h a l f b a k e r yOh yeah? Well, eureka too.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
What about near-boiling water instead of coffee or tea, so
the user can brew any drink they want, or use it for cooking?
[+] |
|
|
// adds milk ... like .... we were served at boarding school // |
|
|
That ..... wasn't....... milk..... |
|
|
Rather than having to decide as a community which hot drink you want, why not just let everyone have access to dozens of different beverage taps? The idea states that your consumption is monitored, so you won't pay for drinks you don't like drinking. |
|
|
Yes, why not. Cocoa, green tea, even hot lemon with paracetamol. for flu sufferers. |
|
|
The selection could change seasonally .... Gluhwein at Christmas. |
|
|
I don't know why, but I think that the added length this would give to your kitchen counter would be an overwhelmingly positive bonus. |
|
|
Visions of a Brasilesque nest of pipes, converters, pressure regulators and other assorted tubery all gurgling quietly away behind the wainscoting. All is well until one of the pipes springs a leak, at which point, you'd better make sure you've filled out a 27B/6 before the PG-Man comes round. |
|
|
I really love this. I had no idea you could come up
with such a generous and functionally sound
group/community hug sort of idea. |
|
|
Okay, fess up fellow bakers, which one of ya's cloning
experiment is he? |
|
|
I suspect you'll run into problems with cavitation in your pipes: Happens when the pumped fluid vaporizes and subsequently implodes in the pipe leading to massive damage. Happens under high temp. or low pressure situations. This is the main reason why a trans-atlantic pipeline has never been created: You need a pump installed every couple miles or so to keep your pressures in check, would be drastically inefficient. To keep your pressure high enough will require lots of pump energy, long story short; definitely for the high end community. Also, I've already witnessed water faucets on individual homes that output water at near boiling temps. I'm guessing they are single unit operations as opposed to some sort of community wide distributed network, for good reason. neutral. |
|
|
NOW it all falls into place. |
|
|
Yup. Rum, sodomy, and the lash .... |
|
|
// the ones who do the cloning // |
|
|
No. We Assimilate other life-forms. Lots of other species do clone themselves and others, though. |
|
|
"They'd have to take a community-wide vote to
decide which drink to use" |
|
|
Have the pipes from the city carry boiling water and
each neighborhood could have a brewing vat which
would contain whatever the neighborhood wanted
steeped. From there, the brewed beverage would be
piped to each house. |
|
|
People have been delivering steam heat to entire neighborhoods for at least 100 years. Couldn't be that much different, by HB standards. |
|
|
A neighborhood near downtown Boise, ID was built on a natural geothermal heat source over 100 years ago. Several blocks of houses get essentially free heat, so the houses we're all built a good bit bigger than they would have been otherwise (mega mansions instead of plain old mansions). |
|
| |