Saint Peter
shoots left
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2002
- Posts
- 94,075
Fucking rod burners. 
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Fucking rod burners.![]()
At least, there's a portable oven to keep yer sammich warm on a cold day.
I brought celery.
I brought celery.
The AP (11/11, Fisher) reports, "One worker was killed and another injured Tuesday when a crane tipped over at the construction site of a Kansas City, Mo., performing arts center, police said." The victims "were in the bucket of the 100-foot-tall JLG Lift when it fell away from the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts and landed across a platform of steel beams at about 1:40 p.m." They "were installing steel panels on the building for Detroit-based subcontractor Midwest Steel, said Kyle McQuiston, spokesman for Kansas City-based general contractor JE Dunn Construction Group," noting that "the construction site had no previous fatalities or injuries." JE Dunn president Dan Euston said that "workers were sent home for the day while investigators examined the site." Crane accidents, notes the AP, "kill up to 82 construction workers each year" in the US, according to official data."
I've done some hairy shit in those manlifts.
Someone drive a doublewide across that thing and put it out of its misery.
I've heard about that thing. That's where every email ever written will be stored and scanned by new Ais."The National Security Agency (NSA) will soon break ground on a data center in Utah that will reportedly cost $1.5 billion. The NSA is building the facility to provide intelligence and warnings related to cyber security threats, cyber security support to defense and civilian agency networks, and technical assistance to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
"Our country must continue to advance its national security efforts and that includes improvements in cyber security," Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, said in a statement. "As we rely more and more on our communications networks for business, government and everyday use, we must be vigilant and provide agencies with the necessary resources to protect our country from a cyber attack."
The data center will be built at Camps Williams, which is a National Guard training center 26 miles south of Salt Lake City. The complex will comprise of the 1.5 million sq-ft-building on 120 to 200 acres of land. According to the budget, the 30-MW data center will be cooled by chilled water and capable of Tier 3, or near carrier-grade, reliability. The design of the data center also calls for the highest LEED standard within available resources.
The U.S. Army Corps of engineers will host a conference in Salt Lake City to provide further detail the data center building and acquisition plans. The project will require between 5,000 and 10,000 workers during construction, and the data center will eventually employ between 100 and 200 workers."
Link
I've heard about that thing. That's where every email ever written will be stored and scanned by new Ais.
Fucking scary if you ask me.
$1000/SF
That's a spendy building.....
And they'll monitor Lit, too.
50,000 rpm--that's no joke."Beacon Power Corp. broke ground today on a 20-megawatt, energy-storage facility in southeastern New York," which will be "the first in the nation to use a 'flywheel' frequency regulation system to balance electricity supply and demand. ... The $69 million facility would store electricity as kinetic energy in a matrix of massive discs when grid supply outstrips demand." Beacon President and CEO Bill Capp said in a statement that "the ability to move power in and out of the system and maintain proper electricity frequency -- about 60 cycles per second -- will make the nation's electricity grid 'smarter.'" Said Capp, "Our flywheel systems provide an essential grid-stabilizing service, and they do it faster and much more efficiently than today's conventional methods.""
New York Times
Imagine if that failed at 50,000 RPM.
From that article:
"Because of this complexity, the magnetic bearings also typically require some kind of back-up bearing in case of power or control system failure."
Still I could only imagine how long they'd (traditional bearing) last at those revolutions.
And further still, interesting the number of applications it affects.