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10 months ago
in Are the economies of scale in PG&E’s 800 megawatt solar installation real? on VentureBeat
Props to Matt for this line in the April 27 post:
"...Why wasn’t public company SunPower in the mix, for example?"
http://venturebeat.com/2007/04/27/secretive-sil...
"...Why wasn’t public company SunPower in the mix, for example?"
http://venturebeat.com/2007/04/27/secretive-sil...
1 reply
Chris Morrison
Hah -- I forgot about that line. Although in Ontario, the answer is relatively easy. Thin film, such as Optisolar makes, is better for northern latitudes that less sun. As you move north, the economics for traditional silicon PV deteriorate. It's better to place them where there is plenty of sun.
12 months ago
in No Indium Shortage on OpenMarket.org
As the proprietor of one of the blogs referenced by Ars Technica I'd like to introduce myself and make a couple points regarding their analysis.
In a nutshell, it's lightweight, akin to a high school sophmore trying to show off for a physics prof.
Start with "...recently lit up the blogosphere...".
There were four blogs. Small ones.
Then the false superiority in this line "Comments on blogs range from the insanely optimistic, "the invisible hand/technology will solve everything" perspective to things along the lines of "you idiots, the world is obviously doomed."
.
I prefaced my link by saying this sounded like Club of Rome stuff and ended by saying
"You know how this ends up?
We'll figure something out. That is really the only claim to fame of Homo Sapiens, singular and collectively.
But, it's a pretty good one."
Ars Technica gives a mini-lecture on end-points in price series (duh) and goes on to a discourse in extraction of rare metals; they're a byproduct. Well double duh.
I can't speak for the other three blogs but my readers are investment banks and hedge funds. If I don't assume my readers know this stuff, they figure I'm the moron.
.
Ars Technica goes on to wrap up with three paragraphs:
"That is not to say that the supply of Indium, Gallium, and other materials are limitless...."
"...but it's possible that we can find replacements or change our technology altogether...."
"...Ultimately we need to be aware of our use of resources, but the present overreaction is not all that well-thought-out...."
.
1) Begin with hyperbole.
2) Set up the strawman.
3) Use points you found on the sites you belittle to knock the strawman down.
4) Leave with air of superiority.
I've never much cared for folks who assume their readers are ignorant of rhetoric and logic.
I'm reminded of that great line about Noam Chomsky:
"Chomsky is the intellectual for people who aren't as smart as they think they are"
In a nutshell, it's lightweight, akin to a high school sophmore trying to show off for a physics prof.
Start with "...recently lit up the blogosphere...".
There were four blogs. Small ones.
Then the false superiority in this line "Comments on blogs range from the insanely optimistic, "the invisible hand/technology will solve everything" perspective to things along the lines of "you idiots, the world is obviously doomed."
.
I prefaced my link by saying this sounded like Club of Rome stuff and ended by saying
"You know how this ends up?
We'll figure something out. That is really the only claim to fame of Homo Sapiens, singular and collectively.
But, it's a pretty good one."
Ars Technica gives a mini-lecture on end-points in price series (duh) and goes on to a discourse in extraction of rare metals; they're a byproduct. Well double duh.
I can't speak for the other three blogs but my readers are investment banks and hedge funds. If I don't assume my readers know this stuff, they figure I'm the moron.
.
Ars Technica goes on to wrap up with three paragraphs:
"That is not to say that the supply of Indium, Gallium, and other materials are limitless...."
"...but it's possible that we can find replacements or change our technology altogether...."
"...Ultimately we need to be aware of our use of resources, but the present overreaction is not all that well-thought-out...."
.
1) Begin with hyperbole.
2) Set up the strawman.
3) Use points you found on the sites you belittle to knock the strawman down.
4) Leave with air of superiority.
I've never much cared for folks who assume their readers are ignorant of rhetoric and logic.
I'm reminded of that great line about Noam Chomsky:
"Chomsky is the intellectual for people who aren't as smart as they think they are"