Yep, that's why such data are sometimes called brute facts ... 8)Tobias said:That shatters my convictions.
It is quite similar over here, especially when you count illegal immigrants,Gaidheal said:If you start looking into the numbers of people who are deliberately 'off-radar' for one reason or another, your estimate will likely go up quite a bit.
Tobias said:No, around an M star, or maybe a brown dwarf or other suitably dim object. But I'm gonna stop now. Thanks for proving me right, anyway.
Oh yes he did. (Concerning my assertion that the original post was entirely in vain.)EDG said:He didn't.
Tobias said:I... ah, forget it.GypsyComet said:Knowing fandom, I'm sure the structural needs of a material like scrith have been dissected online somewhere. The need to have any size Ring react as a rigid body is paramount for stabilization, and while we don't know the engineering characteristics of Bonded Superdense, assuming that it can retain a rigid shape when cast as a 15,000-mile-diameter Halo ring is probably a bit much.
Tobias said:Oh yes he did. (Concerning my assertion that the original post was entirely in vain.)EDG said:He didn't.
And I'm not being confrontational. I'm just disillusioned.
GypsyComet said:I'm not sure what EDG's framed paperwork includes
After about two years of attempting to design a plausible water worldTobias said:I'm just disillusioned.
rust said:After about two years of attempting to design a plausible water worldTobias said:I'm just disillusioned.
and the technology required for a colony there, I am still sent back to
the drawing board about once a week by a comment of someone who
knows more about some subject I touched upon than I do. :wink:
Tobias said:The part where you give me an indication what percentage of the population is a "significant number".aspqrz said:Oh, and what part of ... Which is, sorta, my point ... as I have noted elsewhere, demographic realities are such that if such high pop hellholes (and, regardless of tech, a planet with 40 billion pop would be a hellhole to a significant number of its citizens
Tobias said:I'm still waiting for that one.
Tobias said:And by the way, I don't know who you are trying to fool: You used the term "high population hellhole". You know darn well how that sounds - something quite different from Japan, the UK, the Netherlands, Belgium etc. etc.
[/quote]Tobias said:You do realize that this runs contrary to your own line of argument? You propose that the presence of a large population makes for a "hellhole". Not that a declining population, which is in fact the very opposite of what you say, makes for a "hellhole".aspqrz said:Note that all of these countries have the same problem with low replacement rates
captainjack23 said:i've always prefereed my NearC on the rocks with a gravitic twist - served with an umbrella, naturlich!Perhaps it is time to look for a quiet discussion of Near C rocks.
EDG said:Uh, can BOTH of you please ratchet back the sarcasm and personal attacks? If it's so clear that you're talking past eachother
If only you did. I'm disillusioned because you under-analyzed it, as this lengthy response again shows. I mean, why the heck are you trying to prove to me that ringworlds don't exist in the TU when my post essentially said:GypsyComet said:We tend to over-analyze this stuff.
Tobias said:If only you did. I'm disillusioned because you under-analyzed it, as this lengthy response again shows. I mean, why the heck are you trying to prove to me that ringworlds don't exist in the TU when my post essentially said:GypsyComet said:We tend to over-analyze this stuff.
"Nobody would build a ringworld in the TU even if we assumed the materials were strong enough because it would not make economic sense."