pixelpusher220
pixelpusher220
pixelpusher220

it’s a close shave either way

All things produce waste - definitely true.

Now playing

Engineering Explained did a good explanation of the physics and effects of wheel size on EV range

yep, it’s almost like we can walk and chew gum, or in this case, drive and greenify power generation at the same time !

Lived next to an Air Force officer who had been stationed in Germany. He had like 7 cars (4 in a buddy’s storage somewhere) 3 at the TH (yes he was single...lol) - Lotus, Porsche and I think it was some uber duper luxury BMW that had a 2nd gas tank in front of the engine firewall(?). I want to say 53 gallons total

You made that far too complicated.”

edit kinja’d to the wrong msg!

oh please. the real truth is this:

Wow that’s almost a dead ringer for No Mans Sky, down to the grasses.  Are they related at all?

And as soon as the Gov stops taking *any* money from BOTH sides...and passes vastly tougher laws preventing ‘anti-Union’ behavior...ok.

Translation: Democrats actually care about employeEs.

That’s a funny long way to admit that yes it’s possible to have solar power 24/7.

ah but it is available 24/7.

if only there was some mechanism or technology to reduce the CO2 footprint of electricity generation.

from Mary Trump this week:

my 2 Brother’s both have no issues being connected and infrequently used.

my 2 Brother’s both have no issues being connected and infrequently used.

ahh, thx for the very detailed explainer!  I think I made (one of) my incorrect assumptions in that the article talked about ‘clustering’ of Kuiper Belt objects, which my brain took to indicate Planet 9 was inside the Kuiper belt - which obviously isn’t at all a valid assumption :)

Voyagers are farther out at least by a bit. I’d thought they were past the Kuiper belt, but it turns out the heliopause doesn’t cover the entire Kuiper belt so Voyagers may not have exited Kuiper belt just yet.

Pacific gets a bunch, and they get stronger given the much more open stretches of warm water. They call them cyclones there and US news doesn’t really talk about them much. Most anywhere equatorial is going to get them.  North American continent is just ‘in the way’ ;-)

I’ll still say the Northeast is far and away the safest place in the country. We generally don’t (err. haven’t) get such types of extreme weather. No quakes, no wild fires, minimal tornado threat.