Posted here for Sloan's perusal and for anyone else with an interest in
energy resources and/or the lack thereof:
<http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/55574>
"Prediction is very difficult, particularly about the future." -- Niels Bohr
--
Sal
Ye olde swarm of links: thousands of links for writers, researchers and
the terminally curious <http://writers.internet-resources.com>
see also:
Solar Power -- Comedy or Next Great Thing?
(Is walking more efficient than wheels?)
http://whooooooosh.com/megablog/msg/9fd0a9ddf547c99e
where among other things, you'll find an interesting and entertaining
YouTube video on the subject.
or not.
depending largely on how petty you are.
no, i kid, Sal.
seriously.
but can she take a joke?
nooooooo!
well, not about herself in regards to my various hard work efforts,
anyway.
-$Zero...
The Day Your Universe Changed -- Presto!
http://groups.google.com/group/megablog/msg/f2d51861e54b6464
the fool on the hill
sees the sun going down
but the eyes in his head
sees the world spinning round
and round and round and round
Art for Money's Sake (a good nose for Quality)
Re: Money -- wikipedia find of the day -- Part II e (augmented)
http://groups.google.com/group/megablog/msg/9d8f8fd13cfe723d
> by David Schneider in the current issue of American Scientist.
>
> Posted here for Sloan's perusal and for anyone else with an interest in
> energy resources and/or the lack thereof:
>
> <http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/55574>
>
> "Prediction is very difficult, particularly about the future." -- Niels Bohr
Theory and speculation with little regard for current reality. I have a
friend who owns a coal mine, and price drops have him looking at
bankruptcy if a client with a big contract defaults and doesn't buy as
agreed.