Rakdos Posted July 11, 2004 Author Posted July 11, 2004 MAybe it was being controlled by the train dpt. by remote contol
ydoaPs Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 I don't know about NY, but in Chi town, they can't do that.
Rakdos Posted July 11, 2004 Author Posted July 11, 2004 On TLC it had a show about subways and there was a master control station but that was in Boston
admiral_ju00 Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 To the "whole cold fusion" thing, it has been done. Schrodinger, what is the title and who are the publishers of that cold fusion book at the library? Now, I gather that by the above mention of "Cold Fusion" you're talking about a mechanical device and not a programming language, right? But then again, isn't Cold fusion the same thing as a Perpetual motion device? In which case they might have built it, but it just didn't work.
ydoaPs Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 How is cold fusion the same as a perpetual motion device?
Cohen Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 Let me get this straight, you're trying to pick holes in a fantasy film about a guy who has radioactive blood and can perform superhuman feats including climbing sheer walls? I mean, I can understand it in a science oriented film like say Pi or Cube but Spiderman? Bit like shooting fish in a barrel don't you think considering they don't really go out of their way to make it accurate but (by definition) fantastic.
JaKiri Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 Then get a periodic table Tritium isn't on the periodic table, except as 'Hydrogen', so that's a singularly useless suggestion. To the "whole cold fusion" thing, it has been done. Schrodinger, what is the title and who are the publishers of that cold fusion book at the library? The only 'cold fusion' thing that I know of is the abortive claim of Fleischmann and Pons. That was what we in the scientific community refer to as 'utterly utterly wrong'. Anyway, to pick out scientific flaws in spiderman is a bit pointless.
Rakdos Posted July 11, 2004 Author Posted July 11, 2004 The only 'cold fusion' thing that I know of is the abortive claim of Fleischmann and Pons. That was what we in the scientific community refer to as 'utterly utterly wrong'. Who said it was Cold Fusion? I belive it was laser induced hot fusion, and before you say well it couldn't have formed a sphere because of Earth's gravity it all depends on waht shape they form the fuel into to start the reaction
Rakdos Posted July 11, 2004 Author Posted July 11, 2004 i know what spiderman 3 is JaKiri the book was about the history of the idea of cold fusion [hide] Return of The Green Goblin [/hide]
ydoaPs Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 Tritium is on some periodic tables. They vary slightly. Some have the first few isotopes or uses or something else.
atinymonkey Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 Fagel, use punctuation. Who, what and why? Try and make some sense.
ydoaPs Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 It does make sense. I told Fagel to use punctuation because he isn't making any sense.
atinymonkey Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 Your taking the rather large assumption that we know Schrodngr's_cat's real name. If you have personnel messages, usually people use the PM system.
admiral_ju00 Posted July 12, 2004 Posted July 12, 2004 Tritium is on some periodic tables. They vary slightly. Some have the first few isotopes or uses or something else. Link?
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