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550

I keep thinking. At what cost? What is this going to do to the local ecosystem/environment? No. I am not kidding. You pull that much water out of the air it is GOING to have a impact in the area. I am not against the tech, I just want to understand what the impact is.

Just watch. Set 50 of these up, it makes desertification MUCH worse over a year or two then the "left" gets to yell "see, climate change" it it's really just a bunch of these fucking shit up.

They seem to think "nogs need water" is more important than "climate". Now, if it were White people in the area they would say "maybe the White's should just die. They are screwing up the environment".

Source: https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/device-that-can-extract-1-000-liters-of-clean-water-a-day-from-desert-air-revealed-by-2025-nobel-prize-winner-claimed-to-work-in-desert-air-with-20-percent-humidity-or-lower-delivering-off-grid-personalized-water

From the post:

>A 2025 Nobel Prize winner has set up a company to commercialize a machine that it claims can pull 1,000 liters (about 264 US Gal) of drinkable water a day from the thin air. As Interesting Engineering reports, Professor Omar Yaghi, a chemist at the University of California, Berkeley, invented a machine that works effectively in desert air with 20% humidity or lower. As a self-contained off-grid device, it has the potential to provide relief to regions scattered around the globe, where water shortages are persistent or have been precipitated by a natural disaster. Yaghi’s company, Atoco, also sees a market in “personalized water,” much like where households generate their own off-grid power from wind or solar. Prototypes have been successfully tested in places as arid as Death Valley. The 1,000 liters a day machine is far bigger than the social media prototype machine image we see alongside the Professor in the desert, at around 20ft in length, or the size of a shipping container.

I keep thinking. At what cost? What is this going to do to the local ecosystem/environment? No. I am not kidding. You pull that much water out of the air it is GOING to have a impact in the area. I am not against the tech, I just want to understand what the impact is. Just watch. Set 50 of these up, it makes desertification MUCH worse over a year or two then the "left" gets to yell "see, climate change" it it's really just a bunch of these fucking shit up. They seem to think "nogs need water" is more important than "climate". Now, if it were White people in the area they would say "maybe the White's should just die. They are screwing up the environment". Source: https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/device-that-can-extract-1-000-liters-of-clean-water-a-day-from-desert-air-revealed-by-2025-nobel-prize-winner-claimed-to-work-in-desert-air-with-20-percent-humidity-or-lower-delivering-off-grid-personalized-water From the post: >>A 2025 Nobel Prize winner has set up a company to commercialize a machine that it claims can pull 1,000 liters (about 264 US Gal) of drinkable water a day from the thin air. As Interesting Engineering reports, Professor Omar Yaghi, a chemist at the University of California, Berkeley, invented a machine that works effectively in desert air with 20% humidity or lower. As a self-contained off-grid device, it has the potential to provide relief to regions scattered around the globe, where water shortages are persistent or have been precipitated by a natural disaster. Yaghi’s company, Atoco, also sees a market in “personalized water,” much like where households generate their own off-grid power from wind or solar. Prototypes have been successfully tested in places as arid as Death Valley. The 1,000 liters a day machine is far bigger than the social media prototype machine image we see alongside the Professor in the desert, at around 20ft in length, or the size of a shipping container.
[–] 1 pt

They use tens of thousands of gallons of oil/lube to function. They cannot be recycled, they at-best last around 35-ish years. Even solar is better. I am tired of the bullshit.

I know a guy that did a wildlife study around turbines and the amount of bird-kill is so far above the publicly reported numbers they basically refuse to fund studies now. Too many people would be too pissed off about how bad they actually are.

[–] 1 pt

turbine farms also have a interesting property - they're big fields of radar clutter. A good drone (or even small plane pilot) can get through the field and no one can see it.

Governments are just now figuring this out. It's hilarious seeing them scramble to get measurement projects together to try and penetrate the clutter.

[–] 0 pt

autistic screeching:

Still better than funding dictatorships!!!