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Howdy,
There has been a lot of Interest in biofuels spread out over many different groups lately. As a subscriber to this group, I hope you'll assist me in creating a proper set of forums for these topics. sci.energy.biofuel.* is a new hierarchy that is being discussed in news.groups.proposals. Please support this initiative by posting a few positive words to the current thread. Thanks in advance! |
#2
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Isn't that one already covered by sci.net.energy.sink?
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On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 08:37:21 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: Howdy, There has been a lot of Interest in biofuels spread out over many different groups lately. As a subscriber to this group, I hope you'll assist me in creating a proper set of forums for these topics. sci.energy.biofuel.* is a new hierarchy that is being discussed in news.groups.proposals. Please support this initiative by posting a few positive words to the current thread. Thanks in advance! I'm against it. I'm not dead set against it like I'll vigorously oppose it, but I do think sci.energy is large enough to contain discussions of biofuel, and I have a hunch that most posters to sci.energy find biofuels interesting at the moment and like to discuss them right here. But if there was a separate newsgroup for biofuels only, I'm not sure I'd find it interesting enough to seek it out. Too narrow, you see. If you had proposed something at least a little broader, like "sci.energy.fuel" I would have been more positive. Comparisons of fossil fuels and biofuel are interesting, but a name like "sci.energy.biofuel" might not attract those who would take a stand against biofuel, thus discussions would be one-sided. Fuel is still very much on topic for sci.energy. S. |
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On Jun 24, 6:37 am, Sevenhundred Elves
wrote: On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 08:37:21 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: Howdy, There has been a lot of Interest in biofuels spread out over many different groups lately. As a subscriber to this group, I hope you'll assist me in creating a proper set of forums for these topics. sci.energy.biofuel.* is a new hierarchy that is being discussed in news.groups.proposals. Please support this initiative by posting a few positive words to the current thread. Thanks in advance! I'm against it. I'm not dead set against it like I'll vigorously oppose it, but I do think sci.energy is large enough to contain discussions of biofuel, and I have a hunch that most posters to sci.energy find biofuels interesting at the moment and like to discuss them right here. But if there was a separate newsgroup for biofuels only, I'm not sure I'd find it interesting enough to seek it out. Too narrow, you see. If you had proposed something at least a little broader, like "sci.energy.fuel" I would have been more positive. Comparisons of fossil fuels and biofuel are interesting, but a name like "sci.energy.biofuel" might not attract those who would take a stand against biofuel, thus discussions would be one-sided. Fuel is still very much on topic for sci.energy. S. The hierarchy included groups for engineering chemistry, advocacy, and agriculture. The charters were intended to provide a location for collaboration for these disciplines as they relate to biofuels, not a place to discuss fuel in general. So discussing an engine, or titration, or soil chemistry would be on topic, but the good/bad of biofuels would have definitely been off topic. But it is a moot point. The big-8 board has quashed the initiative. |
#5
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![]() Everyone talks about our terrible dependency on oil -- foreign and otherwise -- but hardly anyone mentions what it is. Fossil fuel, all right, but whose fossils? Mostly tiny plants called diatoms, but quite possibly a few Barney-like creatures went into the mix, like Stegosaurus, Brontosaurus and other giant reptiles that shared the Jurassic period with all those diatoms. What we are burning in our cars and keeping our homes warm or cool with is, in other words, a highly processed version of corpse juice. .... I say to my fellow humans: It's time to stop feeding off the dead and grow up! I don't know about food, but I have a plan for achieving fuel self-suffiency in less time than it takes to say "Arctic National Wildlife Refuge." The idea came to me from reports of the growing crime of French fry oil theft: certain desperate individuals are stealing restaurants' discarded cooking oil, which can then be used to fuel cars. So the idea is, Why not could skip the French fry phase and harvest high-energy hydrocarbons right from ourselves? I'm talking about liposuction, of course, and it's a mystery to me why it hasn't occurred to any of those geniuses who are constantly opining about fuel prices on MSNBC. The average liposuction removes about half a gallon of liquid fat, which may not seem like much. But think of the vast reserves our nation is literally sitting on! Thirty percent of Americans are obese, or about 90 million individuals or 45 million gallons of easily available fat -- not from dead diatoms but from our very own bellies and butts. .... (The Nation) This column was written by Barbara Ehrenreich. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/...n4205088.shtml |
#6
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On Jun 24, 10:23 pm, cavelamb himself wrote:
