dansmithers
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Everything posted by dansmithers
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The only reason to build a Dyson sphere would be to harness it for usable land area-stars are by no means the most efficient way of converting hydrogen into energy(even less so than fusion in a magnetically-confined reactor, due to the vast majority of gas being in the unused outer layers). It would still be a good symbol of cultural and economic dominance though, just like the Great Wall of China
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Smarter than a monkey (about science) test.
dansmithers replied to PB666's topic in Science & Spaceflight
As far as relevance- according to the results(sorted by demographics), only about 85% of post-grads know the difference between astrology/astronomy. -
The whole idea that an AI would either want to or need to "conquer" us is just as absurd as assuming that we wanted to "conquer" the wolf and make it into a dog. Any AI capable of defying the combined forces of Earth would be smart enough to leave us alone(or domesticate us).
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Reading about the Great Filter:
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ITT: They see he rollin', they hatin'
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Ray Kurzweil is a technological singularity theorist- "Manned" in this case means "operated by a transhuman intellect".
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Biology, technology-it's all just baryons(and a few mesons I guess) in the end. The only difference is the specificity of the systems(biology, as a rule, can and will do most anything it's mechanically capable of doing). It's sort of like the difference between an Orion drive and a VASIMIR engine- both solve the same problem, but in vastly different ways and each comes with its own pros and cons. All told though, I do love me some flashy tech.
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To quote a problem solver:
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Well, if Kurzweil is correct, we'll have manned* interstellar travel in less than 100 years**. *for certain definitions of manned **10 thousand year travel time notwithstanding
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It could be useful, assuming its meta-stability doesn't make it nonflammable. And, of course, assuming that you could modify an engine to burn it.
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Why shouldn't humanity last for billions of years?
dansmithers replied to itstimaifool's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Humanity is so hard to define that I'd like to break the question into two parts: Many people(especially sci-fi writers, apparently) define "Humanity" as the sum total of human culture/books/religion. By this metric, humanity might not evne last the next thousand years, much less the next billion. Think about how much we've forgotten about our own 10000 year long history, and you'll get an idea of how hard it'd be for us to even have a chance of reading Shakespeare in the year 12015 Secondly, a more hard and fast definition is humans as a species. Obviously, in a billion years we'll have evolved, but intelligences descended from the life of Earth will almost certainly be around, in one form of another. -
Uh... what? Every law in science started out as a theory. Laws are laws because they are generally accepted theories, not because they are universal truths
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I installed 0.90 last night and built a rocket to go to orbit. It had six SRBS attached by radial separators, all in the same stage. When I launched it and tried to detach the boosters, only one detached, then the next with the next press of space, and so on. This resulted in a crash. Why is this? Is there some tweakable I'm missing?
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Yeah, you just have to rub a balloon against it really fast.
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Wherever it likes. It can't be detected, so it could be anywhere.
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Whay would real-life war spacecraft look like?
dansmithers replied to FishInferno's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Everybody that I've seen in this thread seems either to be advocating cannons powered by explosives, or lasers. Neither of these is particularly practical compared to a rail/coilgun: Cannons release clouds of hot gas from the muzzle,which is basically a big "I'm right here, shoot me" sign for the enemy. Not to mention the fact that cannon shells carry their propulsion with them, and are therefore heavier. Lasers(at least ones with a high enough energy to cause damage) require truly huge amounts of electricity, which makes your ship a bigger target. Not to mention that , unlike kinetic weapons which can keep going(theoretically) forever, a laser actually has a limited range! As for powering the railgun, a super capacitor could provide power storage, as it is unlikely such a weapon would need to fire continuously.​ A microwave based directed energy weapon might also work, though with the same drawbacks as a laser. -
******:áüþтрõть ! MARS-3:W-huh!? ******:çтþ ÑÂтþ ? ******:Ãâ€Ã‘€ÑƒÃ³Ã¾Ã¹ ôõüþý Ѡýõñð ! MARS-3:Some-sorta humanoid-I can't make it out.Stupid cyclotronic camera! PROP-M:Arf-bow! PROP-M moves forward 3 cm. ******:Þý öøòõт ! MARS-3:Oh no. The figures load MARS-3 onto some sort of sledge, and they are dragged off. Sorry for the bad Russian, I used Google Translate.
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No it is not. You lose one point for having your rule denied, and I gain one. Floppster=10pts Dansmithers=2pts megatiger78=-1pts 1: Reviving the thread grants 10 points 2: Players may not have a score over 100. If a player violates this rule, his score is reduced to 0. 3: Correcting a rule-breaker grants 1 point. 4.A corrected rule-breaker loses one point.
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Push him away, use tools as reaction mass to return to capsule. /fight
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You Jelly? (AKA: I Have Better Stuff Than You)
dansmithers replied to Lhathron the Elf's topic in Forum Games!
I don't have legs You jelly? it is ok, i do have legs really -
Mars 3: Helllo? I'm okay! Somebody? Oh тьфу! PROP-M: Arf! Mars 3: At least I have you, boy.
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Not allowed. Players may not have a score over 100. If a player violates this rule, his score is reduced to 0. I grant myself 1 point for correcting this erroneous assumption. Floppster=10pts Dansmithers=1pt megatiger78=0pts 1: Reviving the thread grants 10 points 2: Players may not have a score over 100. If a player violates this rule, his score is reduced to 0. 3: Correcting a rule-breaker grants 1 point.
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Paradox (maybe) disproving almost everything
dansmithers replied to LABHOUSE's topic in Science & Spaceflight
No it isn't. via negation, that statement is equivalent to "No non-squares are rectangles".