That's Not Gonna Be Enough Ramen

These are engineers. Those types of scientists abhor biology, with its "no two systems are alike" principles. They were never going to get anywhere near curing any kind of disease.

That said, I'm still waiting for these ass hats to develop a car with a self-powering perpetual motion engine.
 
These are engineers. Those types of scientists abhor biology, with its "no two systems are alike" principles. They were never going to get anywhere near curing any kind of disease.

That said, I'm still waiting for these ass hats to develop a car with a self-powering perpetual motion engine.

As long as matter exists in the space around the engine, perpetual motion should be impossible to attain.
 
Why don't they get busy developing the teleport machine that I ordered like... a decade ago? :mad:
 
What I want to know is, who the f**k funded this? And WHY are they doing it? It's a collossal waste of time. They made a microscopic bowl for microscopic noodles that are inedible, and thousands of people just died of AIDs and cancer. WTF is wrong with these scientists? Either they're doing totally pointless crap like this, or they're doing stuff that they're "pretty sure" won't end up destroying the planet. No wonder the religous nutbags choose them as a target so much, you have people like this essentially painting a bullseye on the whole profession.
See below.

These are engineers. Those types of scientists abhor biology, with its "no two systems are alike" principles. They were never going to get anywhere near curing any kind of disease.

That said, I'm still waiting for these ass hats to develop a car with a self-powering perpetual motion engine.
Yeah, Joker...let's get the engineers to cure AIDS and cancer. Tell you what, YOU can fund them, and we'll see what sort of cluster***** comes out of the whole ordeal.

This was the application of new technology; that is, the overall goal wasn't the microscopic bowl itself. I'm sure they know it's more or less useless. What it shows, however, is the potential for the production of other, more useful things. The Japanese are well known for these novel approaches.

I can't believe nobody sees the practical applications of the technologies they were using. I'll give you all a hint: it begins with a, "Nano," and ends with a, "technology."
 
Where are our damn Delorean's that run on garbage?:o
 

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