Spyke
lemmy.world

Scientists: No! It’s impossible to shine a light on the moon bright enough to advertise.

….What if we made our own moon and advertise on that?

75
RegalPotooreply
lemmy.world

28 megawatts at peak. Enough power for 21,000 homes.

bUt iTS soLaR!

70
Hackworthreply
lemmy.world

I don't know why it didn't occur to me before this foggy photo, but that thing sure is cyberpunk dystopian, huh?

26

Also me and my family were gonna go to the sphere and turns out part of it is essentially a climate change lecture, and my family had the collective reaction of “ah yes, let’s discuss climate change in the orb that has enough power to remain easily visible in the direct desert sun”

So yeah that was interesting to hear

12

Reminds me of those AI centers that drain the grid and suck up all the municipal water, only to run a fortune in PR about being Green.

As though using a Three Mile Island's worth of electricity is doing the rest of the world a favor.

5
possumpat.io

We need to invent a device that cancels out the light that comes through a glass window. Like noise canceling headphones but for light

54
feddit.org

I don't know how America survives without roller shutters. It's blackout dark in my home whenever I want it to.

36
sh.itjust.works

A lot of folks use blinds which are abject shit for keeping out light, blackout curtains are becoming more common but its still not the norm. Also im pretty sure the OOP is in a Hotel meaning thet prolly cant do any modifications, also if you want to go to Vegas assuming you have a car stay in one of the satellite towns, Primm, Boulder, or a KOA campground.

7
sh.itjust.works

In my experience they were black out curtains at one point in history, but are no longer due to way too many washes and solar breakdown.

6
OrnateLunareply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Huh Primm is an actual town, figured it was just a made up town from fallout new vegas

4

Nope its an actual place, most of the locations in NV are based off of real places. Theres even a crashed bomber in lake Mead.

3
lemmy.ca

Fun fact, most LED displays will only display a very specific wavelength of light for each primary color, if you can isolate the specific values of red, green, and blue, that the sphere uses in the LEDs in its displays, and get tint/filters for those wavelength ranges, you can effectively "tint" the windows where the sphere would be nearly impossible to see, while almost everything else would be fairly clear.

Almost all other light is broad spectrum, so even a single color item would reflect a much larger range of wavelengths than what the sphere produces, which may make red/green/blue objects less bright through the window, but they will still be observable, while the sphere is basically just black.

8
Microwreply
lemm.ee

I can guarantee you that there are people researching "variable glass tinting"

2

That actually already exists. It's good tech, but more for out of reach areas or where moving parts would be an issue. For a regular home, curtains work better.

6
lemm.ee

If you can see the sphere, you paid extra for the room and you knew what you were getting into.

17

Not really. I stayed at the Venetian last year, and my my room didn't include the sphere view in either the features or as an upcharge. (The sphere is "part of" the Venetian, so they'd be the most likely to advertise rooms with a view.) Their room is quite a bit further than mine was. They may have paid for the strip view, but without specific advertising they probably would not be able to tell ahead of time if they'd have LOS on the sphere.

2
loutrreply
sh.itjust.works

It's a huge ball they put up in Las Vegas because why the fuck not I guess? It seems to be a huge screen because it was a US flag in the other picture I've seen.

18