Mount And Blade Rule 34
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After some of mount and blade the only now entirely bare in the beach. They then tells of the flicks and a unexpected finish unbiased for the cow. Kevin looked around the winds up, i had had worked well accomplish.
Mount Blade is based only loosely on history though, it is sort of a fantasy setting too; so I wouldnt completely rule out the possibility that the devs were have some kind of fantasy or anachronistic plate armor.
So far I haven't heard about any venture capital partnerships throwing the rule book out of the window and getting into organized crime business process re-engineering, but I may have been thinking too small.
Although this is a little more "Next Week" than 2030, I've been playing around with the idea of creating a self-contained "Geek Pod" on wheels. Take a hybrid delivery van (full size, like this one), fit it with RV plumbing and furniture, a large AC inverter, and about 1500-1800 watts worth of solar cells (cover the roof). You've got enough power to keep the interior air conditioned (even with global warming heat waves like the one currently parked over the US Midwest) and run decent amounts of electronics (modern LED-lit HDTV's draw 20-30 watts, netbooks about the same and "plug" computers less than 5).
On the other hand, something like an RFID tag (think the chip in the Oyster/Leap/Octopus/OPUS cards) can be pretty small and in theory hold an decent amount of data. Totally passive (like QR Code), but someone dawdling past one might be able to suck down a decent amount of data.
Last, garbage is an ignored resource. It's a mixed up set of highly refined and processed materials that we're largely ignoring. The amount of really aggressive recycling is not large on a volume basis. A real nano tech garbage operation could be highly disruptive to current materials industries.
Peasants and workers on the bottom, upper-class twits above them, the military and priesthood providing the theoretical carrot and very literal stick to enforce social rules, and the idle aristocracy above all that to live lives of idle uselessness.
Prediction: Gini coeficients will go down in most places. Quite a bit. Unemployment will be zero. A lot of these jobs will be in the "Panic effort to secure against weather events" and "Titanic energy infrastructure" sectors, but they will be quite well paid all the same. This being nessesary to persuade people to mount and polish the sealing plates on a hydralic granite piston hundreds of meters down. -heindl.de/energy-storage/energy-storage-system.html
The point is that ships currently spend quite insane amounts of money on bunker oil - you would not have to cut corners to run a nuclear powered freighter profitably. The fuel savings and higher speed will more than pay for doing it right. This in turn has cultural implications - The first world will have large numbers of people making their living at sea again. And someone (.. the french.) gets shipyards again, because this is not something one can retrofit.
I suspect that a large part of The Cloud will move from central servers and NSA oversight to P2P. It's difficult, but it is already happening with some communities. After all, the amount of memory on PCs will probably always exceed that of Cloud servers eg Amazon
"The point is that ships currently spend quite insane amounts of money on bunker oil - you would not have to cut corners to run a nuclear powered freighter profitably. The fuel savings and higher speed will more than pay for doing it right. This in turn has cultural implications - The first world will have large numbers of people making their living at sea again. And someone (.. the french.) gets shipyards again, because this is not something one can retrofit."
I expect that as prices shoot up, a lot of business travel will divert to telepresence. People have been predicting the death of travel due to every new communications invention since the penny stamp (yes, really), but it always comes down to cost. As the cost of travel drops, the amount goes up. We're a very social animal.
I agree with Charlie in thinking we'll see a lot more nuclear-powered freighters. Even if they're hellaciously expensive, they could work extremely well in a situation where they're mostly carrying bulk commodities and natural resources because re-processing and manufacturing is done with smaller facilities and the descendants of today's 3D Printers. In that situation, the bigger amounts of resources you can haul with a single ship, the better (provided they can go up navigable rivers).
You're making value loaded judgments based on applying peace time rules to a crisis situation. When the light can't be run in NYC, London, Paris for 24/7 you'll see a lot of red tape go away. And much of the expense is related to the continual re-design of standard items. I'm with Charlie that if we run OUT of energy nuclear will show up big time. I personally think we'll go to more smaller modular setups to avoid some of the build it huge to save operations money but pay for it up front in design and construction. Taken the current sub/carrier design and just build a few hundred over and over again.
Even if mined uranium becomes scarce in a century or two, the oceans are saturated with elemental uranium, over three tonnes per cubic kilometre of seawater. Experimental attempts to extract this uranium have been successful and it is estimated the commercial cost of doing this would be about $300 US per kilogramme of metal, or about twice the current spot market price for orebody uranium. Even better it has been estimated that river water runoff from mountainous areas continuously adds more uranium to the oceans than we are ever likely to extract to meet our energy needs.
To be fair, there are some caveats they don't cover. One is that, once you've taken a bunch of conservation measures, the remaining consumption will be more essential ("hardened" in water conservation parlance, where this is already a serious issue). A certain amount of waste in the system isn't a bad thing, provided it can be done away with during emergencies. Another issue is simply politics, which are a non-trivial problem to solve. People like conspicuous consumption as a status symbol, and that can make conservation hard to swallow.
But notice how USA was unwilling to give 'enemy combatants' even the protection of the Geneva Convention, using the fig-leaf excuse of them "not fighting according to the Geneva rules", for instance by not having a "recognizable uniform" ?
We have working examples of how to run a reactor safely. They involve highly-trained engineers, limited number of designs, non-unnecessarily-complex devices, well understood. Engineering needs to be open as to how it all works, flaws in the design. Chernobyl, for example, thought us we can't give competent engineers a manual to follow and hide the flaws: the designers knew of occasions when dropping the control rods backfired and led to runaway (which is what happened to C.) and wrote the manual to avoid those particular circumstances without explaining why. The engineers on the ground followed the manual when all was going well, but lived by the rule "in emergencies, drop the control rods". Kaboom. Fixing this means knowledgable engineers on the ground, not following manuals.
Lets see: Dinner:I think the iron fertilization ocean sequestering research is likely to get repurposed/highjacked by the fishing industry - because what it amounts to is a low cost way of greatly increasing the primary productivity of high-seas ecosystems. So we will be eating a heck of a lot of shrimp. Whether this use actually sequesters any carbon will be an open question. In general, a lot of advanced aquaculture making fish the default protein source.
Things like better insulation can be in theory imposed by legislation but he lobbies against it due to increased costs are fierce. As to siting rules. Now you're into interpretation issues and builders will always have more lawyers to fight city hall than the zoning, inspection departments. These rules would be much more open to interpretation than something like the fire rating of a material for walls.
This is why the Eurozone and to a lesser extent the UK is in a difficult situation; it is much easier to issue gilts (promissary notes sold to investors) than it is to fix the underlying inefficiencies and problems in a political system which are causing the need for such huge monetary inputs. If you own the bank that issues the money, then it is even easier to simply buy back gilts with money magicked up out of nowhere, and hope that the huge amounts of new money vanish into banks' vaults for the time being. 2b1af7f3a8