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I wonder if it is retaliation for this: Dutch intelligence agency spied on Russian hacking group

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-netherlands-russia-cyberc...


Elon Musk should do an ICO of a new cryptocoin he could call Marscoin. People would buy it in droves.


Hes basically a cult leader.

Non-automotive people have no clue how insane a 100,000 vehicle/year car company valued at 50B is.

I used to like him, but hes all hype.


I bought my first legal weed in California yesterday and it was a very interesting experience. I don't usually smoke but I wanted to see what the store was like. It was strictly cash only. They had several ATM's installed in the building. Security was tight for this reason. It's hard to process that it's now legal.


Is it completely legal now? Do you no longer even need a prescription?


It is completely legal now and I didn't need a prescription card. They asked me if I had a prescription card, for what reason I don't know, because I've never had one and they don't require it anymore. I think perhaps medical clients get discounts or special deals?


Probably asked so they don’t charge some kind tax or something...


So I gather you don't believe batteries will succeed as a solution


Not clear. If costs really continue to decline, batteries will make up a bigger and bigger part of the solution, but costs and uncertainty of the massive scale battery projects still seem high to me. Decreasing demand, nuclear, carbon capture, batteries, etc will all play a role IMO.


Carbon capture seems like a bigger wildcard to me than battery technology. Battery technology has been improving pretty steadily and will likely continue to do so.

Capturing carbon from coal power plants adds cost to something that is already not cost effective. Capturing carbon in the atmosphere likely will require huge amounts of power - and if its not 100% renewable power its kind of pointless.

Nuclear is better than coal or natural gas, but there have been some high profile failures lately and the lead time on new nuclear is so high, as well as the sticker price.


Nuclear and coal are available now and are known to work. Utility-scale battery farms of the magnitude necessary are not.


>Nuclear and coal are available now and are known to work.

Nuclear is not available now in the sense that you can order a plant and have it running in a year or two like you can with solar. More like a decade

Coal is available, but more expensive than natural gas. Coal is dead, did you really not know that?

>Utility-scale battery farms of the magnitude necessary are not.

But rapid progress is being made, and the utilities are planning for the future, which is only rational.


>Nuclear is not available now in the sense that you can order a plant and have it running in a year or two like you can with solar. More like a decade

The interesting aspect is that by the time a nuclear power plant is online renewable energy and battery storage might have advanced enough to make it uneconomical.


OK, so how long do you wait? How sure of a thing do we need? By that logic we wouldn't do anything. Do you think coal got started with a sure thing?

How is it we're more concerned with wasting some money than the possibility of catastrophic climate change? This is why the federal government should be more involved with combating climate change - nobody is willing to risk their money, or their power bill going up, even if it means essentially saving the world and/or our way of life.


See the Oyster Protocol https://oysterprotocol.com/


There are some links and info in this article which are good starting points: "8 Things We Learned about Blockchain During our Hackathon" https://arctouch.com/2018/01/blockchain-hackathon/


I’ll take a look. Thanks! I am looking for something step by step and really easy to understand.


There are a couple of courses on Udemy which are step by step. Search for 'solidity'. There's a course by Stephen Grider (spelling?).




...encourage users to share their genomic information with scientists by offering them “Luna Coins,” the company’s own version of digital currency...Luna DNA does not provide genome sequencing services. Rather, users would contribute their DNA sequencing from providers such as 23andMe and Ancestry.com.



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