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Seasickness sufferers can become sick on completely calm seas (as witnessed happening to a friend of mine while island hoping in the Aegean) |
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definitely an interesting idea for motion-sickness sufferers.....but looking out the window could be quite disorienting eh? |
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The stabilization of the inner hull would have to be carefully controlled with gyros and supercomputers and other means of stabilization. Just a loose, free-moving gravity based design may cause it to rock even more. For sea-sickness sufferers, [jumblebox] has a point. Looking out the window would be an instant trigger for vomit. |
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See link, taken from "Patent Applied For" by Fred Coppersmith and J. J. Lynx, published 1949. (There's a lot more where that came from.) (Incidentally, the text on the linked page was scanned from the book using a Siemens PocketReader mentioned elsewhere on this site) |
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Try eating ginger root(or drinking ginger tea). |
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I remember that linked pic, but this still won't work, because you only handled 1 axis. What makes this worse is you took away everyone's windows and balconeys, so the lack of fresh air will make it worse. :-( Now if you did it will personal spheres you could at least stabilize both axis', but you'd still need to handle verticle motion, so take two gimbled spheres and hang them from a central pivot and you should be OK. :-) |
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Though I think it would be easier to make a wave penetrator boat or a submarine, since you've already given up having windows. |
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