To: Stock Puppy who wrote (453701 ) 11/11/2025 1:17:04 AM From: didjuneau 1 RecommendationRecommended By goldworldnet
Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 459672 Fusion Is Having a Moment Physicists have proven it’s possible. Now it’s up to engineers to harness fusion energy to generate electricity spectrum.ieee.org Oh yes, Science always leaving the clean-up work to the engineers. And with billions of dollars of government funding and private investment and research from giant international projects fueling these companies, there’s real hope that within the next few years, we might start to see the technology stack necessary to help wean the world off of fossil fuels, and at a pace that could turn the rising tides of climate change . Technology stack? Sounding like Scott Adams. OMG - IEEE has been infiltrated by Climate Weirdos! Been reading some Dale Brown novels - sort of like Tom Clancy stuff, except based on the Air Force. One of his favorite weapons is the Dragon - an airborne plasma laser. Starting to wonder if they could send out a " target " and then hit it with the laser to cause a nice POP! I knew someone in college whose dad worked at Oak Ridge and LLNL.Tried to get me to apply there. My grandparents worked at Hanford and Battelle. Suggested I look for work there too, but it was a hazmat position with the chief benefit of easy work and high pay. Look out Homer Simpson, I'm coming for your job! Implosion?? Or is this energetic compression in order to cause an explosion, er, "efficient thermonuclear burn"? Weapons are much easier - they don't have to be so highly controlled. There must be a lot of weapon ideas out there, which Trump hinted at here: Message 35326290 HAH! Ruby Rod. Rubidium makes a nice target... But I keep running into discussions of mining for He3 on the moon. Is this going to be a real thing? Mining Company Says It’s Identified Hugely Valuable Material on Surface of the Moon Helium-3 mining on the lunar surface Lunar Helium-3: Mining Concepts, Extraction Research, and Potential ISRU Synergies Scientists having fun inventing small suns. Back in the Boy Scouts days.