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  4. Weapons of Mass Destruction

Weapons of Mass Destruction

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  • F Fazlul Kabir

    [Message Deleted]

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    benjymous
    wrote on last edited by
    #19

    Because it doesn't run on petrol? -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!

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    • B benjymous

      Because it doesn't run on petrol? -- Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!

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      Fazlul Kabir
      wrote on last edited by
      #20

      http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/technology/2003-01-20-segway-ban_x.htm[^]

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      • F Fazlul Kabir

        [Message Deleted]

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        Chris Losinger
        wrote on last edited by
        #21

        San Fran, and other cities, have banned their use on sidewalks because a Segway is too quiet, too fast and therefore too dangerous. you're not allowed to ride bikes on the sidewalks either, for the same reason. http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/ptech/01/20/segway.ban.ap/index.html -c


        Zzzzz...

        ThumbNailer

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        • P Paul Watson

          Chris Losinger wrote: the US consumes 1/4 of the world's energy, most of that as oil, while only comprising 5% of the total population. I wonder how much of that energy consumption is used to create export goods that the rest of us consume? Would be curious to know.

          Paul Watson
          Bluegrass
          Cape Town, South Africa

          lauren wrote: theyre making a movie about me "confessions of a dangerous bitch" (hey! she said it, not me)

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          Emcee Lam
          wrote on last edited by
          #22

          Paul Watson wrote: I wonder how much of that energy consumption is used to create export goods that the rest of us consume? Indeed, and how many jobs are dependendent on this flow of oil?

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          • M Megan Forbes

            Michael P Butler wrote: This has been a party political broadcast on behalf of the Green party :cool: Michael P Butler wrote: Oil Sadly true, but it's the human greed (and laziness - lets face it, bicycles would do the job), not the oil that's causing our own destruction :| Baah humbug - all these depressing posts aren't helping the week along at all! :rose:


            A pack of geeks, pale and skinny, feeling a bit pumped and macho after a morning of strenuous mouse clicking and dragging, arriving en masse at the gym. They carefully reset the machines to the lowest settings, offer to spot for each other on the 5 lb dumbells, and rediscover the art of macrame while attempting to jump rope. -Roger Wright on my colleagues and I going to gym each day at lunch

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            brianwelsch
            wrote on last edited by
            #23

            I'm trying to imagine a world where internal combustion engines are only used for long distance transport, and perhaps mass transit. Personal transportation within 25 miles of your home would be by bicycle or perhaps electric motorvehicles. doesn't seem so bad really. It will be awhile though. BW "Gandalf. Yes. That is what they used to call me. Gandalf the Grey. *I* am Gandalf the White." - Gandalf the White

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            • M Michael P Butler

              Saddam does have access to a weapon of mass destruction - Oil Lets face it, oil and the things it powers have been destroying our environment for years. Not to mention the number of lives lost fighting over it. This has been a party political broadcast on behalf of the Green party ;-) Michael The avalanche has started, it's too late for the pebbles to vote.

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              Jorgen Sigvardsson
              wrote on last edited by
              #24

              If oil is considered weapons of mass destruction, then we in the western world is guilty of extremly large scale genocide. This argument makes Saddam look innocent. -- There's a new game we like to play you see. A game with added reality. You treat me like a dog, get me down on my knees. We call it master and servant.

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              • C Chris Losinger

                more specifically, US cars. the US consumes 1/4 of the world's energy, most of that as oil, while only comprising 5% of the total population. -c


                Zzzzz...

                ThumbNailer

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                brianwelsch
                wrote on last edited by
                #25

                Well, once we get everyone else's consumption levels up to snuff the statistics of it all will make us look much better, and then we can turn around and say, "hey, look at how fast ABC's energy consumption is increasing!" BW "Gandalf. Yes. That is what they used to call me. Gandalf the Grey. *I* am Gandalf the White." - Gandalf the White

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                • B brianwelsch

                  I'm trying to imagine a world where internal combustion engines are only used for long distance transport, and perhaps mass transit. Personal transportation within 25 miles of your home would be by bicycle or perhaps electric motorvehicles. doesn't seem so bad really. It will be awhile though. BW "Gandalf. Yes. That is what they used to call me. Gandalf the Grey. *I* am Gandalf the White." - Gandalf the White

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                  Rob Graham
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #26

                  Bad plan. How will you make sufficient electricity to charge the batteries for all those electric vehicles. Burning Oil or natural gas to make electricity, transporting it through miles of copper (with nearly 50% loss) to charge a battery would be less efficient, and result in more polution (no catalytic converters on your neighborhood power plant. Fuel Cells might be an answer some day, but for now the technology and infrastructure to make and distribute the needed Hydrogen just isn't there. The average commute to work where I live is around 20 miles one way: I don't hold out a lot of hope for convincing folk to use bicycles for this, especially since there is, again, little infrastructure (bike lanes) for this, and few would be willing to share a 6-lane expressway with tandem-trailer trucks on their bike (illegal anyway at the moment). In fact, it is the lack of infrastructure that is the biggest obstacle to replacing the gasoline engine. :suss: Some ideas are so stupid that only an intellectual could have thought of them - George Orwell

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                  • F Fazlul Kabir

                    [Message Deleted]

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                    Rob Graham
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #27

                    Actually only San Francisco so far,I think. Too fast & dangerous for sidewalks, to slow for streets... So much for the bastion of liberalism. (skate boards, however are still allowed :~ ) Some ideas are so stupid that only an intellectual could have thought of them - George Orwell

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                    • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                      If oil is considered weapons of mass destruction, then we in the western world is guilty of extremly large scale genocide. This argument makes Saddam look innocent. -- There's a new game we like to play you see. A game with added reality. You treat me like a dog, get me down on my knees. We call it master and servant.

