Hey, #FediFrens!
Who are some #Trans #FiberArts designers?
(knitting, weaving, crochet, embroidery, etc.)
/plz boost for signal?
The buzz of them could be heard from the shore. There was no time. We ran into the citadel and shut the sliding metal doors and stuffed perspex covid-dividers at the gap under the door.
Would it be enough?
Then the red insects could be seen from behind the covid divider. They could not see us. A person wearing the same colour red shoes stepped up to the door too. We waited forever in a moment. They all left in union.
All our #fediFrens would be safe from the #Nov2022s.
It is really fucking cool that I can post a question about fusion and get a response with this kind of substance and insight:
https://toot.cat/@riley/109518823848958655 (thanks so much @riley)
I'm spending a lot of time checking out folks' profiles cause I'm just blown away by all the cool people I've been able to interact with on the #fediverse. Y'all are pretty fuckin great actually #FridayFeels (I know it's not friday yet, idgaf i think that hashtag is kinda neat; starting a thing (lol also slightly bummed to learn it was not born of my brain and has def been used ๐ )) #FediFrens
@[email protected]: So, the primary problem of fusion power is delivering an extreme energy density in a way that doesn't break the machine beyond repair. Until recently, the only way to get energy out of fusion processes involved using fission detonation devices to rapidly deliver the high energy density, but nuclear bombs have the nasty tendency to break the whole machine into tiny pieces, and you'd need to build a new device if you wanted to do some more fusion. The NIF machine is a great breakthrough not as much because it shoves 2MJ of energy into the Hohlraum and gets 3MJ out, but because once it will have done it, *the machine will still be intact, and can run the next flash the next day*. The machine not blowing up during routine operation is a very useful feature to have. ... but for commercial usefulness, the machine will not need to run once per day, or once per hour, but many times in every second. With advanced confinement techniques, this number can be slightly reduced, of course. But the current machine is at once a great demonstration of useful techniques, yet not nearly capable of doing the great thing that it does often enough to be industrially useful. It's still very much a R&D device: its usefulness is that by having built it, and making sure that it works, people will know more about how the next iteration could be built, not that it can make cheap power.