Nuclear power looks pretty cost competitive to me.
Nuclear power looks pretty cost competitive to me.
There is currently a 3 reactor plant in Arizona that generates 3.9 GW of energy.
STOP CONTRADICTING ME WITH LOGICAL, RATIONAL DISCUSSION.
Move to KCK.
Seriously? People are not moving this desert area en masse any time soon. What's wrong with having industrial-only zones?
The FCC could make net neutrality agreement a requirement in any approved merger. Also, I hope the FCC prohibits data caps from Comcast. Give me those two things, and I may begrudgingly be okay with the merger.
The Fukashima plant was built near a population center. That doesn't appear to be the case with the location of the Ivanpah solar plant.
The most powerful nuclear plant in the US has an output of 3.9 GW. Put two of those in, and you are more than 10 times productive.
They could have built nuclear plants instead, and had 10 times the energy output.
I could easily envision a Steam store popping up...
Willing to bet that Comcast won't be on board. Why would they want anybody using a competent, functional interface?
Google needs to bring back Exchange support. It angers me that the only way to get push notifications with Gmail on a new iOS device is using the official Gmail app. I have 4 or 5 email accounts, and do not want an app for Gmail alone.
Get your own spot!
Enslaving? Marrying as a fourth wife!
KU fan here- some of the well-connected super fans at various schools in the Big 12 are racist douchebags. Texas Tech isn't the only one.
Tesla was right!
So, Kansas is the perfect size. Suck it, Missouri.
There's a huge salt mine, museum, and climate controlled storage facility in Hutchinson, KS.
Apple is getting a legitimate threat on tv interfaces. This competition will be a win-win for Google, Apple, and consumers.
I find it very comical that the nation' largest city and and a huge metro area can't efficiently transport people. I understand that volume has been exponentially higher than on a normal day, but there was plenty of time for organizers and the local and state governments to effectively plan for expanding capacity.