Originally posted by Shimano105
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Reply to: 100w light bulbs
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Previously on "100w light bulbs"
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Originally posted by Shimano105 View PostNice to be 'green' in theory, however when you know that you are just being manipulated by 2-jag driving lying coonts you start to think differently.
I think we should start shunning all the emotive green bollox and start aiming for efficiency in everything. Like good code, less is more. I will only start changing my light bulbs when LED technology is prevelant. Some of the new LED bike lights are very impressive in tems of brightness and power consumption.
Aren't energy efficient bulbs highly toxic as well?
And if you break one, Defra says you should:
Vacate the room and ventilate it for at least 15 minutes. Do not use a vacuum cleaner, but clean up using rubber gloves and aim to avoid creating and inhaling airborne dust. Sweep up all particles and glass fragments and place in a plastic bag. Wipe the area with a damp cloth, then add that to the bag and seal it. Mercury is hazardous and the bag should not be disposed of in the bin.
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Nice to be 'green' in theory, however when you know that you are just being manipulated by 2-jag driving lying coonts you start to think differently.
I think we should start shunning all the emotive green bollox and start aiming for efficiency in everything. Like good code, less is more. I will only start changing my light bulbs when LED technology is prevelant. Some of the new LED bike lights are very impressive in tems of brightness and power consumption.
Aren't energy efficient bulbs highly toxic as well?
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We can feed, clothe and house everyone in the world right now if we wanted to, but we don't. The planet could probably support a lot more people if we all worked together for the common good, but we won't.
The assumption that we are intelligent mammals making quality decisions about our resources etc is entirely false.
As Agent Smith pointed out to Morpheus - we act like a virus. Our entire society is based on continual consumption - when we consume more we call that 'economic growth'. History shows that when two or more societies want the same recources, they typically go to war over it.
Remember those nagging thoughts you probably had over the last few years that property prices couldn't just keep on rising like this forever, but somehow you must be wrong because everyone else seemed to think it was normal? And now you've been proven right?
The same will happen with that nagging thought that surely we can't just keep on going consuming the way we currently do...
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The population the world could support depends on available energy. Currently it is heavily subsidised by fossil fuels (for fertiliser, transport, etc) and our rate of consumption of these is growing exponentially, and new finds getting smaller but meeting current demand. Some people speculate that this situation will change in the very near future though, and places like the UK are already dependent on the rest of the world for energy.
If we had abundant energy, food can be made (inefficiently) with plants growing in 3 dimensions (e.g. hydroponics and powerful lights) instead of the regular 2 (on land).
Does anyone know of any chemical process that has been developed that can create food from raw materials such as air and water? Plants and animals (including bacteria) can do obviously, but can man do it yet, even if only to create basic sugars or carbohydrates?
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Originally posted by Stan.goodvibes View PostWell better brains than mine put the number somewhere in the low 1-2 billion.
It also depends if we're assuming nothing else changes... meat is far less efficient in terms of people fed per acre for instance.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostExactly how many people have your detailed calculations revealed the planet can support then?
In an interesting parallel to the credit crunch, we are living well beyond our means in terms of enviromental resources - I have seen quite a few articles hilighting this issue recently. Can't keep doing it forever.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostThere's no reason they can't be powerful enough, but I thought all new cars had LEDs now not just expensive ones? Maybe I have some kind of halogens but the bulb certainly looks unlike a normal incandescent one in my Yaris.
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostPower isn't an issue with an alternator and LED's aren't powerful enough for the main beam, they'd look more at home on a modified saxo if you ask me.
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Originally posted by d000hg View Post
And by the way, LED car headlights use less power and also should not need replacing hardly at all, which I like because they never seem as easy to replace as they should be in any car I've tried. I think they also cast less glare to the side than normal lights although that could be more about the assembly they are fitted into.
I wonder if you can get different colours and make them flash in pretty patterns like my Christmas tree lights?
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Originally posted by Stan.goodvibes View PostThere.Are.Too.Many.People.
I'm a bit worried, this is the first thread I ever read where AtW doesn't sound like an escaped lunatic.
I'm all for low-energy lights, as long as they are not the ones which take 5min to 'warm up'. I think this is where the difference is between cheap & expensive ones?
LEDs could be pretty cool if the technology properly matures, I imagine they last practically forever even compared with standard low-energy bulbs.
And by the way, LED car headlights use less power and also should not need replacing hardly at all, which I like because they never seem as easy to replace as they should be in any car I've tried. I think they also cast less glare to the side than normal lights although that could be more about the assembly they are fitted into.
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