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gftChris

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Posts posted by gftChris

  1. I could stay with relatives. I have several cousins near there. Croydon for sure. Northhampton. An aunt by marriage still lives near Liverpool. My Gillingham and Chatham connections are gone though.

    Well, Croydon's almost London I suppose ;)

     

    By american standards the rest are definitely not. If you're around, give me a shout and I'll buy you some cold fizzy tasteless piss, or a real beer.

  2. Nice. What kind of things do you normally look for?

     

    We went to an event at the royal observatory in Greenwich (as in Greenwich mean time) where they had a few scopes set up, and binoculars to hand out to everyone, plus looking through the great equatorial telescope - that thing is massive! 28-inch refractor, the scope is 28 feet long. Not as powerful as modern telescopes of course, but still pretty impressive engineering for 150 years ago.

    http://www.rmg.co.uk/see-do/we-recommend/attractions/great-equatorial-telescope

  3. Were I on my own I'd take you up on it for sure, but I'll be bringing a couple of friends at least. What telescope do you have? I'm relatively new to the field and just recently got my first proper pair of binoculars (and mount). Didn't want to go full on scope for hundreds of pounds if I wasn't sure I'd use it a lot. In London we have 'issues' with light pollution...

     

    The last 4 years or so a few friends and I have been visiting different theme parks, once per year. Started with the two biggest in the UK, then the two biggest non-disney ones in Europe (Port Aventura, Europa Park), but now we're short of ideas. It's either step down in size/quality and stay in Europe, or just fuck it and go big. My GF has always wanted to go to Cedar Point, so that ties in nicely with Cleveland football.

  4. People - I have tentative plans to visit Cedar Point for a few days later in the year (may get pushed to 2017). Obviously, swinging by for a Browns game is a must, but is there anything else in the area? I suspect we would end up flying in to detroit as it's direct for us, picking up a car and going from there, in a round trip. I suspect Niagara is on the list as well, and maybe Toronto.

     

    Anything I might not know about worth taking a look at? Nature and astronomy would be a big plus as well.

  5. That's pretty. Looks like the contrasts have been played with - no way the water is that blue with the sun that low. But still, pretty.

     

    As I said, that as just last week. It's a bit unfair as I get to watch the sunset across London every day now for a couple of months from my desk on the 40th floor in canary wharf.

  6. Lol, Woody not the bottom of the panel, Einstein. The actual road surface. And no it would not be the same as the top, that's the pricy part.

    How is the top not the same as the road surface? I think the top layer has been tested thoroughly enough that as a proof of concept, it works fine. Sure, it's been tested in warm weather, so the snow melting capacity hasn't been exposed to Alaskan conditions, and that's something they'll need to do.

     

    As for the cracks/potholes, I think it's a lot less likely than in a tarmac/concrete road. Whereas that is one rigid inflexible slab, this would be a series of individual components that are themselves relatively flexible and the connections probably make the whole thing a lot more flexible. Potentially a factor when thinking about paving in earthquake prone areas I guess.

  7. Cool, but it would cost a fortune and take forever to complete.

    So we'd better get started now, rather than delay?

     

    Yes, the funding issue is a real one, and not a simple one to solve. But there's money available to repair roads, to repair the energy infrastructure and all the rest. It might mean that we scrimp on some other area for the next 10 years to get this installed (maybe less military for a start), but the rewards if and when it's installed are massive.

    • Upvote 1
  8. Absolutely. I posted this in another thread somewhere, but these are amazing. So, if they get installed on every tarmac surface in america, you produce about 3 times the national requirements of energy? Then why the fuck are we waiting? Money has to come from somewhere, I suppose. But these things will essentially pay for themselves. Who stands to lose from that? Oh, right, oil companies. Good job they don't have any influence anywhere in policy making...

     

    Pub for lunch, feeling cynical!

  9. While that is true, I think the thing that can set them apart is the setting. In my choice it was really all about the setting. I was on the tip of a peninsula, fairly high above cliffs below me, and with an Island with a lighthouse on it just adjacent to where the sun set.

    (Cape Flattery, Wash. with Tatoosh Island just offshore)

    Atmospheric conditions as well - you can get some truly spectacular sunsets if the conditions are right like:

    06584-Sunset-over-lake-in-Scotland.jpg

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