![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#81
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Roderick Stewart" wrote in message .myzen.co.uk... In article , David wrote: and don't forget the hydro in Norway, and Scotland, that was a major theme in Series 3 of Survivors. I often wonder why we aren't concentrating on developing our use of hydro as a renewable energy source, rather than wind; In a situation like the one depicted in Survivors, hydro energy might very well be renewable, but the machinery necessary to extract it certainly would not be, because the industrial infrastructure that could maintain and replace it would be gone. We've become accustomed to living in a throwaway society because there is always a replacement for something that breaks, but it would be sheer folly to depend on anything we couldn't replace when it wore out. Rod. Engineering skills would have to be rediscovered and taught, but in the short term existing hydroelectric dams fortunately need little maintenance. With multiple generators and turbines, even if several fail there's still a lot of redundancy left. Steve Terry |
|
#82
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Invid Fan" wrote in message ... In article , Bill Wright wrote: "Peter Duncanson" wrote in message ... On Sun, 19 Jul 2009 21:33:08 +0100, Roderick Stewart wrote: There is a fascinating book "Guns, Germs and Steel: A short history of everybody for the last 13,000 years" by Jared Diamond. It takes a scientific look at why the industrial revolution and other major developments occurred in Europe and led to the dominance of Europeans. Obviously the reason is the racial superiority of the inhabitants of that area. The tone of the book at times seemed to argue the opposite, that Europe rose to the top despite the quality of the inhabitants ![]() That's the trouble. So many authors are racist. Bill |
|
#83
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article , Steve Terry wrote:
The last hundred years of knowledge is stored on many mediums from books to hard drives to USB sticks, it's not all going to get lost. You can't do much with a hard drive or a USB stick without an electronics industry to maintain the equipment to play them, or without electricity to run the equipment. We'd be lucky if any usable remnant of those storage mechanisms lasted five years, never mind a hundred. And in a society that has been so reduced and fragmented that their most pressing concerns are fresh water, food and somewhere warm to stay, who is going to teach the next few generations to read books? Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
|
#84
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article , Steve Terry wrote:
In a situation like the one depicted in Survivors, hydro energy might very well be renewable, but the machinery necessary to extract it certainly would not be, because the industrial infrastructure that could maintain and replace it would be gone. We've become accustomed to living in a throwaway society because there is always a replacement for something that breaks, but it would be sheer folly to depend on anything we couldn't replace when it wore out. Rod. Engineering skills would have to be rediscovered and taught, but in the short term existing hydroelectric dams fortunately need little maintenance. With multiple generators and turbines, even if several fail there's still a lot of redundancy left. Even if, by pure fluke, out of the fraction of the population left over, the tiny percentage that knew how to run a power station (do you?) just happened to find their way to them (How? on foot? on horseback), they'd realise that it was only a stopgap. There would be no hope of repairing or replacing anything. You might be able to teach the next generation how to tend a generator, but without an upbringing in a technological world they'd have an increasingly limited understanding of how it worked, eventually just knowing what switches to press to make it work. (This is, after all, the extent of most people's understanding of technology now). As little as one generation down the line, explanations in scientific terminology would be meaningless mumbo-jumbo to a rural society with no laboratories to demonstrate any of it - just stuff the older people would expect you to memorise to be allowed to tend the great machine. Within three or four generations, if it was still working, they'd be worshipping the thing. Then it would break down. Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
|
#85
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Roderick Stewart" wrote in message .myzen.co.uk... In article , Steve Terry wrote: The last hundred years of knowledge is stored on many mediums from books to hard drives to USB sticks, it's not all going to get lost. You can't do much with a hard drive or a USB stick without an electronics industry to maintain the equipment to play them, or without electricity to run the equipment. We'd be lucky if any usable remnant of those storage mechanisms lasted five years, never mind a hundred. And in a society that has been so reduced and fragmented that their most pressing concerns are fresh water, food and somewhere warm to stay, who is going to teach the next few generations to read books? Rod. From the dark ages onwards it was monks in monasteries, i'm sure we'd be able to do better than that. Steve Terry |
