Xref: utzoo unix-pc.general:7199 comp.sys.att:11456 Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!cica!bronze!copper!templon From: templon@copper.ucs.indiana.edu (jeffrey templon) Newsgroups: unix-pc.general,comp.sys.att Subject: Re: Brownouts, shorts, explosions and the unix pc. Message-ID: <1991Jan11.161417.4776@bronze.ucs.indiana.edu> Date: 11 Jan 91 16:14:17 GMT References: <484@dmk3b1.UUCP> <1991Jan11.025038.11661@colnet.uucp> <37881@cup.portal.com> Sender: news@bronze.ucs.indiana.edu (USENET News System) Organization: Indiana University, Bloomington Lines: 19 In article <37881@cup.portal.com> thad@cup.portal.com (Thad P Floryan) writes: >White Sands Missile Range circa late '50s or early '60s: a soldier took a >shortcut through the "beam" in a multi-megawatt RADAR installation and keeled >over, and it wasn't apparent what happened until after the autopsy: certain >internal organs were cooked. This incident is "rumored" to have been the Yeah, this is a problem. I got interested in Solar Power Satellites at one time and did some research. This was one of the worries - for those baffled, an SPS is a big satellite with solar panels, converts sunlight to electricity and then beams it down to earth in microwave form - that if somehow the guidance got screwed up, there would be this swath of destruction cut by the wandering power beam. Even if it did stay on target, they would be forever collecting birds and small rodents which died near the receiving antennas. Maybe we should rename the new group to comp.sys.3b1.boom.boom.boom ! Jeff