On Jan 19, 4:39 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" <
dynam...@vianet.on.ca> wrote:
> On Jan 18, 2:31 pm, Bill Sloman <
bill.slo...@ieee.org> wrote:
>
> > On Jan 18, 7:20 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" <
dynam...@vianet.on.ca> wrote:
> ...
> > > Mommy didn't let you have a chemistry set, well that explains it.
>
> > My father and mother both had degrees in chemistry, and I went on to
> > get a Ph.D. in physical chemistry - your imagination regularly leads
> > you astray, but this is further off the wall than usual.
>
> Yet your parents couldn't teach their brats how to safely use matches,
They most certainly could, and did, but they didn't trust our
judgement when it came to exploiting these skills. Most adults are
better than most children in predicting and anticipating how things
can go wrong.
> they hardly sound educated, but you can blame your emotional
> problems on them, and seek counciling.
Well they did teach me how to spell counselling, and my only
"emotional problem" which I'm prepared to lay at their door is a
persistent abhorrence of nonsense. I don't find it a problem, but
nonsense-pedlars like you and John Larkin seem to feel that I'd be
improved if I was more tolerant of the rubbish you post was little
> > > Anyway, your deep prejustice against "Faux" and all things American,
>
> > I've got a perfectly rational distaste for Faux News and Rush
> > Limbaurgh - as would anybody with brain in their head. This doesn't
> > generalise to "all things American" otherwise I wouldn't be quite so
> > fond of all the stuff the Bob Widlar designed. As usual, you are
> > imagining stuff which happens to be completely wrong.
>
> They nailed Cpt Fat Wop pretty good.
If a little before all the evidence was actually available.
> > > once again blinded you from the facts.
> > > The news was indeed generous to Cpt. Fat Wop, at 1st.
>
> > > From time to time I make briefs freely available publicly,
>
> > >
http://physics.trak4.com/
>
> > > Topically, those briefs use GR to describe gravitation electrically.
> > > On close examination, QT results from GR, I write in a way to
> > > make that clear.
>
> > I've seen them, as have others. They are pretentious nonsense.
>
> Sloman, have you been talking to God on your CB again? As it happens
> the analysis predicts LIGO type apparatus will NOT detect g-waves,
> a rather unpopular position, but theoretics is unpopular anyway, and
> after 10 years the detectors are still null.
> Incidentally, I'm under no obligation to publish as I work for
> commercial science.
> Our groups theory opens new theoretical vista's, boosting the need to
> decide if g-waves exist as theorized, our theory makes that
> determination
> much more important, with expenditures nearing $1,000,000,000
> globally.
I don't actually care how much money would have been saved if your
eccentric ideas had been accepted - the point at issue is that you
haven't persuaded the physics community that you ideas make sense,
which is why they show up on an unrefereed web-site, rather than in a
peer-reviewed journal. The fact that I find that they read like all
the other pseudo-physics web-sites that - mostly - tell me that
Einstein was wrong, does influence my opinion too.
> > > What has Dr. Sloman done?
>
> > Check out
scholar.google.com searching on "A W Sloman". I'm not an
> > academic, and the one cited paper got written up just after I'd moved
> > the the Netherlands and didn't have anything better with which to
> > occupy my time, but the less cited papers give an indication of some
> > of the areas where I did do some work.
>
> Wow, did you discover navel lint too?
Not one of my areas of interest. I'm reminded of the husband who left
the trivial decisions to his wife - where they should live, which
house they should buy - while he concentrated on the important
decisions, such as whether the country should recognise Red China.
You wanted to tell the world that the investment in LIGO was ill-
advised? Fine. Sadly, nobody took you seriously. I've confined myself
to more trivial tasks, like improving the electron-beam-
microfabricator that Fairchild used to make the masks for their 100K
ECL logic parts, and the crystal-weighing electronics that - as one
stage - made 95% of the single crystal GaAs produced in the West.
Nobody made a fuss about it, but the machines worked better after with
my modifications, and not did the new production incorporate them, but
we shipped a few up-grades for machine already in the field.
--
Bill Sloman, Nijmegen