Mar 222019
 

Last year a number of photos of the Lockheed L-2000 SST concept were sold on eBay. I didn’t get them, but the auctions came complete with some decent (not great) resolution scans of the photos. I have uploaded seven photos to the 2019-03 APR Extras Dropbox folder, available to $4 and up subscribers to the APR Monthly Historical Documents Program.

 Posted by at 6:47 pm
Mar 212019
 

I have repeatedly suggested over the years that the US needs to do some massive engineering projects. Dredging out the Great Salt Lake and refilling a much deeper version of it with ocean water, stock it with ocean fish and submersible mobile nuclear reactors, and you have a Good Thing. More, the US should build pipelines hither and yon, vast continent-crossing constructions that can transport not only water but also generate power by plating them with solar panels. Why would we want such things? Gentlemen, behold:

Much of the midwest is currently underwater, with the only way to get rid of it is for that water to flow down local rivers. But while the midwest is current cosplaying as Atlantis, other regions remain bone dry. Imagine if that water, or at least a lot of it, could be pumped over the Rockies into the Colorado River, which no longer even reaches the sea because so much of it is tapped off for agriculture and the cities of the southwest.

Along with those pipelines, a project that seems like it should be worth doing is sort of reverse-irrigation. Nebraska sits atop the Ogalala Aquifer, which the farms of the region *need* for irrigation. But the aquifer is being drained dry *fast,* all while billions of tons of unwanted water sit on top of it. Pumping that water back underground would be a chore, and potentially dangerous… filling those voids with water could well “inflate” the ground and create earthquakes. But you know what’s worse than earthquakes? A million acres of productive farmland turned into desert because the aquifer is dry.

Sure, massive pipelines – say, a bank of a dozen pipes each five meters in diameter – would consume vast amounts of real estate. The only way to accomplish this would be via eminent domain, a process that makes me twitch at the best of times. But I am not a libertarian absolutist; sometimes this needs to be done, in contrast to the insane Green New Deal notions of replacing aircraft with trains. The GND would mandate far *more* such land grabs, for a far lesser purpose. Because trains can (and should) be replaced with aircraft, but nothing much replaces water.

Such pipelines would be very valuable for a number of non-irrigation roles. A bank of pipes sixty meters wide would, it seems, make a perfectly fine sub-structure for a new transcontinental highway; so long as you are building the pipes and putting a road on them, you could built a “roof” over the whole thing, covered in solar cells. A fifty meter wide band of cells a thousand kilometers long would have *vast* power generation potential. By roofing over the road you would prevent snow on the highway; the vast thermal mass of the water underneath would keep the roads warm in the winter. The electrical power would allow for regular electric vehicle charging stations; if the technology works out, *perhaps* the cars could tap off the power directly while running, and not use their batteries at all. Self-driving electric vehicles could thus run down the highway at 85 miles per hour non-stop, allowing a person to travel cross-country in short order. My 1,200 mile drive from Utah to Illinois could be accomplished in 14 hours with such a system; this is, realistically, not much more than what’s required to fly there (my last such flight started at waking up at 4 AM and getting to Illinois at something like 6PM so, call it 13 hours devoted to the process), and would certainly be a lot faster than taking a train which would have to stop regularly.

The vast thermal mass of the water could also provide cooling for nuclear reactors strung along the length of the pipes.

The effort needed to build the system would require a vast amount of manpower. One of the very few things that the original New Deal did halfway right was the Works Projects Administration, which put millions of men to work building *infrastructure,* buildings and roads and bridges and dams. A pipeline system like this could be at the heart of a revived WPA; blighted urban areas could be effectively depopulated of their unemployed, given good, high-paying jobs actually *doing* *something* rather than merely existing on welfare.

Climate change is coming. Exactly what it will entail is unclear, but it looks like weather-related chaos is very likely. So we can either accept that the great American heartland will be maybe drowned, maybe dried out in mega-droughts, while California bursts into flames; or we can Build Stuff that would be useful *regardless* of climate change. Imagine what the current Housing and Urban Development budget ($32 billion) could do if devoted to something like this.

A pipeline system like this will mean that the US will *need* a massive revival in the steel industry. And the tools and techniques that allow you to make thousands of kilometers of massive pipelines, with a gigawatt-class reactor complex every fifty or hundred miles means you have the ability to make a hundred Seawolf class subs a year, backed up by a couple dozen “whatever replaces the Ohio class” boomers per year.

 Posted by at 10:41 pm
Mar 202019
 

I applaud the manufacturers for figuring out a cheap way to get large sums of money out of ridiculous people. I despair at a society that has produced enough idiots to make this a market.

Gucci “distressed” sneakers sell for $870, look like “something you’d buy at Goodwill

I can sell you grottier-looking *actually* distressed sneakers for less than half the price. But maybe I’d do better if I tried to sell them at *twice* the price?

