Laptop Battery The volatile issue of whether it is safe to transport highly radioactive nuclear materials around the country has been pushed before the public by the state of Nevada in recent weeks. In a desperate effort to avoid becoming the nation's burial spot for spent fuel rods from nuclear plants, Nevada has begun to run advertising that warns the residents of 42 other states that they will be "IN GRAVE DANGER" from truck and train shipments of the waste unless they persuade Congress to block the burial plan.
According to the indictment, Jones would steal various IBM and Penguin computer servers from Verisign's warehouse in Virginia and sell them to Johnson. Johnson would then sell the servers to several individuals, who would sometimes place them for sale on eBay. As a result of this scheme, the indictment alleges that Jones and Johnson caused Verisign to lose more than $120, 000 worth of computer equipment. In the indictment, Jones and Johnson are charged in three counts with causing the interstate transportation of stolen property, namely IBM 330 and 335 servers, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
Thinkpad That may be Nevada's best shot politically, but it ignores two salient facts. Spent fuel rods have been shipped in small quantities for decades now with no obvious harm to the public, and whatever new risks may emerge with more numerous shipments in an age of terrorism will have to be addressed in detail by federal regulators before they approve the burial plan. Nevada's hyperbole provides no reason for Congress to abort a promising plan before the issues can be closely analyzed.
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Microsoft The transportation issue has come to the fore in the wake of the Bush administration's formal proposal to build an underground repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada to accept spent fuel rods that are now stored at the sites of nuclear power plants. Nevada has vetoed the plan, and Congress has until July 26 to override that veto and push ahead. Nevada contends that the Yucca Mountain site is unsuitable and cannot safely contain the waste for the 10,000 years required. But that is an issue that has little resonance elsewhere, so the state has buttressed its argument with alarming statements about transportation risks that, according to its governor, endanger some 123 million Americans in states along the way.
laptop computers is driving strong sales for notebook computers, according to the latest quarterly sales figures from the research firm IDC, which reported a 37% computer sales for the second quarter, compared with a year earlier. In the U.S., laptop sales grew 17.7%, while sales of desktop computers and servers fell 4%. The New York Times ( 10), CNET ( 10)
Laptop Computers Nevada cites estimates that some 96,000 truck shipments or about 19,000 rail shipments would be needed to transport the waste over three to four decades, and the state says that would expose communities along the way to the risk of radiation exposure from accidents or terrorist acts. The state estimates that there might be 130 truck accidents or 440 train accidents over that period. It contends that a credible worst-case accident could release enough radioactive material to cause hundreds of cancer deaths and cost tens of billions of dollars to clean up.
- Final disposal of nuclear waste The federal government has to decide upon final disposal sites for the nuclear waste. The depots in the closed nuclear power stations are full to the brim. The reprocessed nuclear waste from Great Britain and France adds to this. Granite areas in the Black Forest are considered a possibility as well as the salt mines in Gorleben. affected areas. No matter where the nuclear waste is disposed, the radiating legacy will be around for the next 10, 000 years. Nuclear power stations cover one third of Germany's total electric energy demand. What are the alternative energy sources that could replace the supplies of energy
Laptop Computer These are merely speculative estimates that have yet to be subjected to the kind of rigorous scrutiny needed to form national policy. By contrast, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the agency designated to protect the public from such disasters, has conducted its own analyses over the years and found very little likelihood of an accident that would release enough radioactivity to harm the public. The massive casks that are used to transport the spent fuel rods are designed to survive punishing tests in which they are dropped onto hard surfaces, subjected to a puncture test, engulfed in fire and submerged in water. So far, in some 2,600 shipments of spent fuel rods since the mid-60's, there have been only four truck accidents and four rail accidents, with no release of radioactive material.
"Computer industry analysts estimate that some 60 percent of all corporate data exists only on desktop and laptop computers, " said Walter Scott, CEO of Acronis. "Incorporating Acronis True Image with New Mexico Software backup server is the ideal solution to capture that corporate data and ensure that it is not lost. While traditional server backups are effective for protecting server data, every company should have a combination of server and workstation backup plans."
Desktop Computer There is no question that the transportation issues will need to be explored in great depth to make sure that the tests conducted on the casks are strenuous enough, that the probabilities of serious accidents have been reasonably and conservatively calculated and that the new threat of terrorism can be countered. But the appropriate place for those issues to be addressed is in painstaking regulatory proceedings before the N.R.C., not in rushed Congressional debate now.
Notebooks New York Times - 4/21/2002
Topic: Nuclear
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