one called Comprehensive Technology (CT), in which technological advancements help reduce pollution and increase food supplies, even as natural resources run out.

While the CT scenario results in less of a shock to the global population and personal welfare, the lack of natural resources still leads to a point where economic growth sharply declines — in other words, a sudden collapse of industrial society.

"[The BAU] and CT scenarios show a halt in growth within a decade or so from now," Herrington wrote in her study. "Both scenarios thus indicate that continuing business as usual, that is, pursuing continuous growth, is not possible."

The good news is that it's not too late to avoid both of these scenarios and put society on track for an alternative — the Stabilized World (SW) scenario. This path begins as the BAU and CT routes do, with population, pollution and economic growth rising in tandem while natural resources decline. The difference comes when humans decide to deliberately limit economic growth on their own, before a lack of resources forces them to.

"The SW scenario assumes that in addition to the technological solutions, global societal priorities change," Herrington wrote. "A change in values and policies translates into, amongst other things, low desired family size, perfect birth control availability, and a deliberate choice to limit industrial output and prioritize health and education services."

On a graph of the SW scenario, industrial growth and global population begin to level out shortly after this shift in values occurs. Food availability continues to rise to meet the needs of the global population; pollution declines and all but disappears; and the depletion of natural resources begins to level out, too. Societal collapse is avoided entirely.

This scenario may sound like a fantasy — especially as atmospheric carbon dioxide levels soar to record highs. But the study suggests a deliberate change in course is still possible.
...
 

Don't Bogart

Well-Known Member
Ya can't pollute space, the place is fucking lethal already, besides the solar wind will blow the smoke away!
Better the shit ends up there, than in our atmosphere, the moon is like one giant slag heap anyway.
Don't need to worry. The universe will collapse in about 14B years. Crushing it down to about 100 trillion, trillion, trillion neutrinos. Ouch!! My eggs!!
 

topcat

Well-Known Member
Beat this :)

One toilet, waiting for it to vacate, I was six, twisting to subdue the urge to pee. My older brother busted me, but didn't tease me, like usual. Later on, I would just go out to the back yard. I do that now to save water on flushing 10 to 15 times.
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member
Don't need to worry. The universe will collapse in about 14B years. Crushing it down to about 100 trillion, trillion, trillion neutrinos. Ouch!! My eggs!!
I think most cosmologists think the universe is open by a small margin. (will not stop expanding) No crunch, just a long cold coda.
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
Sorry, came in late. Didn't know it was song time.

It's ALWAYS song time here @Don't Bogart, give us another, please :)
I saw these guy's in this club in Manhattan in 1981 or1982 or1983 (It's mostly a blur those years & I can't remember much from that time, but I know/think I had fun :) )
Anyway I was drunk as fuck on Heinekens (I know, it tastes like shit, right?) & José Cuervo (which is good to kill the taste of the Heineken)
plus me and my friends were working our way through an 8 ball of Peruvian blow.
These guy's were the band, and yes, they rocked.

 

rkymtnman

Well-Known Member
It's ALWAYS song time here @Don't Bogart, give us another, please :)
I saw these guy's in this club in Manhattan in 1981 or1982 or1983 (It's mostly a blur those years & I can't remember much from that time, but I know/think I had fun :) )
Anyway I was drunk as fuck on Heinekens (I know, it tastes like shit, right?) & José Cuervo (which is good to kill the taste of the Heineken)
plus me and my friends were working our way through an 8 ball of Peruvian blow.
These guy's were the band, and yes, they rocked.

for the record, i love heineken.

and there aren't nearly enough rockabilly bands IMO. here they are at teh US festival '83.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top