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Unexplained Mysteries Discussion Forums > Science > Science & Technology
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htrn3000
Whoa182-Could it possibly be,that at long last,I've finally found someone that's not only interested in science, but also in the paranormal?By the way,thanks for the info. on the new li-ion battery! With a lot of luck,I'll be able to finally get one of my inventions on the market! What would you say if someone told you they had a idea for cars,trucks,boats,and planes that would operate without fuel.No more need for oil or hydrogen? How many billions do you think it would be worth? Just wanted to give you something to think about. see you later htrn3000
Adramaleck
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Mar 30 2005, 10:04 PM)
Whoa182-Could it possibly be,that at long last,I've finally found someone that's not only interested in science, but also in the paranormal?By the way,thanks for the info. on the new li-ion battery! With a lot of luck,I'll be able to finally get one of my inventions on the market! What would you say if someone told you they had a idea for cars,trucks,boats,and planes that would operate without fuel.No more need for oil or hydrogen? How many billions do you think it would be worth?  Just wanted to give you something to think about.      see you later htrn3000
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Hm... probably a few million, cause the oil companies would buy it to further their monopoly of the fuel industry hmm.gif sad.gif
htrn3000
QUOTE(Adramaleck @ Mar 31 2005, 11:26 AM)
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Mar 30 2005, 10:04 PM)
Whoa182-Could it possibly be,that at long last,I've finally found someone that's not only interested in science, but also in the paranormal?By the way,thanks for the info. on the new li-ion battery! With a lot of luck,I'll be able to finally get one of my inventions on the market! What would you say if someone told you they had a idea for cars,trucks,boats,and planes that would operate without fuel.No more need for oil or hydrogen? How many billions do you think it would be worth?  Just wanted to give you something to think about.       see you later htrn3000
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Hm... probably a few million, cause the oil companies would buy it to further their monopoly of the fuel industry hmm.gif sad.gif
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htrn3000
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Mar 31 2005, 03:13 PM)
QUOTE(Adramaleck @ Mar 31 2005, 11:26 AM)
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Mar 30 2005, 10:04 PM)
Whoa182-Could it possibly be,that at long last,I've finally found someone that's not only interested in science, but also in the paranormal?By the way,thanks for the info. on the new li-ion battery! With a lot of luck,I'll be able to finally get one of my inventions on the market! What would you say if someone told you they had a idea for cars,trucks,boats,and planes that would operate without fuel.No more need for oil or hydrogen? How many billions do you think it would be worth?  Just wanted to give you something to think about.       see you later htrn3000
[right][snapback]549390[/snapback][/right]



Hm... probably a few million, cause the oil companies would buy it to further their monopoly of the fuel industry hmm.gif sad.gif
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htrn3000
Adramaleck- As much as I hate to admit it, I don't think I could ever get my invention built by private industry.I doubt finding anyone other than the pentagon,with enough clout to get the job done.Imagine being able to cut America's need for oil by say 60 to 70% in five yr's or less! And possibly even further later on.Except of course for what industry uses for other than fuel needs. htrn3000
Adramaleck
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Mar 31 2005, 04:58 PM)
Adramaleck-  As much as I hate to admit it, I don't think I could ever get my invention built by private industry.I doubt finding anyone other than the pentagon,with enough clout to get the job done.Imagine being able to cut America's need for oil by say 60 to 70% in five yr's or less! And possibly even further later on.Except of course for what industry uses for other than fuel needs.            htrn3000
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Exactly. They wouldn't buy it. They'd buy the right so no one could make it, therefore preserving their iron grip on society and the world. If you want some advice, save some money, be the entreprenur, or find another willing to spend some money and market your product. I would buy one.

And you've really got to stop quoting multiple times, lol.

Could you give me some blueprints or something so I could cut my fuel consumption? I'll be your best friend! lol grin2.gif
htrn3000
Adramalack-I'm really a novice,when it comes to bulliten boards online and such.So it'll take me a while to get all the bugs worked out.And it doesn't help,that I have to learn everything on my own.But I did manage to get my computer hooked up,and get online by myself.Without ever having turned a computer on before.And as a personal aside- I grew up in Kentucky,and not meaning to brag but my I.Q. is a good bit over 125.So I spent most of my youth playing dumb or a smart ass in order to fit in. So if at times I seem to revert back I'll go ahead and say i'm sorry to whomever now.As the saying goes,''the old habits are hardest to break.'' later high tech redneck (htrn3000)
Adramaleck
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Apr 1 2005, 11:10 PM)
Adramalack-Sorry if you don't like my writing style.Us Kentucky rednecks don't always like English Comp. and spelling! But when your I.Q. is 133 as mine is you learn to compensate in other areas.And I wasn't aware that this forum is formal in any case.lol      high tech. redneck 3000
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I wasn't commenting your writing style... you had just quoted what was said in previous posts and then didnt add anything...

