Alternative energy, not always high-tech
Geplaatst: wo 14 sep 2005, 12:32
Firstly, you might expect an apology for the intrusion of such a crude and simple contraption into a world used to thinking only of 'high-tech' solutions to everything. But apologise to any who so wilfully accept such a crude and simple political-commercial tyranny masquerading as democracy world-wide today? Perhaps not.
And high technology? This mechanism should have been invented twenty thousand years ago by our distant forefathers, but the Patent Office recognises it as 'novel', so 'novel' it is. The apparatus is not nano-anything, but very much the contrary. Rather than merely agricultural in scale, as you will see it is marine in dimension and global in scope. So, if it seems brutish and crude, well, that is just what it is. However, the more brutish and vast it is, the more beneficial it is to us and to all life on the planet. So, rather than looking for any technological elegance, look at it and appreciate it for what it is and will mean for us all.
The invention provides a cheap and novel way a) to propel ships and b) to produce rotary power for electrical generation in vast quantities, in both cases totally without combustion, without chemical reaction and without pollution. So who needs oil or nuclear power? Certainly not the planet.
Patent Office recognition of it as 'novel' and of its 'industrial applicability', and it also being Copyright, all mean that, with the inventor's permission, anyone can implement it without fear of infringing any 'patent law' or anybody's 'rights'. There are a few stipulations at the end of the following description, which set out how it should be done for its benefits to go where they belong - to the planet and its inhabitants, rather than into a few already grossly over-swollen pockets.
http://www.justice-publications.com/GRAVITY.pdf
(Published by the Office of World Intellectual Property on August 18th 2005)
Iemand enig idee of dit gaat werken?
And high technology? This mechanism should have been invented twenty thousand years ago by our distant forefathers, but the Patent Office recognises it as 'novel', so 'novel' it is. The apparatus is not nano-anything, but very much the contrary. Rather than merely agricultural in scale, as you will see it is marine in dimension and global in scope. So, if it seems brutish and crude, well, that is just what it is. However, the more brutish and vast it is, the more beneficial it is to us and to all life on the planet. So, rather than looking for any technological elegance, look at it and appreciate it for what it is and will mean for us all.
The invention provides a cheap and novel way a) to propel ships and b) to produce rotary power for electrical generation in vast quantities, in both cases totally without combustion, without chemical reaction and without pollution. So who needs oil or nuclear power? Certainly not the planet.
Patent Office recognition of it as 'novel' and of its 'industrial applicability', and it also being Copyright, all mean that, with the inventor's permission, anyone can implement it without fear of infringing any 'patent law' or anybody's 'rights'. There are a few stipulations at the end of the following description, which set out how it should be done for its benefits to go where they belong - to the planet and its inhabitants, rather than into a few already grossly over-swollen pockets.
http://www.justice-publications.com/GRAVITY.pdf
(Published by the Office of World Intellectual Property on August 18th 2005)
Iemand enig idee of dit gaat werken?