h a l f b a k e r yCompound disinterest.
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Quite well-baked, I'm afraid. |
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I like this idea quite a lot, and I've never heard it described before. Beauxeault: please provide a link if you can find one. Peter: I agree it's elegantly stated, but what does all-your-base mean? |
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It's a reference to the 'translated-not-extremely-well-from-Japanese' feel of the syntax, taken from the 'Zero-Wing- video game. Search on 'all your base' for further info. It's almost haiku-esque. I like it. Even though it's baked, I vote 'yay' for the prose. |
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kaana, this would be surreal: as if rain were running from the eaves on a hot sunny day. Like the others, I enjoy the expressiveness of your idea. Am I correct in assuming that English is not your cradle language? |
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Nice first idea. Welcome to the Halfbakery! |
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From the link, it seems to me that Californians do not pay the full economic cost of their water. |
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Cute idea! If I build a house where I need a roof cooling, I will probably use the idea. Just because it looks so nice. It's so romantic... Probably I will also write somewhere on the roof: |
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"From the top of the roof, water is flowed.Heat of the roof is taken away.And then room temperature falls.Looking it out of windows is nice. -kaana: halfbakery.com" |
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ever heard about passive architecture & evaporative cooling (more than fully baked concepts)? |
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Gently cool the summer heat. |
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In the 1998 Israel jubillee expo we were shown an invention of
a greenhous that has water running on the roof and walls
creating a virtual waterfall all day round. I was not able to
find a trace of this idea since. |
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Nice idea. One point: even if the water were recirculated,
you'd lose quite a lot to evaporation. |
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Evaporative cooling is how it works... |
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The Shrine of the Book <link> has a water-jet (fountain) system which doubles as a cooling device. |
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