|
#86
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Steve Terry" wrote in message ... "Col" wrote in message ... Thinking about it, we might be able to return to a rather primitive form of industrialisation. We'd still have water power of course, but more importantly we'd be still be able to make charcoal. Early furnaces used charcoal so you'd still have industry of sorts. Unfortunately you can't fuel a full-blown industrial revolution by burning trees, so that might be as far advanced as we could get. Col Nonsense, that could only happen if all collective knowledge was lost, and the last time that happened was the fall of the roman empire, leading to 800 years of the dark ages (in Europe anyway) The last hundred years of knowledge is stored on many mediums from books to hard drives to USB sticks, it's not all going to get lost. Civilisation recovered relatively quickly from the black death of the 14th century, resulting in better work conditions, pay, and rights for remaining workers because of supply and demand I wasn't talking about lost knowledge, I was expanding on my previous post as to how it would be very difficult to get another industrial revolution going without an easily accesible energy source. The easily extractable coal (and oil) has long gone, gobbled up in the first industrial revolution, I don't see how we could get at the rest. Knowledge is all very well and good, but there is little point in knowing how to build a nuclear power station when you don't even have the resources to fuel a coal-fired one. Col |
|
#87
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Roderick Stewart" wrote in message .myzen.co.uk... In article , Steve Terry wrote: The last hundred years of knowledge is stored on many mediums from books to hard drives to USB sticks, it's not all going to get lost. You can't do much with a hard drive or a USB stick without an electronics industry to maintain the equipment to play them, or without electricity to run the equipment. We'd be lucky if any usable remnant of those storage mechanisms lasted five years, never mind a hundred. And in a society that has been so reduced and fragmented that their most pressing concerns are fresh water, food and somewhere warm to stay, who is going to teach the next few generations to read books? I think efforts wouild be made to ot deliver at least a very limited education. Medieval peasants didn't teach their kids to read because they didn't know how themselves. Survivors, even if they were living like medieval peasants *would* know how to read and would realise how important it was if society was going to have any chance of advancing again. Col |
|
#88
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Roderick Stewart" wrote in message .myzen.co.uk... In article , Steve Terry wrote: In a situation like the one depicted in Survivors, hydro energy might very well be renewable, but the machinery necessary to extract it certainly would not be, because the industrial infrastructure that could maintain and replace it would be gone. We've become accustomed to living in a throwaway society because there is always a replacement for something that breaks, but it would be sheer folly to depend on anything we couldn't replace when it wore out. Rod. I agree as far as the word 'depend' is concerned but not to USE something if it is available and you need it or it gives you a big advantage would be just as great a folly. Learning to make soap before all supplies run out is one thing, refusing to use what is available because it will eventually run out is ridiculous. Depending on a crossbow to provide your meat and defence because you will eventually run out of ammunition for a rifle is just as great a nonsense while you have the much more efficient rifle and ammunition for it, though you should certainly learn and use the older technology when you can before you need it. Reverting to a cart horse and hand-guided plough makes no sense while you have a tractor and fuel that works now but which will eventually become useless if you don't use them. In teaching survival we always taught people to carry 3 sources of making fire and to learn improvised ways such as the fire bow. The sources carried were usually a lighter, matches and a flint and steel set. The tactical use of these was not to use your best first and gradually revert to the least efficient as you became desperate but to try the improvised methods when you were strong and the outcome not critical, the flint and steel when conditions were good enough, but use the matches or lighter whenever, but only when, you really needed something you could depend on. If you are going to survive, you need to use common sense in deciding those things. David (who is having problems with his newserver) |
