Month: March 2024

Richard Talks to Google Gemini about SpaceX Starship, AI capabilities and responsibilities, a compressible vacuum

Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation: Can you tell me details of the suborbital test of Starship? Or are you out of date? Google Bard Gemini: I am up-to-date on Starship information. Starship has actually completed several suborbital test flights, not just one. Here’s a quick rundown: Starship prototypes undergo suborbital flights to test the vehicle’s
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Richard Talks with Grok about X, global open tokens, topics and conversations, topic management and fair indexing of the Internet

Note:  In this conversation, I said there was no article on Gyrotrons in Wikipedia. It was that I could not search Wikipedia through Google.  There is an article when searching inside Wikipedia English version at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyrotron Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation:  When people use the # to name things on Twitter, what is that called?
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Sub nanosecond flash 3D video sampling allows gravitational imaging, “imaging accelerometry”

I am interested in your “double exposure”. 200 ns would be 5 Mfps. Can you say which specific cameras from Imperix or elsewhere can support that? I am also interested in LWIR “thermal” camera for passive radiometry. Do you have anyone interested in camera interface standards? There are many cameras, and the cost of storing
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Add diamagnetic gravimeter to the list of ways to make chip scale gravimeters and their imaging networks

Diamagnetic magnetic levitation at nanoscale is one way to make chip scale gravimeters. A “gravimeter” is an accelerometer that can track the sun and moon by their gravitational fields precisely. https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.13555   The three axis signal allows “gravitational GPS/GNSS” and “gravitational compass” in 3D. Array for imaging atmospheres, oceans, magma and interiors of things. After
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