tsig
a carbon based life-form
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2005
- Messages
- 39,049
It is to laugh.
It is to laugh.
How so?It is to laugh.
I think this is still fairly specific. Even in daily conversation I basically use it to mean airflow relative to me (or to some other observer). For instance, I would call the airflow outside the car window wind. And one of them is called the windscreen, so the inventor of said screen appears to agree.Wind is relative motion between air and ground, in a direction parallel to the ground. It doesn't matter if we consider the ground to be staying still and the air to be moving, or the air to be staying still and the ground to be moving: in both cases there's a wind.
How so?
I'm trying to get him to say something that will indicate there's a human being in there.Out of curiosity, why are you guys feeding this one? The humber one is at least somewhat entertaining - when you poke it it produces long streams of nearly grammatical nonsense words. But this one doesn't even do that.
I'm trying to get him to say something that will indicate there's a human being in there.
That and masochism.
Out of curiosity, why are you guys feeding this one? The humber one is at least somewhat entertaining - when you poke it long streams of nearly grammatical nonsense words come out. But this one doesn't even do that.
I am aware of this. Thanks thoughDon't expect too much - it could easily be a bot.
Only feed trolls up to the point it ceases to entertain you - that's the golden rule of internet fora.
The idea of someone publicly disproving another's claim, on a machine with an imaginary wind, is beyond parody.
And yet the trolls never address the oft repeated following:
And yet the trolls never address the oft repeated following:
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If I simply increased the size of my treadmill enough, I could set you in an easy chair on the porch of a house on a hot summer day and with the treadmill set at 10mph, you would be telling us how sweet the tea was and how nice the breeze was.
The flag on your porch column would stand proud, the wind chimes would be a 'clanging and the shrubs and trees would be swaying -- all because of a treadmill that "can't make wind". And of course you would be arguing strenuously with us that it's REAL wind and would not believe me when I told you that it was all just a treadmill.
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JB
It's not just that they don't address it - it's completely absurd to be arguing over it at all. It's like an argument over witchcraft, or the four humors (actually it's much worse than that - doctors were talking about yellow bile long after Galileo was dead).
I think this is still fairly specific. Even in daily conversation I basically use it to mean airflow relative to me (or to some other observer). For instance, I would call the airflow outside the car window wind. And one of them is called the windscreen, so the inventor of said screen appears to agree.
Of course we can define wind relative to a moving car, a moving boat, or whatever. The essential point is that wind is air moving relative to something else.
When we're talking about the subtleties of something that goes faster than the "wind", we need to be quite clear about our definitions. One of the barriers to the correct understanding of the DDWFTTW cart is a shifting definition of "wind". We start out seeing the wind relative to the ground, and when it is stated that the cart runs faster than the wind, everybody seems to agree that the two speeds are to be measured relative to the ground. But many people have said that when the cart gets up to the speed of the wind, there's no wind acting on the cart, so the wind can provide no power. They've changed their frame of reference without realising it. Yes, the wind relative to the cart at this point is zero, but it is not the wind relative to the cart that is providing the power. The power is coming from the wind relative to the ground, which hasn't changed.
Actually humber, you are precisely wrong. In this sunny porch scenario there is exactly no "wind" just above the treadmill surface, just like in all cases where air moves relative to a surface.Thanks for the allegory, but I think that the "wind" may perhaps only exist just above the treadmill surface, in a sort of laminar flow kind of way.
That is exactly what I was getting at. I just thought your previous definition was overly specific.Of course we can define wind relative to a moving car, a moving boat, or whatever. The essential point is that wind is air moving relative to something else.
I'm sorry if I led you to believe that this particular choir needs preaching to, but you are.When we're talking about the subtleties of something that goes faster than the "wind", we need to be quite clear about our definitions.
[...snip...]
They've changed their frame of reference without realising it. Yes, the wind relative to the cart at this point is zero, but it is not the wind relative to the cart that is providing the power. The power is coming from the wind relative to the ground, which hasn't changed.
The wheels spin the prop, the prop moves the cart, the cart spins the wheels.
Why do world class sailboats have spinnakers?
The problem of faster than wind travel is more than just that. The means of time and measurement would be critical to any claim. The closer the cart gets to windspeed, the more accurate the measurement would need to be.
The precise means by which the cart achieves that goal is important too.
Given free reign, a faster than wind cart is not difficult to build.