oh well, its not a big deal man, dont even worry about it =D
whoa182
A short new video explaining and showing how Nanotech will Diagnose and Cure cancer before it even develops! thumbsup.gif

http://www.nsti.org/Nanotech2005/symposia/...html?rid=wmv_hi


Just had a quick look around the site, has a lot of info there! http://www.nsti.org/Nanotech2005/
The Roswell Man
i hope we wont be taken over by the grey goo. no.gif
Adramaleck
Awesome links as usual, thanks whoa.
htrn3000
Adramaleck- I CAN'T BEGIN TO TELL YOU HOW SORRY I AM !!!!!!!! I tried to edit that message when it finally hit me what you ment. But apparently I screwed that up too.I'm a novice at this, and boy does it show. I'm trying to learn what I can about my computer, on my own.It just proves,that no matter how smart you are,you can still screw up Royally!!!Again,I'm so sorry, I apologize to everyone out there!!! HTRN3000
Adramaleck
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Apr 2 2005, 09:21 PM)
Adramaleck-  I CAN'T BEGIN TO TELL YOU HOW SORRY I AM !!!!!!!! I tried to edit that message when it finally hit me what you ment. But apparently I screwed that up too.I'm a novice at this, and boy does it show. I'm trying to learn what I can about my computer, on my own.It just proves,that no matter how smart you are,you can still screw up Royally!!!Again,I'm so sorry, I apologize to everyone out there!!!      HTRN3000
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Dude, chill out man lol, its alright, its not a big deal, just calm... down.... lol

man, you must drink a lot of coffee.
Adramaleck
Well, if this replicatorish technology is real, the price of coal will definatly go up.
htrn3000
Hey,Adramaleck-HTRN3000,back again,my wife's sister died week before last.So I haven't been online much for the last few days.But things are slowly begining to get back to normal.Did you get a chance to see the supervolcano special on the Discovery Channel? I thought over all it was pretty good.I just hope it does,nt blow for a couple hundred more yr's yet! But one thing is sure and certain we're all going to die from something! I just hope when my time comes it's either really quick or in my sleep.Oh well, I did'nt mean to get morbid. May you find answers to all your questions---till next time,HTRN3000
Adramaleck
QUOTE(htrn3000 @ Apr 12 2005, 10:48 PM)
Hey,Adramaleck-HTRN3000,back again,my wife's sister died week before last.So I haven't been online much for the last few days.But things are slowly begining to get back to normal.Did you get a chance to see the supervolcano special on the Discovery Channel? I thought over all it was pretty good.I just hope it does,nt blow for a couple hundred more yr's yet! But one thing is sure and certain we're all going to die from something! I just hope when my time comes it's either really quick or in my sleep.Oh well, I did'nt mean to get morbid.  May you find answers to all your questions---till next time,HTRN3000
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Sorry to hear about your sister in law. I didn't catch the special; sounds interesting though. I tend to watch more of the history channel, and discovery channel about physics, sometimes engineering.

Did everyone hear about the nano motor?

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7480429
whoa182
Some good information on stem cells here. On this forum somewhere.. a few months ago there was a discussion in which the person replied saying that blindness wont be cured untill around 2030 + . I predicted in the next 10 years.

Well stem cell therapy is rapidly advancing and the treatments are probably going to be widely used in the near future. I believe we'll see a cure for 90% of blind and deaf people by 2015. Maybe Im optimistic? I dont know...

But so far its looking good

heres a very recent article

QUOTE
Pioneering stem-cell surgery restores sight
By Sam Lister, Health Correspondent

A PIONEERING form of surgery has been developed that can restore the sight of patients by using stem cells to encourage damaged eyes to repair themselves.
A team of British specialists has successfully treated more than a dozen patients with impaired corneas by transplanting human stem cells grown in a laboratory on to their eyes.

Recent operations on ten patients showed that the technique restored sight in seven cases of people who had been blinded after getting acid, alkali and boiling metal in their eyes, or because of congenital disorders.

Many of the patients treated at the Centre for Sight, Queen Victoria Hospital, in East Grinstead, West Sussex, had been told that they had no hope of getting their sight back, or had already undergone failed corneal transplants.

The process involves taking stem cells, which occur naturally in the eye, and developing them into sheets of cells in the laboratory. These are transplanted on to the surface of the eye where they are held in place by an amniotic membrane, which dissolves away as the sheet fuses to the eye.

Sheraz Daya, an ophthalmic surgeon leading the Sussex team, which has spent five years perfecting the technique, said that doctors had been astonished at how the cells appeared to trigger the eye’s natural regeneration of its damaged surface. Tests on the patients after a year revealed no trace of the DNA of the stem-cell donor, meaning that the repair was carried out by the eye’s own cells — a permanent healing process that does not require long-term use of powerful drugs to suppress the patient’s immune system.

Mr Daya said: “The technique not only works, but there was no donor tissue there. That is what really blew our minds. The cells appeared to have been shed from the eye and replaced by the patient’s own, much more hardy, cells.”

The team, including scientists at the hospital’s McIndoe Surgical Centre, now hopes to identify the processes at work, which might then be used to trigger the repair of other damaged tissue around the body. Details of the trial were revealed this month at an international conference of eye specialists in America. All the patients in the trial had corneas that had become damaged because they no longer had limbal stem cells, which are normally under the eyelid and help to keep the surface of the cornea clear, protecting it.

Edward Bailey, who lost his sight after caustic acid landed in his left eye while he was cleaning pipes at a yoghurt factory, said that the operation had transformed his life.

“It was the most emotional moment,” Mr Bailey, 65, said. “I couldn’t believe it. For ten years all I had seen was shades of black and grey, then after I had the operation the nurse came by and I saw a flash of blue from her uniform. I went home and when I took the patch off my eye, I had my vision back. It is only when you lose something like sight that you realise how precious it is.”

Nadey Hakim, a consultant surgeon at St Mary’s Hospital, London, said that it was likely that such action could be mimicked in other organs, thus reducing the need for organ transplants. Professor Hakim said: “The hope is that stem cells will one day be used to generate large quantities of cells and tissues and possibly entire organs damaged by disease and injury. It is a dream.”


http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-1589642,00.html
whoa182
I think doctors, nurses and whoever using the term "you will have this condition for the rest of your life" should be a bit more careful.

Most conditions that kids have such as diabetes, blindness, deafness and other disorders are likely to be curable within the next two decades
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