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I wonder if they will also see 25 prompts per 3 hours limit.


This really goes to heart of what it means to actually OWN something. Can it still be called ownership if a few years down the road cars come with a paid subscription and not paying for that subscription stops the car from functioning altogether? That would be more like leasing or renting, rather than owning.


I just hope whatever original idea you put out in public; it won't get patented by some tech giant.


Though I'm having trouble finding the source, I believe there to some degree an idea published in a public fashion becomes un-patentable / public domain after a given period (something like 6 months). Hopefully someone can chime in on details about publicly shared ideas and patentability.


Pretty sure a patent like that would be invalidated due to prior art. It might be expensive to take to court though. Obligatory IANAL.


I hope u guys caught my bathtub video.


I think that it might be interested to use something like that to help aim solar panels towards the sun?


One idea I had a while ago was that you could use these for saving energy by targeting exposed skin surfaces only. This would be particularly useful for offices: the office can be set to the lower temperature preferred by men, and then women can be targeted by the infrared heaters to keep them comfortable as well, so no one has to be uncomfortable while still saving energy. (It has to default to colder/male preferences because you save more energy by keeping the office as a whole at the lower temperature, and anyway, there's no such thing as an 'anti-heat beam' so you can't cool down a subset.)


You sound like a fella that doesn't spend much time around post-menopausal women :)



Indeed, women in offices now tend to either suffer or sweater. They are solutions, but not good ones. Infrared trackers would allow one to have one's cake of attractive stylish (non-sweater) clothing while not suffering in the eating. So to speak.


If they were pervasive, they could allow institutional users to lower the temperature in their buildings a few degrees. One degree on the thermostat for a large building in New England could equate to a lot of savings in fuel.


Or those who feel cold could put a jumper on?


The thing is... heliostats are expensive, susceptible to breakdown, and require maintenance. And panels are getting cheaper and cheaper.

If you’re dealing with “free” rooftop mounting space, it’s cheaper to just throw more panels at the problem.

And you’ll get better peak power with more panels.

Or get a manually adjustable setup and manually adjust them for each season.


The sun follows a pretty regular schedule, so might be easier to just program that in :)


No programming required....the mechanical clockworks for that was figured out a few hundred years ago.


It may surprise you but using a micro-controller and some servos is today often an easier and simpler solution than building a complex mechanism using cams and clockworks.


True.

Your user name makes that statement hilarious though. :)


That sounds like a fun project, but economically impractical. When we installed panels on our roof it was cheaper to just lay them flat and buy extra panels to make up the difference, than to install them on static frames to angle them for most efficient energy generation. If static frames are not worth it, dynamic ones are definitely going to be too expensive.

Perhaps at scale, things would be different, but I doubt it.



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