Related Articles

9 users responded in this post

Subscribe to this post comment rss or trackback url
mygif

We need some quantitative standard by which we can declare “Yes, now we can Seattle by solar energy.”

‘Cause, you know, then we just have to work on those giant robots.

ReplyReply
mygif
Sofa King said on July 11th, 2008 at 6:19 pm

Whyfore is there no page from the book of forgotten comic characters this week?

ReplyReply
mygif

I just squeed a bit…

ReplyReply
mygif

“Yes, now we can Seattle by solar energy.”

I’m guessing thats just a typo and there should be a “power” in there, but I still wonder what Seattle as a verb indicates…

ReplyReply
mygif

To Seattle: Something that Nirvana, Starbucks, and Frasier Crane have in common, I guess. Someone else will have to come up with the punch-line for that one.

MIT Super-solar: Before looking at it, I had guessed that it involved nano-something, that it’d be a wildly popular thing that turned out to be the next asbestos, and that in thirty years everyone would be cursing the fools (us) who so carelessly built, bought,and disposed of the stuff — think cell-slicing nano-sediment bio-accumulating in river and lake life. So I’m delighted to see that it’s actually not that at all. I want soar storm windows (though it sounds like they’re necessarily funny colours).

I will say that I don’t see how it can be used to retrofit existing panels in any practical way, and that it looks like it’s a 40x concentrator that sends light to narrow cells around the edges, not something that you slap on to magically get forty times the energy for the same area. So you don’t install one of these at a size of, say 1×2 metres and get power equivalent to a traditional panel of 40 x 2m^2. Instead, assuming an edge width of 1 cm, you’d get the equivalent of 40 x Perimiter x Thickness or 40 x 600 cm x 1 cm = 2.4 m^2. They’re supposedly stackable, so that`s where the real win comes in, but not forty times over.

ReplyReply
mygif

Still waiting on my flying car.

but this is cool.

ReplyReply
mygif

[…] solar cells more efficient by using glass panels to increase their capture ability (discussed here), guess what the folks at MIT did: they invented a cheap, efficient and stable fuel cell so that […]

mygif

[…] two years ago was at 15-20 cents, and with the recent advances in solar technology making them vastly more efficient and with cheap fuel cell technology essentially perfected allowing us to more or less store solar […]

mygif

[…] two years ago was at 15-20 cents, and with the recent advances in solar technology making them vastly more efficient and with cheap fuel cell technology essentially perfected allowing us to more or less store solar […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please Note: Comment moderation may be active so there is no need to resubmit your comments