                      R Offline
                      R Offline
                      Rob Graham
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #28

                      No argument can make Saddam look innocent.:( Some ideas are so stupid that only an intellectual could have thought of them - George Orwell

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                      • R Rob Graham

                        Bad plan. How will you make sufficient electricity to charge the batteries for all those electric vehicles. Burning Oil or natural gas to make electricity, transporting it through miles of copper (with nearly 50% loss) to charge a battery would be less efficient, and result in more polution (no catalytic converters on your neighborhood power plant. Fuel Cells might be an answer some day, but for now the technology and infrastructure to make and distribute the needed Hydrogen just isn't there. The average commute to work where I live is around 20 miles one way: I don't hold out a lot of hope for convincing folk to use bicycles for this, especially since there is, again, little infrastructure (bike lanes) for this, and few would be willing to share a 6-lane expressway with tandem-trailer trucks on their bike (illegal anyway at the moment). In fact, it is the lack of infrastructure that is the biggest obstacle to replacing the gasoline engine. :suss: Some ideas are so stupid that only an intellectual could have thought of them - George Orwell

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                        brianwelsch
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #29

                        I agree we're not close, that's why I said it will be a while. My commute is 25 miles one-way, and I know I wouldn't want to spend 3hrs per day traveling to work. But, I'm all for working towards a better efficiency. BW "Gandalf. Yes. That is what they used to call me. Gandalf the Grey. *I* am Gandalf the White." - Gandalf the White

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                        • P Paul Watson

                          Megan Forbes wrote: lets face it, bicycles would do the job In a lot of cases, most certainly. Janina's dad got a bicycle awhile back, started riding it to work everyday instead of taking his car. Then one day a bus veered into him... luckily he was ok. The next day he went outside, opened his garage and got into his 3.0 litre Honda. Decided cars are safer when everyone else is also driving a car :) I am trying to decide between a surf ski... or a mountain bike. If I get the bike then I can ride to work (we have a shower in the office so that is no problem.) But the surf ski would be fantastic for taking photographs off, of the coast... lol. I wish the public transport was better here, I would use it (like I do when in London) then.

                          Paul Watson
                          Bluegrass
                          Cape Town, South Africa

                          lauren wrote: theyre making a movie about me "confessions of a dangerous bitch" (hey! she said it, not me)

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                          ColinDavies
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #30

                          I reccomend the surf ski. Regardz Colin J Davies

                          Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                          You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.

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                          0
                          • R Rob Graham

                            Bad plan. How will you make sufficient electricity to charge the batteries for all those electric vehicles. Burning Oil or natural gas to make electricity, transporting it through miles of copper (with nearly 50% loss) to charge a battery would be less efficient, and result in more polution (no catalytic converters on your neighborhood power plant. Fuel Cells might be an answer some day, but for now the technology and infrastructure to make and distribute the needed Hydrogen just isn't there. The average commute to work where I live is around 20 miles one way: I don't hold out a lot of hope for convincing folk to use bicycles for this, especially since there is, again, little infrastructure (bike lanes) for this, and few would be willing to share a 6-lane expressway with tandem-trailer trucks on their bike (illegal anyway at the moment). In fact, it is the lack of infrastructure that is the biggest obstacle to replacing the gasoline engine. :suss: Some ideas are so stupid that only an intellectual could have thought of them - George Orwell

                            C Offline
                            C Offline
                            ColinDavies
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #31

                            Rob Graham wrote: Burning Oil or natural gas to make electricity, transporting it through miles of copper (with nearly 50% loss) to charge a battery would be less efficient, and result in more polution (no catalytic converters on your neighborhood power plant. Most people seem to forget this. Even the Hydrogen powered cars need electricity to make the hydrogen, and the elctricity is probably made from coal or oil. So we are just switching one place doing the polluting to another. One idea I like is wind farms that produce electricity that is immediately used for Hydrogen production. But its probably not economically viable for sometime still. Regardz Colin J Davies

                            Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                            You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining. Said by Roger Wright about me.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • P Paul Watson

                              Megan Forbes wrote: lets face it, bicycles would do the job In a lot of cases, most certainly. Janina's dad got a bicycle awhile back, started riding it to work everyday instead of taking his car. Then one day a bus veered into him... luckily he was ok. The next day he went outside, opened his garage and got into his 3.0 litre Honda. Decided cars are safer when everyone else is also driving a car :) I am trying to decide between a surf ski... or a mountain bike. If I get the bike then I can ride to work (we have a shower in the office so that is no problem.) But the surf ski would be fantastic for taking photographs off, of the coast... lol. I wish the public transport was better here, I would use it (like I do when in London) then.

                              Paul Watson
                              Bluegrass
                              Cape Town, South Africa

                              lauren wrote: theyre making a movie about me "confessions of a dangerous bitch" (hey! she said it, not me)

                              P Offline
                              P Offline
                              peterchen
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #32

                              Go for the bike - makes the more effective role model ;) BTW. We have no shower in the office, but everybody has his own room and I own a deo stick. ;P


                              Changing requirements are the crux of software development - you start with a sex drugs and rock'n'roll design, and end up with an aids crack and techno implementation  [sighist] [Agile Programming] [doxygen]

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