RE: Cold Fusion Lives: Experiments Create Energy When None Should Exist

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Cold Fusion Lives: Experiments Create Energy When None Should Exist

in science •  8 years ago  (edited)

Have you looked at that link? I do not think that I need to add anything more myself (apart from the picture), when this article is so long and detailed. I treat steemit like reddit. It is weird that instead of appreciating that I shared with steemit users such interesting article, it is by some people here expected that instead I write what I think about this. Well, I think that it is great, there is nothing more to add, really.

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no I haven't looked at the link. For one thing I've been burned many a time by 'blind links' and I'm leery of following them. Clik bait you know.
. One big feature of Steemit is telling us what YOU think.
Why should I bother following a link if you don't take the time to do some promotion?

I publish on steemit when I think that it is worth promoting or sharing with others. So in my opinion I do not need to promote it additionally by some other means. I simply do not have time for that. I am sorry that you did not appreciate that I shared with you this very interesting article. As you can see from the URL the article is in Scientific American, so that by itself is a great advertisement.

Up to you.
I was merely giving you a little friendly advice.
emphasis on friendly
sorry you didn't take it that way.

Regarding Scientific American.
Back before it became so left wing and political and actually wrote about science
it was four or five times the size it is now.
wonder why it lost so many of it's readers?

Thank you for the friendly advice, but to follow that advice I would have to have more time and something interesting to add. That is not always possible. That is in fact usually not possible. I did write a few articles on steemit, but mostly I treat it as an equivalent of reddit, and I do not believe it to be wrong, because that way I could share with you something interesting.

This article is not original Scientific American article - it was reproduced by them with permission from the Chemical & Engineering News.