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So, I pay all my utilities via credit card, and I receive emails when the bill is due and amount. Last month, the water department notified me that my bill was $240 and change. Considering my normal bill is $39 my attention was captured.
Here's the interesting thing - about 4 months ago, the water department started rolling out smart meters that they could query and collect usage information. Think now - water department, smart meters, automatic billing.... most of the people I've met from the county departments leave me less than inspired. This month, my water usage has been at a square wave. Normally 400 gallons a month, it's been spiking at various times and days to over a thousand gallons per day. I've already pointed out that their data is corrupt, but all I get is a tired voice on the line.
I may have found a new career, no, sorry misspoke, consulting opportunity.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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charlieg wrote: consulting opportunity Working for them seems more of a headache opportunity.
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment
"Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst
"I don't drink any more... then again, I don't drink any less." - Mike Mullikins uncle
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charlieg wrote: over a thousand gallons per day.
Wow! That's like a 1" pipe going full tilt the whole day! Maybe you shouldn't fill your pool daily; you know, it's not a bathtub
Mircea
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Mircea Neacsu wrote: Maybe you shouldn't fill your pool daily; you know, it's not a bathtub
My mother-in-law once got a water bill that was the equivalent of filling her pool 10 times daily for an entire month! The water company then compounded the mistake by crediting her account - twice!
They never corrected the account. I told her that when she moved away from her old house, she should have asked them to close out the account and pay her the sum.
At least the local paper got an amusing article out of it showcasing the incompetence of the water company.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Correct. And I have made the point that we don't have a pool. The general attitude I'm picking up is (a) oh elephant, I don't know anything about these meters... or (b) yawn, just another local whining about their bill.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Some years back we had dual, electronic/analog water meters. In case of disagreement the analog/mechanical one took precedence. Now the city gave up on the electronic ones and we just have to read ourselves the analog ones and enter the reading on a web page once a year. Works great.
Mircea
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This sounds like a broken pipe.
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If it was continuous you would be correct. But what we have then is a "self healing pipe" which in all my years I have never seen.
The fact that on Monday morning Sunday's usage was *exactly* 412 gallons for 7, 8, 9, and 10 pm each - really? I don't think so. Monday had an issue so when I went back to Sunday, those numbers all changed. using Smart Meters in departments that might not be as technically adept to pay attention to this stuff is a recipe for nonsense.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Definitely a meter failure then.
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My sympathies. We had a similar problem with "smart" meters here in Israel. It took a few billing cycles to fix, and IIRC, the meter itself was faulty.
The biggest problem was getting the pen-pushing, ing bureaucrats in the water company to accept that this was a problem with the meter, and not an intermittent leak in our pipes.
At least we were reimbursed for the unusual bills (they used the last billing cycle from before the erroneous bills to charge us).
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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(Late to this thread, I know, but bear with me).
I live out in the country (far enough for the closest city so the everyone in the entire neighborhood has its own well), and about a decade ago the city decided to run pipes all the way down our street. Those who wanted to connect to it could apply, and we all had the choice to stick to our wells. Which most of us did.
A few months later, a neighbor of mine, 80+ years old, bless his heart, got a bill for his water usage. Not much of a significant amount, but he had not got his house connected to the city pipes. So he refused to pay it. Then got a warning the next month, and the one after he was getting warned they were going to cut off his water supply. He took it all to city hall, explained the situation, and dared them to cut him off, and they re-iterated that they would, if he didn't pay his bill. He was waiting with a camera for them to show up and record them looking for the valve.
Sadly, they never did show up and he stopped receiving those warning letters.
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Are you keeping up the ground water where you live?
According to articles I come across ever now and then, pumping of ground water in the US of A has lowered the ground water table dangerously much. California is worst off: In Central Valley, farmers must drill their wells more than 300 m deep to find water, and now, saltwater is seeping in. On the prairie, pumping did not got really going until several years after California, so it isn't that bad yet - but from what I read, the groundwater table is continuously lowering. A large part of the entire prairie lies on top of the same aquifer, the same "underground lake", so the water your neighbor farm is pumping up, is taken from your water reserves as well!
I saw a map showing the extent of this huge aquifer, but didn't save the URL - I believe that it extended into Canada to the north. Maybe Canada is rather depleting other aquifers, if Canadian farmers are as eager to pump groundwater as their USAtian colleagues ...
Where you live, do you have to drill you well deeper every year? Or can you still have your meals at the same groundwater table?
Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.
