For decades, government scientists have toiled away trying to make nuclear fusion work. Will commercial companies sprint to the finish?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    21 year ago

    You’re right, but you can’t use the word ‘scam’ for it. It’s an avenue that should be explored fully and may or may not lead somewhere. A scam would imply it’s a conspiracy where the players already know the unsuccessful end result, but are hiding it and using funding or similar for other end purposes.

    • @BedbugCutlefish
      link
      English
      41 year ago

      That is what I think the owner is doing here. Scamming venture capital firms for a tech that cannot work.

      And I mean, its not like I have any proof. I can’t read minds; maybe he is a true believer.

      But this company feels like those companies back in the 80s that sold tickets to mars, for the rockets they were ‘just about to build’; a scam.

      This isn’t a research firm. This isn’t trying to find the exact settings and layouts to make fusion possible. If the article can be taken at face value, this is a company to make a commercial fusion plant. And I find that, in 2023, patently absurd.

      • @assassin_aragorn
        link
        11 year ago

        I don’t think I trust the commercial companies, but the research coming out of national labs is promising at least

        • @BedbugCutlefish
          link
          English
          11 year ago

          I agree. I’m very much for more research into fusion. I’m still somewhat skeptical of it ever being ‘infinite cheap energy’. But even if it never becomes a ‘good energy source’, the advancement of knowledge is valuable. So its not like I think fusion is a scam overall.

          But I think this particular company is.