I like and agree with your thinking, the answer is...yes we can...(a hemp plastic car body maybe) yet what you are describing requires a paradigm shift in the way we think and live, and a regime change. For example, the langenburgh tech (look it up) mentioned can purify ocean water brinelessly without RO, then use that water, convert it to a fuel that can run in a internal combustion engine. No modifications necessary. Let that fully sink in. The answers are here, but experientially, the doe wouldnt recognize that particular water as a fuel for market. So the inventor is at a stand still. Furthermore, that inventor can de-materialize all waste, no more landfills, yet the waste industry is a monopoly and the inventor is greedy, so its a loss for everyone. Thats what I mean by a paradigm shift needs to happen. We need to stop following the money.
During the 80's I recall an inventor upgraded his engine to get 300 miles per gallon, then he disappeared. That one innovation couldve decreased emmission 300x. One night at a bar a guy told me a story about his dad suiciding. His dad made an engine run on water, a major took it on, they were soon to market, the feds came, the project ended, his dad suicided. I met an inventor, John Smith, an ex ceo of exxon, he invented an unending clean supply electric gen, he had a stroke. There are 3 existing companies that can make fuel from water...see Langenburgh Technologies, Star Scientific Australia (it creates steam from catalytic reaction not hydrogen fuel as they market themselves) and a inventor from japan Ohm water. Point being, we have the answers for brineless water purification, water as fuel, increased miles per gallon, waste incineration to end landfills...but greed, money, monopolies prevent the natural evolution of free market capitalism from working.
Thanks for writing. You tell cool stories--and I wonder about the other 100+ elements (besides oil) that make one vehicle run. Could engineers design a biodegradable car? Could they design a car using only raw materials sourced from within a 500 mile radius of them? If not, how/can we transport ourselves within our ecological limits--without ravaging the Earth and the communities near mining, refining and assembly sites?
During the 80's I recall an inventor upgraded his engine to get 300 miles per gallon, then he disappeared. That one innovation couldve decreased emmission 300x. One night at a bar a guy told me a story about his dad suiciding. His dad made an engine run on water, a major took it on, they were soon to market, the feds came, the project ended, his dad suicided. I met an inventor, John Smith, an ex ceo of exxon, he invented an unending clean supply electric gen, he had a stroke. There are 3 existing companies that can make fuel from water...see Langenburgh Technologies, Star Scientific Australia (it creates steam from catalytic reaction not hydrogen fuel as they market themselves) and a inventor from japan Ohm water. Point being, we have the answers for brineless water purification, water as fuel, increased miles per gallon, waste incineration to end landfills...but greed, money, monopolies prevent the natural evolution of free market capitalism from working.
Don't most AI supercomputers use water as part of the hard drive? Seems like water may be a better investment or memory "stick" for us all to drink, rather than putting our money into AI.
Good question. I don't know the answer--but clearly, we need a team to trace every computer's water use from its cradle to its grave. After learning our own computers' water use, we can better gauge AI supercomputers.
I like and agree with your thinking, the answer is...yes we can...(a hemp plastic car body maybe) yet what you are describing requires a paradigm shift in the way we think and live, and a regime change. For example, the langenburgh tech (look it up) mentioned can purify ocean water brinelessly without RO, then use that water, convert it to a fuel that can run in a internal combustion engine. No modifications necessary. Let that fully sink in. The answers are here, but experientially, the doe wouldnt recognize that particular water as a fuel for market. So the inventor is at a stand still. Furthermore, that inventor can de-materialize all waste, no more landfills, yet the waste industry is a monopoly and the inventor is greedy, so its a loss for everyone. Thats what I mean by a paradigm shift needs to happen. We need to stop following the money.
During the 80's I recall an inventor upgraded his engine to get 300 miles per gallon, then he disappeared. That one innovation couldve decreased emmission 300x. One night at a bar a guy told me a story about his dad suiciding. His dad made an engine run on water, a major took it on, they were soon to market, the feds came, the project ended, his dad suicided. I met an inventor, John Smith, an ex ceo of exxon, he invented an unending clean supply electric gen, he had a stroke. There are 3 existing companies that can make fuel from water...see Langenburgh Technologies, Star Scientific Australia (it creates steam from catalytic reaction not hydrogen fuel as they market themselves) and a inventor from japan Ohm water. Point being, we have the answers for brineless water purification, water as fuel, increased miles per gallon, waste incineration to end landfills...but greed, money, monopolies prevent the natural evolution of free market capitalism from working.
Thanks for writing. You tell cool stories--and I wonder about the other 100+ elements (besides oil) that make one vehicle run. Could engineers design a biodegradable car? Could they design a car using only raw materials sourced from within a 500 mile radius of them? If not, how/can we transport ourselves within our ecological limits--without ravaging the Earth and the communities near mining, refining and assembly sites?
During the 80's I recall an inventor upgraded his engine to get 300 miles per gallon, then he disappeared. That one innovation couldve decreased emmission 300x. One night at a bar a guy told me a story about his dad suiciding. His dad made an engine run on water, a major took it on, they were soon to market, the feds came, the project ended, his dad suicided. I met an inventor, John Smith, an ex ceo of exxon, he invented an unending clean supply electric gen, he had a stroke. There are 3 existing companies that can make fuel from water...see Langenburgh Technologies, Star Scientific Australia (it creates steam from catalytic reaction not hydrogen fuel as they market themselves) and a inventor from japan Ohm water. Point being, we have the answers for brineless water purification, water as fuel, increased miles per gallon, waste incineration to end landfills...but greed, money, monopolies prevent the natural evolution of free market capitalism from working.
Don't most AI supercomputers use water as part of the hard drive? Seems like water may be a better investment or memory "stick" for us all to drink, rather than putting our money into AI.
Good question. I don't know the answer--but clearly, we need a team to trace every computer's water use from its cradle to its grave. After learning our own computers' water use, we can better gauge AI supercomputers.
drink water consciously! yes!