 Posted by at 7:06 pm
Mar 192019
 

Artwork of the Boeing Integrated Manned Interplanetary Spacecraft, circa 1968. This is the best known of the numerous manned Mars spacecraft designed over the last half century, and is often directly associated with Werner von Braun as he would go on to try to get congress and NASA to forge ahead with the program. Obviously he was not successful. Aspects of this spacecraft design were illustrated in great detail in US Spacecraft Projects #03 and USSP #04

I’ve seen this piece of art many times over the years, always in pretty poor resolution; I finally found a good-rez version on eBay a while back. I’ve made the full-rez scan available to above-$10-subscribers to the APR Monthly Historical Documents Program/Patreon. Clearly the original painting must have been done in color, but I do not think I’ve ever seen this image reproduced in color. I suspect that about ten seconds after I keel over someone will put on eBay a 24X26 full-color pristine lithograph with a buy-it-now price of five bucks. So keep an eye out for that: you see it, I’m like as not deadern’ disco.

If this sort of thing is of interest, consider subscribing. Even a buck a month will help out; but the more you subscribe for, the more you get… and the more you help me get from eBay and save for the ages.

 

 

 Posted by at 10:05 pm
Mar 182019
 

The nerdverse has been lightly abuzz the last few days thanks to this video showing the results of using Google’s machine learning system to bump up Deep Space Nine footage from 480p to 1080p. Honestly… I can’t really see much of an improvement, but a lot of people say they can. Shrug.

Deep Space Nine, Voyager and Babylon 5 will probably never see true Blu Ray releases, because they weren’t filmed with that resolution in mind. So a high-rez version will probably have to rely on computer magic. And while I just can’t see it here… give it a few years and doubtless we’ll be able to watch bootleg DS9 in 12K resolution

What I’m *really* hoping for, though, is an innovation in quantum computing. With luck we’ll be able to fire up Netflix, select a preferred alternate reality, and watch all sixteen seasons of DS9 shot at 4K resolution.

 Posted by at 11:51 pm
Mar 182019
 

She is both entertaining and, refreshingly, not politically insane. Basic setup, she stands or sits there and rants about politics and pop culture.

https://www.youtube.com/mindlessentertainment

On the subject of the hypocrisy and outright insanity of “cultural appropriation:”

 

And on the subject of “strong female characters:”

The usual crop of “strong female characters” are discussed, both Real “strong women like Ellen Ripley and Princess Leia, and the forced NPC-like Rey and Captain Marvel.

There are some oddities when this subject is discussed, there have been some truly badass “strong female characters” who just keep being forgotten in these discussions.

Like Kira Nerys, who was central to making DS9 the great show that it was…

And I mean, come on. Dude. B5. Dude.

Not to forget Aeryn Sun:

And the entirely unrelated Vala Mal Doran:

And Samantha Carter:

 

 Posted by at 6:20 pm
Mar 172019
 

An idle thought occurred while Netflix was on for background noise while I poked away at the computer.

Can we shoehorn the James Bond and 2001 universes together? Obviously we can’t assume that every Bond movie is canonical with “2001,” since the Bond flicks recognize that the USSR fell. But *one* movie… maybe. Consider the linking figure: actor William Sylvester.

Sylvester played Dr. Heywood Floyd,  head of the National Council of Astronautics, in 1968’s “2001.” He also played “Pentagon Official” in 1967’s “You Only Live Twice.” Obviously these are not the same character, as the timeframes of the movies are separated by ~34 years, while the *actor* was essentially the same age (~45) in both movies. But here’s the what-if: what if that Pentagon Official was Heywood Floyds father? It’s *really* not that unusual for people deeply involved in the government bureaucracy and politics to have kids who follow in their footsteps. Dr. Floyd would have been born when his father was about 34, a perfectly cromulent age for that sort of thing.

It’s a minor point, of course, to have the same actor. But the events of “You Only Live Twice,” where a well-funded terrorist organization is paid by the Chinese to run a space launch facility and program to steal Soviet and American space capsules, might be just the sort of thing to set changes in the timeline in motion. A private organization operating Chinese equipment (it’s unclear whether the entire rocket and spacecraft were Chinese products through and through, or if SPECTRE designed them themselves using Chinese hardware, or what) and proving rapid turnaround for a partially reusable space launch system in 1967 would have been just the thing to get the USA and USSR off their butts. NASA was well on it’s way to the moon, but the “Bird One” spacecraft would have set them on the course to developing low-cost reusable craft *fast.* Because not only would it be obvious that major powers have such craft… so do criminal organizations.

“Pentagon Official” saw World War III nearly break out over a small reusable spacecraft of remarkable capability. Doubtless he would have shared that with his then-11-year-old son. That could well have set Lil’ Heywood on his way, just as the events set the US and the USSR on their way to lunar bases and space stations.

I suppose there might be a longer fan-fiction story in there.

– – –

By the way: a few years ago I mastered kits for Fantastic plastic that fit directly into this hypothesis. Click the pics for the links to ordering them.

 

 

 Posted by at 8:23 pm