That's what I love about speculative technologies.Schneibster wrote:Well, gawd hasn't been proven impossible either, but you're an atheist.
Just sayin'.

That's what I love about speculative technologies.Schneibster wrote:Well, gawd hasn't been proven impossible either, but you're an atheist.
Just sayin'.
And the solar energy hitting this planet is something like a thousand times our current energy usage. Now obviously we can't make use of all of that - but then, the solar energy hitting earth is also a really tiny amount compared to the total solar output. If we can get some sort of lens/mirror system in space, we could presumably harvest much more.Schneibster wrote:The limit isn't the Earth, it's the incoming energy from the Sun.
There's speculative, then there's magic.Zombie Gawdzilla wrote:That's what I love about speculative technologies.Schneibster wrote:Well, gawd hasn't been proven impossible either, but you're an atheist.
Just sayin'.
You just refuted your own argument. I'll let you one fight it out from there.Schneibster wrote:There's speculative, then there's magic.Zombie Gawdzilla wrote:That's what I love about speculative technologies.Schneibster wrote:Well, gawd hasn't been proven impossible either, but you're an atheist.
Just sayin'.
Now, mind you, they're finding out how to read brain squiggles from outside the skull, and talking about controlling prosthetics with it. And if you can do that, you can read thoughts. But being able to insert a thought, that's another thing entirely. Much, much more complex- and likely unique for each brain, since they grow, though there is apparently quite a bit of stereotyped structure. How much is something we're still figuring out, I guess.
One of the answers to the Fermi Paradox is "They're all inside Dyson spheres, so there's no output to detect."Psychoserenity wrote:And the solar energy hitting this planet is something like a thousand times our current energy usage. Now obviously we can't make use of all of that - but then, the solar energy hitting earth is also a really tiny amount compared to the total solar output. If we can get some sort of lens/mirror system in space, we could presumably harvest much more.Schneibster wrote:The limit isn't the Earth, it's the incoming energy from the Sun.
I wouldn't argue a moment with that.Psychoserenity wrote:Ultimately when talking about the carrying capacity of the earth, I think the real problem we face is the way we manage resources. Currently, despite all the technology we have, we are failing to properly provide for something like a fifth of the population of the planet - and that's mainly down to stupid politics, abstract economics and anti-scientific religion getting in the way.
No kidding. Last time all that carbon was in the atmosphere, at the end of the Cambrian, it was not a real comfortable climate for mammals. Last time it was anywhere near as high as it is now was the PETM, which predated the existence of humans but apparently selected for smaller hominids than us, judging by the sizes of Australopithecenes extant at the time.Psychoserenity wrote:Of course we also have to switch to sustainable energy ASAP or there'll be a right shit-fuck over the next few decades.
No I didn't; you're forgetting moving the data from here to there. You're assuming "telepathic" communication would be instantaneous, and I'm talking about electromagnetics, which are by definition limited to lightspeed.Zombie Gawdzilla wrote:You just refuted your own argument. I'll let you one fight it out from there.Schneibster wrote:There's speculative, then there's magic.Zombie Gawdzilla wrote:That's what I love about speculative technologies.Schneibster wrote:Well, gawd hasn't been proven impossible either, but you're an atheist.
Just sayin'.
Now, mind you, they're finding out how to read brain squiggles from outside the skull, and talking about controlling prosthetics with it. And if you can do that, you can read thoughts. But being able to insert a thought, that's another thing entirely. Much, much more complex- and likely unique for each brain, since they grow, though there is apparently quite a bit of stereotyped structure. How much is something we're still figuring out, I guess.
Another would be "could we have detected satellite transmissions 200 years ago?" The "window" for use of radio is, I think, rather small on a cosmic time scale.Schneibster wrote:One of the answers to the Fermi Paradox is "They're all inside Dyson spheres, so there's no output to detect."Psychoserenity wrote:And the solar energy hitting this planet is something like a thousand times our current energy usage. Now obviously we can't make use of all of that - but then, the solar energy hitting earth is also a really tiny amount compared to the total solar output. If we can get some sort of lens/mirror system in space, we could presumably harvest much more.Schneibster wrote:The limit isn't the Earth, it's the incoming energy from the Sun.![]()
The thing is, the less developed countries are almost totally reliant on the developed nations for food and medicine. Normally famine and disease would keep their numbers in check, and as their populations rise and the developed nations are no longer able to provide for them their populations will crash.Tero wrote:The projection is 9 Billion by 2050. We'll start eating soybeans after that. Sorry Zilla, only tofu bacon. They have leveling at 11 billion, but I bet it will top at 15 billion. Before the EPIDEMIC.
Tyrannical wrote:The thing is, the less developed countries are almost totally reliant on the developed nations for food and medicine. Normally famine and disease would keep their numbers in check, and as their populations rise and the developed nations are no longer able to provide for them their populations will crash.Tero wrote:The projection is 9 Billion by 2050. We'll start eating soybeans after that. Sorry Zilla, only tofu bacon. They have leveling at 11 billion, but I bet it will top at 15 billion. Before the EPIDEMIC.
But anyone who knows how to use it would know the speed of light.Zombie Gawdzilla wrote:Another would be "could we have detected satellite transmissions 200 years ago?" The "window" for use of radio is, I think, rather small on a cosmic time scale.Schneibster wrote:One of the answers to the Fermi Paradox is "They're all inside Dyson spheres, so there's no output to detect."Psychoserenity wrote:And the solar energy hitting this planet is something like a thousand times our current energy usage. Now obviously we can't make use of all of that - but then, the solar energy hitting earth is also a really tiny amount compared to the total solar output. If we can get some sort of lens/mirror system in space, we could presumably harvest much more.Schneibster wrote:The limit isn't the Earth, it's the incoming energy from the Sun.![]()
What's scary is that more than half of them live in countries that have nuclear weapons.Tyrannical wrote:The thing is, the less developed countries are almost totally reliant on the developed nations for food and medicine. Normally famine and disease would keep their numbers in check, and as their populations rise and the developed nations are no longer able to provide for them their populations will crash.Tero wrote:The projection is 9 Billion by 2050. We'll start eating soybeans after that. Sorry Zilla, only tofu bacon. They have leveling at 11 billion, but I bet it will top at 15 billion. Before the EPIDEMIC.
PordFrefect wrote:I say we move forward and colonize the moon. China is already working on a plan.
http://www.therightperspective.org/2009 ... -the-moon/Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni has said Africans must go to the moon in order to see what developed nations are doing up there.
“The Americans have gone to the moon. And the Russians. The Chinese and Indians will go there soon. Africans are the only ones who are stuck here,” Museveni said, addressing a meeting of the Uganda Law Society in Entebbe.
“We must also go there and say: ‘What are you people doing up here?’.”
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