DISQUS

Pervasive Smothering: Blogging… delayed

  • betote · 3 years ago
    igual ya te lo sabes, pero si no hay te va

    http://dilbertblog.typepad.com/

    digo no se por que tengo la idea de que te gusta dilbert , igual ando meando fuera de la hoya =P
  • catarf · 3 years ago
    jajajaj... si yo me acuerdo de mis años de estudiante.

    cuidate compi y no juegues con fuego!!!
  • rolandog · 3 years ago
    Beto, no le podrías haber atinado más adentro (inclusive sin churruspear tantito).
    Dilbert es la mamada. Gracias por el recurso.
  • Mirabai · 3 years ago
    Wastewater as an eregy source????
    If anybody can do that will become as famous as Einstein or something.
    The only use of wastewater I've heard of is gardening the plants in public squares or stuff like that.
    It'd be really good for ecology or whatever it's called.
    congratulations and go on!!!
  • Subzero · 3 years ago
    Ke pedo dude!, pues por ke no les dices la verdad, you burned shit dude...., jajaja, poop ashes, jajaja, pero bueno, nomas es por castrar un rato, ey espero que te haya gustado "My name is Earl", ya veras que es la mamada.
  • Joe Smith · 3 years ago
    I work at Deer Island Treatment Plant in Boston, Mass. On average we pump 250 mgd of "product" and produce tons sludge. We use some in our methane (or meethane, if you're British ;o) )to co-generate some electricity in our gas turbine. Raw sludge, though? - not quite. Have you published any results?

    I'm just a computer jock, not an engineer, or chemist, so they may be hot on the trail of this one. ,,, Joe s.
  • Rolando Garza · 3 years ago
    Hi Joe. The 'Dulces Nombres' Treatment Plant in Monterrey, Nuevo León (one of the plants in town) gets around 115 MGDs of waste water. And they do use meethane ( :-D ) for electricity co-generation... (though they also get some propane... so, we might conclude mexican food produces explosive gases).

    We still have not published any results... If we do, though... I'll let you know. I think I'm not allowed to discuss much of the project at all, since we were supposed to be hired under some sort of 'oath of secrecy'. Weird thing is, they never gave us some any non-disclosure agreements to sign at all.

    We aren't however the first to think of wastewater sludge reuse. Japan and Germany already have interesting projects. Ours is similar to the one described at the article at the bottom of this newsletter.
  • Dreamwalker · 3 years ago
    So we are manufacturing our own fuel...Cool :)