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total_chaos5

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    Computer Science

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Lepton

Lepton (1/13)

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  1. When it comes to computer parts newegg is one of the best. Since you aren't looking for anything crazy then I would suggest any amd quad core chip(anything above a 2.3ghz will do), they're extremely cheap! obviously 4 gigs of ram(DDR3 will be fine) would be a must. Look into getting a graphics card with dedicated ram. Thats basically all you will need for gaming, the rest is trivial.
  2. Agreed, but it can be optimized with different substances. Take for example using water instead of heavy gas, Water would apply a VERY significant force compared to any gas. Trust me I'm not ready to hit the shelves with this anytime soon, just spit balling ideas to help better our world. Like a helium balloon in the atmosphere. I'm not sure what material I would use, but I'm positive there are many optimal materials on the market.
  3. How would that matter though since the forces are working together? on the left side the gases would apply a force upward and on the right side the gases are applying a downward force. This would result in a turning motion since the forces are working together.
  4. Have you tried contacting customer support? you said you tried it on multiple computers?
  5. I don't understand what you mean there, can you expand on that a little more?
  6. Well I'm just wondering if it will work. I'm just as big of a skeptic as you guys. Theoretically if we overcame the force of friction, wouldn't that mean the conservation of energy law no longer applies? I don't understand where the energy comes from when gases rise/fall in our atmosphere. Maybe someone can explain this to me, but when I see a helium balloon rising it really makes me think.
  7. I read somewhere that you can fill a chamber to approx. 99.9% gas with the right conditions, which would mean the .1% that would be air would float to the top/bottom. There is loss to friction with everything, thats a problem I'm not concerned about yet.
  8. My understanding of chemistry is minimal, so if this idea doesn't work go easy on me. So I understand helium balloons rise in our atmosphere because they are less dense than our air. Could it be possible to create a cylindrical container having two sides light air(less dense) and the other side heavy air(more dense). The sides are separated by another cylindrical container. Inside this container theres compartments of medium dense gas. When the gas turns to the light side it fall creating a downward force, on the heavy side the gas would rise to create an upward force. The resulting force would continuously spin the inside container which could be attached to a turbine or a generator of some kind. The picture I provided(very poor picture took me a total of 30 seconds to make) will help as a good visual description of what I'm trying to describe. The blue color is the medium gas. The green can be light. The red can be heavy(the green and red are interchangeable). here is the picture
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