Where is everyone?

All off topic discussions go here. Everything from the funny thing your cat did to your favorite tv shows. Non-programming computer questions are ok too.

Where is everyone?

North America
20
24%
Middle America
0
No votes
South America
2
2%
Europe
42
51%
Asia
5
6%
Africa
1
1%
Australia
8
10%
Antarctica
5
6%
 
Total votes: 83

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AndrewAPrice
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by AndrewAPrice »

Who knows.. maybe 4 scientists working in Antarctica realised with all the free time they have sitting inside their houses which are inverted-refrigerators (keeping the cold out - not in!) could be better spent on writing an OS.
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Troy Martin
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Troy Martin »

MessiahAndrw wrote:Who knows.. maybe 4 scientists working in Antarctica realised with all the free time they have sitting inside their houses which are inverted-refrigerators (keeping the cold out - not in!) could be better spent on writing an OS.
Well they are studying penguin cultures down there and watching them push each other off into the ocean must be terribly boring...
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Solar wrote:It keeps stunning me how friendly we - as a community - are towards people who start programming "their first OS" who don't even have a solid understanding of pointers, their compiler, or how a OS is structured.
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i586coder
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by i586coder »

come on folks, no body talking about mars, maybe in the future there is a human beings
up there in mars, so i suggest adding MARS in your options



can't belive, read this
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoen ... 80731.html


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Solar
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Solar »

Once I had dreams about mankind actually finding a second home in space. Today, I know more about the greedy stupidity of mankind and Kessler Syndrome, I have buried such hopes.

Perhaps there'll be missions that make research companies richer, bring home minerals to build poisonous things, or bring home fuels to burn into our atmosphere, but a populace leaving our planet to build communities elsewhere?

Forget it. The free market tells you there's no ROI in it, unless we're talking a Mars holiday resort for the Filthy Rich (tm).
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Combuster
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Combuster »

Forget it. The free market tells you there's no ROI in it
I shall wait for the day that there are too many people to be supplied by oxygen given the remaining rainforest sizes.
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Solar »

Already there. Co2 levels are rising. Long before O2 runs out, the Co2 will suffocate us.
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Brynet-Inc »

Solar wrote:Already there. Co2 levels are rising. Long before O2 runs out, the Co2 will suffocate us.
I'll stop burping after I drink a pop... no, not really.
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Solar »

Good one. :D
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by jal »

Solar wrote:Already there. Co2 levels are rising. Long before O2 runs out, the Co2 will suffocate us.
CO2 doesn't suffocate you. Suffocation is caused by lack of O2. You could feel really suffocated though, with high levels of CO2, without getting oxygen deprived.


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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Solar »

1% Co2: drowsiness. 2%: blood pressure and pulse rise, hearing diminished. 5%: dizzyness, confusion, headaches, shortness of breath. 8%: sweating, dim vision, tremor, unconsciousness.

Our atmosphere contains >20% O2, and Co2 is ~1.5 times heavier than O2. The rest is math and physics... (see also Lake Nyos 1986 disaster.)
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AJ
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by AJ »

Solar wrote:1% Co2: drowsiness. 2%: blood pressure and pulse rise, hearing diminished. 5%: dizzyness, confusion, headaches, shortness of breath. 8%: sweating, dim vision, tremor, unconsciousness.
But stictly speaking, that's not due to suffocation, it's due to hypercapnia.

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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by jal »

AJ wrote:But stictly speaking, that's not due to suffocation, it's due to hypercapnia.
Indeed. It's a bit far fetched to go from rise of CO2 in atmosphere to rise of CO2 in blood.
Solar wrote:Our atmosphere contains >20% O2, and Co2 is ~1.5 times heavier than O2. The rest is math and physics
Unfortunately, I was never that good in either math or physics, but I'm pretty sure oxygen and nitrogen also have different masses, and yet.

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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by Solar »

  • Oxygen: 1.429 g/L
  • Nitrogen: 1.251 g/L
  • Carbon Dioxide: 1.98 g/L
Yes, they mix, but not terribly well or fast. Teachers demonstrate this by "pouring" CO2 from a container into another one holding a burning candle - candle goes out. (See for yourself.)

About external and blood Co2 levels... you know how the lungs work? Co2 levels in your blood are always higher than your surroundings... (The percentage values I mentioned in my last post were for external Co2 levels...)
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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by jal »

Solar wrote:Yes, they mix, but not terribly well or fast. Teachers demonstrate this by "pouring" CO2 from a container into another one holding a burning candle - candle goes out.
Yes, but atmospheric conditions are different.
About external and blood Co2 levels... you know how the lungs work? Co2 levels in your blood are always higher than your surroundings... (The percentage values I mentioned in my last post were for external Co2 levels...)
It'd be interesting to know at what point (CO2 levels in surrounding) the lungs start failing to exhume CO2 so that you're bloodlevels rise dangerously. Anyway, the proposed levels in the (distant) past are much higher than the currently expected values because of our CO2 polutions. So I still think it's unrealistic to state that we'll cause our own suffocation :).


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Re: Where is everyone?

Post by bewing »

Yes, it is completely unrealistic. We've been working at it really hard for a century, and we managed to raise CO2 levels from 320 parts per million to 380 ppm. If we do it for another half-century, all the oil runs out. Guess how much CO2 will be released from burning oil, after it runs out? The most hysterical-panic-mongering guesstimates that I have seen for CO2 levels (such as in Al Gore's movie) were for 500 ppm. Still two orders of magnitude below the 5% atmospheric concentration that Solar (correctly) finds troublesome. But we would have to decompose most of the carbonate rocks in the continents in order to get there. And CO2 does mix quite evenly through the atmosphere, on the order of a few days. It doesn't stick to the surface of the planet.

Going to space starting from scratch can be done for a few billion dollars, assuming perfect efficiency. Add a couple orders of magnitude for inefficiency. It won't be long until someone develops decent technology, and does it from scratch the first time. After the early adopters pay for the initial development, the price will drop several orders of magnitude -- and mere millionaires will be able to move into space. Will the general populace be able to go? Of course not. E = mgh ensures that.
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