• 28 Posts
  • 465 Comments
Joined 10 months ago
cake
Cake day: August 28th, 2023

help-circle





  • I agree with you. I would like to add though, that coffee in a cafeteria of the Venezuelan kind is quintessential for the existence of the apple species in Uganda due to the very simple laws of motion of quantum mechanics. The theory of everything requires the grand unification of the great countries of Ivory Coast and mechanical dynamics. Modern technologies are built and advanced due to the red bull concentration technique that focuses on driving profits by manufacturing more self driving trains. It’s very simple really. AI will show us how to establish objective philosophical ecologies of the Geonosian kind, where the pains of human existence are equivalent to the bonds between entangled particles in a quantum supercomputer. The future is made up of many possibilities of having ethereal intercourse with Joe Biden.

    Your decision of taking an apple at the cafeteria has thus changed the course of human existence.

    (This comment was made WITHOUT AI and without any alcohol consumption. The credit goes solely and solely to the not so narcissistic, me).







  • I’m not rlly that aware of how boring works, so I’ll take ur word for it there I suppose.

    Any moon mining is going to be expensive because it’s the moon. That kind of travel is going to be expensive.

    For this tho, u don’t have to “travel” anywhere. U just build a one time installation on the moon, which would be expensive. Once it’s built, u just launch stuff from the moon using a railgun like system with enough velocity to deorbit it, use the earth’s atmosphere to slow down enough that the material doesn’t vaporize on a crash landing in a designated location. This would most likely be how we would get our material in the future.


  • I’m sorry you feel that way. I think I explained my position very clearly whenever I disagreed with you.

    I did “look into stuff” as you asked. Perhaps I didn’t look into the resources that you were talking about. Maybe you should’ve linked those sources in your post instead of saying “go look it up”.

    I do listen to what other people have to say. That doesn’t mean I have to agree with it always, no? Whenever I disagree, I always explain my underlying motivation.

    I really cannot see how I was arguing in bad faith anywhere above.


  • Don’t parrot what idiots like Musk say.

    Aren’t you parroting what others say too though? You haven’t provided a single PHYSICAL problem. You are just telling me, “it doesn’t work that way”, without giving a single thesis statement.

    And if people tell you there’s huge physics issues, think about that instead of waving it away and say “it’s just engineering”.

    I have. I’m not saying that we will have anti gravity spaceships. The physics for anti-gravity simply doesn’t exist. I am talking about a vacuum tube. That is the biggest holdup. We have already built small vacuum chambers. The physics is there. HOW is this a PHYSICAL problem?

    Give me one single reason as to why the laws of physics prevent hyperloops.



  • I don’t think AR/VR will play a big role, I was talking about the acceptance and incorporation of digital systems in our every day lives.

    I mean… AR/VR is a step forward in audio/visual IO systems. You technically don’t NEED an HD monitor and a good camera to have a video call. But it definitely makes things easier, no? AR/VR right now sucks. Although it doesn’t mean that it has to suck 100 years in the future.

    Plus there’s already plenty of resources online that go into great detail about all the things that are totally impossible.

    None of them talking about the physical impossibility of it. All issues of the hyperloop are economical ones. My premise removes these issues.

    as you even start to contemplate this you run into huge issues.

    Them being economical issues. NOT physical ones.

    They still need fuel, they still produce nuclear waste

    Sourcing fuel is incredibly easy if we have a mature nuclear fusion energy supply ecosystem. Most likely, nuclear fuel would be deuterium and tritium. Sourcing deuterium is very very easy. For tritium, you would just need breeding blankets at reactor walls. I don’t see how this tech won’t be mature a 100-150 years from now. As for nuclear waste, the fusion processes produce negligible waste. It’s the breeding blankets that could be the source of waste. They too won’t produce waste that would have to sit for more than a 100 years without being recycled/repurposed/disposed off.

    the unwarranted fear people have towards nuclear fission

    The politics around this is changing slowly. I don’t think it would be that many decades before people start liking nuclear fission again.



  • Sure, u won’t need to mine the moon to do this. But resources would be incredibly cheap WHEN we start mining the moon.

    I disagree with the energy part though. I’m pretty sure we would need A LOT of energy to dig continent spanning tunnels. How many drills would we run out of? How much energy would be required to recycle these drills?

    The point is, the resources required for Hyperloop construction would be cheaper when we uk… Increase their supply (by nuclear fusion or lunar mining). It would thus be kinda economical then, no?