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I'm in eastern Ontario, Canada--east of Ottawa. Our well was dug maybe 35 years ago, had plenty of water at 60 feet, but the guy operating the machinery at the time went to 90 feet (if I remember correctly), "for a good reserve". None of my neighbors are any deeper, I believe.
None of us has ever gone out of our way to try to save water, even during summer droughts and nobody has ever had a dry well going as far back as any one of us knows (which arguably goes back a hundred years). My grandfather, who had a small farm, used to own a large part of the land, and there were a number of surface wells on his property. These were blocked off only because of the potential risks to trespassers unknowingly walking over.
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California is a special case of bat s*** crazy. Having lived in southern arizona, I know a few things about ground water. There is a saying there, "Summer is not here until the ice breaks on the Santa Cruz." The Santa Cruz is a river that runs through the city of Tucson and is dry most of the year - the ice breaks when the temperature hits 100 degrees. When I was there, and honestly, I would move instantly to the high desert is I could, we had huge numbers of people moving to the city from the north and east. They all wanted yards - lawns. City could not handle the water demand then. I'd not move back to Tucson - it's crap hole run by California progressives and have turned it into a garbage pit, oh, wait back on message...
The biggest issue for Arizona was the open pit copper mines. Huge ground water users.
back to California - near the coast, the state is basically air conditioned. 90% of the remainder of the state is arid or pure desert. yet to support the ever increasing population, the state ran all of the agriculture down to Mexico. They live on water from the Colorado river. As for Canada, NOBODY lives there. Yes, I know there are some people up there (thank you for the hockey), but the density is insignificant.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Whilst I was perusing another article in the MSN info world (that another member had mentioned) I stumbled across the following article "Scientists have found 'evidence' of advanced alien civilisations". The article relates to a scientific study of a combination of star surveys (roughly 5 million stars) and a methodology to filter the stars looking for specific emission markers that make the star unusual and possibly a Dyson sphere under construction. In the article there is a link to the official paper that the group produced (haven't finished reading it yet).
My own feelings are that Dyson spheres sound cool, but the amount of physical material that would go into making one would be prohibitive. Stars are big. Even red dwarf stars. Surrounding the star with technological material (all of the support devices to convert, control the flow of energy, store and forward it to the area of need). Would require the literal conversion of several star systems of every bit of matter in them (planets, moons, asteroids, every spec of material left over from the star formation) to provide the raw materials for the build. We might want to look for star systems surrounding a suspected Dyson sphere that have no planetary bodies associated with the star.
Of course, an advanced civilization might be able to capture the solar wind and also convert a large part of the radiant energy directly to usable matter.
In any case, here is the link. Have fun.
MSN[^]
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I suppose one way to do it is to cannibalize the other planets in the system. Like hit each planet with a giant spatula to flatten it.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Here's a question, how do you maintain gravity in a Dyson Sphere (assuming you do not have "artificial gravity")?
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity -
RAH
I'm old. I know stuff - JSOP
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I would suggest spinning it. You'd wind up with only a ring world's amount of living space but (like 640kb) that should be enough for anyone. It would probably make for an interesting typography in that "down" might not be perpendicular to the surface, but hey, you've already solved the hard problem of making and spinning it. This is probably a minor issue, comparatively. On the plus side there's no need to worry about artificial gravity failures sending the atmosphere and other loose material, like people, into the sun.
The "unused" sides, the axis poles as it were, could be for energy harvesting and such. They'd also make fairly good access points for ingress/egress of the sphere.
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From the CP newsletter
Astronomers are on the Hunt for Dyson Spheres - Universe Today[^]
Gary Stachelski 2021 wrote: but the amount of physical material that would go into making one would be prohibitive
There are all sorts of engineering problems, economical problems, and political ones as well. Those are pretty standard constraints on all fantastical theoretical constructs. Even much smaller ones.
Consider this - lets say one claims that the material in the solar system is enough. How do you dismantle Jupiter without destabilizing the entire star system.
Or what political system must the world have in place such that it would remain stable enough for perhaps hundreds of thousands of years while this was happening.
Those who want to believe often rely on yet more fantastical stuff to avoid such problems.
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It's all really a question of perspective. If you were to ask people in the 1600's to build the Hoover dam it would be deemed impossible. The technology, cost and political problems from the 1600's would preclude the project. However, come 1931 and it was now possible.
The same can be said for a Dyson Sphere project. The civilization that would tackle a project like that had outgrown the fusion reactor/alternative green power solutions and needed a larger source of power to continue to evolve their technological society.
