My retirement plan is to start a syncretistic tithing religion. When I free up a little more time I'll get to work on the book for it. I think there are tax breaks.
Gleefully by the head of Physics and the head of Religious Studies. They chuckled for ages. I just wanted to graduate.
Yes, also very much agree, and sorry if you thought I was being particularly serious. Just flying the flag for chemists. Can I also point out that my paper in Phenomenology of Religion was gleefully cross credited as a Physics paper to allow me to graduate BSc, so I'm good with origin stories?
Well, in order: - The physics has been done but the engineering is proving tricky (www.openstar.tech) - Chemistry (although I fell out with inorganic chemistry in 1980) - Deeply, deeply, interesting but I'm not sure how the information would change my life
OpenStar’s mission is to deliver clean, abundant, and available fusion energy to the world.
Well possibly, but all the useful physics stuff has been done now...
Well, nothing very new has happened in physics for a while and there isn't a maths prize so why not?
And yet Wellington's food carts are not run off their feet with business. There are plenty of food carts around because you get quite a gathering of them at the Harbourside Market on a Sunday. And there are about 8 cafes/bars between the Bluebridge and Hikitia.
Yay the anti-muons!
Yes, it is better but it covers the fact that at each peak everyone is running around starting new projects and looking for people and at each trough everyone is out looking for money for the mortgage. And yes there are subcontracts and so on. If I get the time...
A nice example of Betteridge's law.