IsawYoshi said:
Happydolphin would be furious. He wouldn't understand if he was loosing or not :D |
True dat xD
I'm on Twitter @DanneSandin!
Furthermore, I think VGChartz should add a "Like"-button.
IsawYoshi said:
Happydolphin would be furious. He wouldn't understand if he was loosing or not :D |
True dat xD
I'm on Twitter @DanneSandin!
Furthermore, I think VGChartz should add a "Like"-button.
Future? No no no, that's not Nintendo's style. They use 10-year-old tech in their consoles.

can't watch the video right now but a major breakthough in battery tech has far more impactful consequences than a game console. ...like making renewable energy practical.
| DanneSandin said:
I don't think it's that easy... You can't simply use a CD-burner to mass produce these kind of things. You have to have the right shapes on these things and it has to be done fast in large quantities. The technology is there, yes, but right now we're a while away from seeing this on the market. And you more or less just skipped the rest of my argument... |
The reason I skipped the rest of your argument is that batteries are ubiquitous, so oil companies have no say in the matter if foxconn needs them for their next ipad supply chain.
As for using a CD-burner to mass produce them, how do you think CD's are recorded and distributed to retail outlets in massive quantities? You got it, there are machines for that, stacked burners that do all that the video showed in mass-production. They could be tweacked like the lab guy did with his recorder to perform the same purpose.
The challenge is after that: how to mangle the paper into a battery form so compact and automate it all. That's the real challenge. Making the graphene oxide massively is the easy part.
| kitler53 said: can't watch the video right now but a major breakthough in battery tech has far more impactful consequences than a game console. ...like making renewable energy practical. |
Yeah, this is a gaming site though, and if you watch the video you'll see they talk about renewable energy. I know that those viewing can also see the ramifications outside of the context of consumer electronics. At least I hope they do. ;)
DanneSandin said:
True dat xD |
What are you swedes saying about me :)
Lafiel said:
you know the guys names and faces, you know what you have to do |
We'll probably figure out something, like selling gasoline as "good-smelling water" or something ^^
happydolphin said:
The reason I skipped the rest of your argument is that batteries are ubiquitous, so oil companies have no say in the matter if foxconn needs them for their next ipad supply chain. As for usng a CD-burner to mass produce them, how do you think CD's are recorder and distributed to retail outlets in massive quantities? You got it, there are machines for that, stacked burners that do all that the video showed in mass-production. They could be tweacked like the lab guy did with his recorder to perform the same purpose. The challenge is after that: how to mangle the paper into a battery form so compact and automate it all. That's the real challenge. Making the graphene oxide massively is the easy part. |
A lot of companies and even countries will be upset if their main source of income becomes obsolete in just a manor of a few years...
Yes, the technology more or less just needs to be tweaked, but as you said: there is more to it that simply making the material - they need to work on other things as well.
I'm on Twitter @DanneSandin!
Furthermore, I think VGChartz should add a "Like"-button.
happydolphin said:
What are you swedes saying about me :) |
Well, I'm the only swede around here actually ^-^
I'm on Twitter @DanneSandin!
Furthermore, I think VGChartz should add a "Like"-button.
great video.
Also correction needs to be made Capacitor and battery are not the same.
This is a break through it making a capacitor that can discharge over longer period of time.
happydolphin said:
What are you swedes saying about me :) |
ARE YOU CALLING ME A SWEDE??? 

Nah, Im probably a norwegian