BTW: Dyson spheres do not need to be solid objects. They can be made of earth sized sections that are towed into an acceptable orbit around the sun. So they can be built incrementally over time. Giving the civilization access to increasing amounts of energy. They do not have to be living spaces (although they can be). They can simply capture, convert and transmit the energy to somewhere else. Using the sun as a big fusion reactor and like a power company, transmitting the power to where it is needed.
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Gary Stachelski 2021 wrote: If you were to ask people in the 1600's to build the Hoover dam it would be deemed impossible.
The universe is not in fact infinite. There are very real limits. And scaling up known systems is not the same as claiming unknown systems (dams existed long before then.)
Gary Stachelski 2021 wrote: They can be made of earth sized sections that are towed into an acceptable orbit around the sun. So they can be built incrementally over time.
Ignoring the engineering, economical and political points that I already stated.
What are the exact engines would they use? How would they pay for the fuel? Who would pay for the fuel?
Based on your claim then it should be easy for you to find a scaled up version that was built now, which is comparable to that which was only built in the 1600s.
For example the Lake Homs Dam is one mile long and 23 ft high and built in the 1300s. Hoover is 726 ft tall and 1200 ft long.
Thus by your scaling someone should now be building a dam that is 20 times as tall as Hoover. But it just doesn't happen because there are real problems with scaling like that.
Tall buildings are a very good example of that. People would love to build a building that was 1 mile high (or 10,000 meters.) They are even willing to pay for it. But there are real engineering and physical reasons that buildings are not a mile high or even higher. There are also real practical issues with even populating a building even that is much shorter. Then are safety issues such as those from earthquakes and fires.
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jschell wrote: The universe is not in fact infinite. There are very real limits. And scaling up known systems is not the same as claiming unknown systems (dams existed long before then.)
I apologize, I was not clear in my clumsy attempt to make a point. I was not dissing what you had said about the engineering, economic and political climate for large projects. I was not suggesting that scaling up the a dam from an earlier time (even 1300, and the Romans were superb engineers) was equivalent to building a Dyson sphere to harvest the energy of the local sun.
Let me try another equally clumsy attempt to get my point across (please do not take offense).
Today we are in 2024. Lets roll the clock back 1,000 years to 1024. Given the engineering, technological, economic and political climate of 1024. Would it be possible for an engineer to design and construct a cell phone?
My answer would be no. There were huge gaps in knowledge, supporting Infrastructure, etc.
However, in just 1000 years it is now possible for billions of people to communicate using one.
Does this mean we have the knowledge and supporting infrastructure to build a Dyson sphere. Of course not.
However, in another 1000 years (if we don't kill ourselves) we might have some better ideas.
jschell wrote: What are the exact engines would they use? How would they pay for the fuel? Who would pay for the fuel?
I have no clue what technology a civilization that is 10,000 years (or 100,000 years?) more advanced than ours would use to travel around interstellar space or how to fuel it.
No more than a person from 1024 could imagine how to fuel a jet for travel between continents.
(yes, yes I know the argument of the great filter, no technological civilization survives for long since it's technological advancements eventually kill it off. But I am optimistic that maybe an alien one might not fall into that trap).
All I am saying is that it would be hubris to think that as of today, we know everything about how the universe works. We certainly do not know how to build a Dyson sphere. Or if it is even practical to do so.
In any case, Back in 1960 Freedman Dyson wrote a formal paper ("Search for Artificial Stellar Sources of Infra-Red Radiation") on a simple thought experiment which was not aimed at the details of building a Dyson sphere but given one was built, was it possible for us to detect it.
Pretty cool and terrifying if we can detect one that is in the process of getting built.
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Gary Stachelski 2021 wrote: However, in another 1000 years (if we don't kill ourselves) we might have some better ideas.
That is exactly how I read your reply.
We already know enough to posit how to construct large projects. So we can certainly make reasonable assumptions about what large scale project would involve.
And I gave you an example - very tall buildings. With those it is not a matter of will. People want them. People are willing to pay for them. The engineering says it cannot be done.
It can only be done if fantastical technologies somehow come into existence. Technologies that have no current basis.
One thousand years ago there was a basis for larger projects. And they used that to build large projects. So claims of 'what will the future bring' do not provide a basis for that.
Gary Stachelski 2021 wrote: how to fuel a jet for travel between continents.
The first glider was in 1793. The first balloon (with people) was in 1783. The water wheel was invented before recorded history. The first recorded powered engine was in 1 CE. The first wind powered electrical generator was in in 1887.
Gary Stachelski 2021 wrote: All I am saying is that it would be hubris to think that as of today, we know everything about how the universe works
We do however know a great deal about how the universe works at the macro scale. And a Dyson sphere is definitely macro.
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