Everyone talks about our terrible dependency on oil -- foreign and otherwise -- but hardly anyone mentions what it is. Fossil fuel, all right, but whose fossils? Mostly tiny plants called diatoms, but quite possibly a few Barney-like creatures went into the mix, like Stegosaurus, Brontosaurus and other giant reptiles that shared the Jurassic period with all those diatoms. What we are burning in our cars and keeping our homes warm or cool with is, in other words, a highly processed version of corpse juice. ... I say to my fellow humans: It's time to stop feeding off the dead and grow up! I don't know about food, but I have a plan for achieving fuel self-suffiency in less time than it takes to say "Arctic National Wildlife Refuge." The idea came to me from reports of the growing crime of French fry oil theft: certain desperate individuals are stealing restaurants' discarded cooking oil, which can then be used to fuel cars. So the idea is, Why not could skip the French fry phase and harvest high-energy hydrocarbons right from ourselves? I'm talking about liposuction, of course, and it's a mystery to me why it hasn't occurred to any of those geniuses who are constantly opining about fuel prices on MSNBC. The average liposuction removes about half a gallon of liquid fat, which may not seem like much. But think of the vast reserves our nation is literally sitting on! Thirty percent of Americans are obese, or about 90 million individuals or 45 million gallons of easily available fat -- not from dead diatoms but from our very own bellies and butts. ... (The Nation) This column was written by Barbara Ehrenreich. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/...n4205088.shtml The FDA would lever allow it. Sucking fat out of peoples asses would put great hazard to them being stabbed in the brain with the hose. |
#7
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On Jun 24, 8:23 pm, cavelamb himself wrote:
Everyone talks about our terrible dependency on oil -- foreign and otherwise -- but hardly anyone mentions what it is. Fossil fuel, all right, but whose fossils? Mostly tiny plants called diatoms, but quite possibly a few Barney-like creatures went into the mix, like Stegosaurus, Brontosaurus and other giant reptiles that shared the Jurassic period with all those diatoms. What we are burning in our cars and keeping our homes warm or cool with is, in other words, a highly processed version of corpse juice. I wonder about that. Just how many dead dinosaurs did it take to create the gazillions of barrels of known oil reserves (or whatever the big number is)? Around ten years ago some scientists in the Ukraine tested a theory that's been bouncing around awhile that says that oil can be formed deep in the earth by heat and pressure as a reaction between water and limestone. Those Ukrainians did that: they mixed water and dolomite (limestone) and subjected it to terrific pressure and heated it, and got something pretty close to crude oil out of it. Limestone, I know, is made up of diatoms' skeletons. As far as biofuel goes, I'm willing to donate some belly fat if I can get a tankful of gas out of it. Or we could distill some of the baloney from alternative energy group discussions and get almost unlimited fuel. Dan |
#8
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![]() "cavelamb himself" wrote in message ... .... I'm talking about liposuction, of course, and it's a mystery to me why it hasn't occurred to any of those geniuses who are constantly opining about fuel prices on MSNBC. The average liposuction removes about half a gallon of liquid fat, which may not seem like much. But think of the vast reserves our nation is literally sitting on! Thirty percent of Americans are obese, or about 90 million individuals or 45 million gallons of easily available fat -- not from dead diatoms but from our very own bellies and butts. Cute. Unfortunately, in the US, 45 million gallons is burned in less time than it took you to write the posting. |
#9
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wrote in message
... On Jun 24, 6:37 am, Sevenhundred Elves wrote: On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 08:37:21 -0700 (PDT), " There has been a lot of Interest in biofuels spread out over many different groups lately. As a subscriber to this group, I hope you'll assist me in creating a proper set of forums for these topics. sci.energy.biofuel.* is a new hierarchy that is being discussed in news.groups.proposals. Why the hell do you need more than one ****ing group? Please support this initiative by posting a few positive words to the current thread. **** off and die. Thanks in advance! I'm against it. I'm not dead set against it like I'll vigorously oppose it, but I do think sci.energy is large enough to contain discussions of biofuel, and I have a hunch that most posters to sci.energy find biofuels interesting at the moment and like to discuss them right here. But if there was a separate newsgroup for biofuels only, I'm not sure I'd find it interesting enough to seek it out. Too narrow, you see. If you had proposed something at least a little broader, like "sci.energy.fuel" I would have been more positive. Comparisons of fossil fuels and biofuel are interesting, but a name like "sci.energy.biofuel" might not attract those who would take a stand against biofuel, thus discussions would be one-sided. Fuel is still very much on topic for sci.energy. The hierarchy included groups for engineering chemistry, advocacy, and agriculture. The charters were intended to provide a location for collaboration for these disciplines as they relate to biofuels, not a place to discuss fuel in general. So discussing an engine, or titration, or soil chemistry would be on topic, but the good/bad of biofuels would have definitely been off topic. If you want a hierarchy, here's a logical one: sci.energy .fuel ..bio ..hydrogen ..fossil ..water-lunatics But it is a moot point. The big-8 board has quashed the initiative. Good for them. |
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