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1  Other / Politics & Society / Re: LFTR and Market Failures on: July 21, 2012, 07:28:48 PM
Why bother with LFTR when coal is cheaper?  Coal is cheaper than regular nuclear too.
LFTR has the potential to be cheaper than coal, though more development needs to happen first to determine if it is the case.
2  Other / Politics & Society / Re: LFTR and Market Failures on: July 14, 2012, 07:00:03 PM
Then come back to me and explain why the "Free Market" or "Private Enterprise" or "Free Enterprise" hasn't been able to build another one of these, after the prototype, in the past 40-ish years.
Take a look at all of the government invention in LFTR's area. Look at all of the hoops that would have to be jumped to privately bring it to market.

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You can do that after you admit that the technology also solely exists because of Government funded research to begin with.
Weinberg new that the aircraft reactor was a joke, but he was able to use those funds to research something more socially useful.
3  Other / Politics & Society / Re: America Beyond Capitalism on: December 29, 2011, 01:49:13 AM
Perhaps when we speak of capitalism we are not meaning the same thing.
This. It is a collusion between the state and business along with perverse circumstances that is the issue anarcho-socialists have with what they call 'Capitalism'. See Roderick Long's discussion on this topic.
4  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Worker-Owners of America, Unite! on: December 18, 2011, 11:00:29 PM
When I go to a store and find it is employee owned, I really stay away from the place.  If they don't offer you a job, and they don't offer stock, why would anyone shop in the place?
Because you want to buy something?
5  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Who creates the jobs? on: December 18, 2011, 10:58:07 PM
Rich people invest, and investment creates jobs. Employees need to be worth the capital to be hired, but ultimately the investment creates the jobs ergo rich create jobs.
This is mistaking the effect with the cause. The markets create jobs, and investment realizes them. Without a favorable market, the investment would not happen in the first place.
6  Other / Politics & Society / Re: What does it take to get a job around here? on: December 11, 2011, 08:51:01 PM

Nice round about way of saying that he isn't selling enough.
7  Other / Off-topic / Re: Fukushima enters "China Syndrome" stage on: December 03, 2011, 07:14:37 PM
I like the science of breeder reactors, but it would be better if we can wait to use them off-planet.
Why generate the power off planet? You would be greatly increasing the transmissions costs with no gain.

If Fukushima was a LFTR, there would've been nothing news worth to report there. You cut power, the freeze plug melts, and the fuel drains into a container that passively cools the fuel.
8  Other / Off-topic / Re: Fukushima enters "China Syndrome" stage on: December 03, 2011, 05:09:38 PM
I used to be pro-nuclear, but this is starting to scare the crap out of me.
This.

Thoriumsalt sounds interesting. India is building one, right? I hope they pull it off.
Last I heard India was building solid fuel thorium reactors. China on the other hand is working on LFTR.
9  Other / Politics & Society / Re: I don't feel like working anymore. on: December 03, 2011, 05:05:58 PM
Taxes may take half of your earnings, but you'd spend that much providing the same services the government does (at least).

Prove it.
The gov't runs a deficit.
10  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Only significant property owners should be allowed to vote. on: December 01, 2011, 01:32:08 AM
This is an old concept but good one. This used to apply in this nation and I certainly preferred it.

Why should people with little to nothing be allowed to vote away and steal the property of others? Shouldn't the law that regulates property only be handled by the property owners that the law mainly affects in the first place?
Is your labor not significant enough?
11  Other / Politics & Society / Re: 'reset' of money? on: November 20, 2011, 06:31:32 PM
If people had nothing else but the current world to pattern their new world on, I'd strongly suspect that we would see the same conditions develop again (although possibility with different winners and losers).
12  Other / Politics & Society / Re: "Capitalism" and "Socialism" are anti-concepts - Roderick T. Long on: September 07, 2011, 12:17:42 AM
This is truth. "Free market anti-capitalism" makes this quite clear.
13  Other / Off-topic / Re: The one true keyboard on: September 04, 2011, 02:06:24 AM
Unicomp SpaceSaver PC (Buckling spring, black with metallic gray, USB).

Have you had a chance to test it againt a IBM manufactured model m for comparison i've been thinking of buying one of those for the family pc and was curious how they compared.
Unfortunately, no.  It does sound like a real keyboard, though. It doesn't have key caps, and you can see dimples/marring from the injection molding on the side of the keys facing the back of the keyboard, but this is only an aesthetic issue. Mine was made 3/27/2009, and I don't know if anything has changed since then.
14  Other / Off-topic / Re: The one true keyboard on: September 03, 2011, 06:50:43 PM
Unicomp SpaceSaver PC (Buckling spring, black with metallic gray, USB).
15  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: What would stop me from issuing gold backed bitcoins? on: August 29, 2011, 02:39:48 AM
It would probably be best done by creating a new block chain. The genesis block would pay you the total amount of GoldBits (which could be more than you would initially distribute, assuming you want room to add more gold to the network later) that there will ever be and every block after that would generate none.

Alternatively, you could Open Transactions to create your gold backed currency.
16  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Would this be illegal? on: August 29, 2011, 02:30:58 AM
Let's person A has a lot of money, so he buys 1 million or so bitcoins. After he buys those he goes out and buys a load of iPods, for which he flips at 0.5 bitcoins. So by doing this he drives up the price of bitcoins to $100+ and then proceeds to dump the amassed bitcoins at a large profit. Legal and would this work?
You would run into massive problems at every stage of that plan. First buying that many Bitcoins would take a very long time and/or drive up the price very high. Second, if an iPod isn't already worth 0.5 Bitcoins, you would be taking a massive loss in trying to boost the price of Bitcoins. Finally, assuming you do get the price you want, cashing out is going to be an issue. You would have to do it slowly or else you would crash the market, and at the same time continue to offer the deal or else the price would fall (if that is the only thing supporting it).

Its practically a given that you would lose a ton of money, so it doesn't matter if it is legal or not.
17  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What does Quantum Computing mean for Bitcoin? on: August 28, 2011, 12:07:25 AM
2. all encryption can be broken with enough time AFAIK
Except the one time pad.
18  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Libertarian Anticapitalism on: August 21, 2011, 05:02:57 PM
*yawn*

really, of all the things to get up in arms about, food safety is a really boring one everyone. It is easily accomplished without state action ...snip...

Actually it can't be accomplished without state action.  Food safety requires the ability to force firms to close down and only a state can legally force you to do stuff.
Not necessarily. The industry could produce an organization similar to the USDA which performs random inspections and ensures a rigorous set of standards are being followed in exchanged for permission to use the group's trademark on their product. Consumers can then just look for the trademark.

This assumes that the use of the trademark is enforceable, naturally.
19  Economy / Economics / Re: Bitcoin has failed. Could something similar possibly work? on: August 09, 2011, 12:35:59 AM
Mutual mistrust between buyer and seller needs to be supported. This is the toughest problem. Right now, sending Bitcoins is not tied to receiving something in return, and is irrevocable.
This is cryptographically solved in Bitcoin by use of a trusted third party.  However, it is not widely implemented yet. (see: https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Contracts)
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The double-spending check system has to be as least as fast as normal credit card processing. Waiting minutes for the block chain to update is unacceptable.
This can be solved by having the coins come from a trusted source.
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Some price stability is needed. Value shouldn't change more than 1% per week, worst case. 1% per month would be better.
Any new currency not tacked to an existing one will suffer this; I don't consider it an issue.
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A better way of launching the currency needs to be developed.
What do you mean by this?
20  Economy / Economics / Re: Vulgar Keynes on: August 06, 2011, 04:07:22 PM
The sound is terribly messed up on that video.
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