|
#89
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
Steve Terry wrote: The last hundred years of knowledge is stored on many mediums from books to hard drives to USB sticks, it's not all going to get lost. How long do you estimate a USB stick or HD would survive? In the context of books, not a lot. Same with all electronic storage media. -- *A bicycle can't stand alone because it's two tyred.* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
|
#90
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 20 jul, 11:29, Luke Curtis wrote:
On Fri, 17 Jul 2009 10:10:02 -0700 (PDT), sirblob2 wrote: clcking in at what must be 27 hours, this uk tv series certainly isnt for the anti sofa brigade.. its bloody great thats what it be. I certainly enjoyed series 1, and the first episode "The Forth Horsemen" is one of the best first episode of any series I have seen, a fantastic 50 minutes. i havent seen the remake, thou i heard it be arsefest. I quite enjoyed it myself - I'm quite looking forward to series 2 - XBox 360 GT: Broton69 -- ButIstillneedtoknowwhat'sinthere! Thekeytoanysecurity systemishowit'sdesigned! Thatdependsonwhyitwasdesigned! Ihavetoknowwhatwhoeverdesigneditwastryingtoprotect ! (Blakes 7, City on the Edge of the World *- Vila in typical panic mode) i just saw the first season of the 2008 version. there are some changes i like and some i dont the first episode, for example, was great in its use of silence. it was a sober little thing, and the tone went on throughout the other episodes and seasons. in the new one, it's hysterical and to no avail unlike in dead set, where it was scary etc. take for instance the point where abbie discovers she's alone and walks about until she finally says 'oh god, don't let it be me'. it's on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-VeO_JhIXiY in the new version abbie does the same idea and finally says 'oh god don't let it be me' but the sequence is much less memorable, much more conventional and routine because she runs and she's hysterical and the camera goes all over the place with lots of music. and it isn't scary, thou the old one wasnt that scary either. things i like are that comparing the same story 33 years later gives you an idea how the images have changed so drastically, the way ppl dress is completely different and has a lot to do with plastic sexuality and a paranoia that's been embedded and assimilated these last years. the new one is far more sex-crazed than the old one. this time around sarah, played by a robyn addison well fit, is much more explicitly a whore than the last time and she's far more quick to get the hots for the strong one in the pack. having an arab playboy just highlights this even further and the episode with the fanatics led by a schitzo has fanatics apparently so out of contact with themselves that they want to reproduce with the playboy's sperm, whereas the old one had long debates on abortion i like the fact that there's a convict here, whereas the last time i'm quite sure charles was only a reproduction addict and not an ex-con. however, it's not as good as stuff we've been seeing from us tv channels, like alias, mad men, 24. probably the reason the british remade it was cuz it gave them a chance to do something with low production costs, no special effects etcetera. thou paradoxically the newer version dilapidates a lot more on production than the old one. as for character development, i'd say it's just different to the last one, perhaps worse on the one-on-one but has a better spectrum to choose from. still, thou i find it passable and i can watch it, it can't compete with a lot of the stuff that's being made these days there comes a point too, with that plastic sexuality thing, when the doctor says, to the ex convict, that she falls in love with ppl not with their sex, nothing against plastic sexuality but i really thought i was watching that awful recent tv series 'lost in austen', with moments like when darcy walks all wet out of the swimming pool and she says 'oh! what a postmodern moment!'. and there's a lot of stuff going on i couldnt care less about, like when she delivers a baby and we're subject to all the suspense as to whether she'll make it, with lots of music added and the loony christian going hysterical. those are the moments i really miss the tightly knit yaddering on bout everything group full of dialogue as they were, like those eternal conversation abby used to have with lots of ppl about survival in the first season. |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Barry White - BBC Live 1975 [SVCD] - Readme.nfo | joefish | UK digital tv | 10 | January 16th 04 04:06 PM |
| Barry White - BBC Live 1975 [SVCD] - Readme.nfo | joefish | UK digital tv | 0 | January 15th 04 06:58 PM |