Vcon 37 Thoughts, part 1

Had a blast at V-con 37 over the last weekend.

Joe and I got to the hotel (the Vancouver Guildford Sheraton). We got checked in [1] and went through registration. My badge was a very plain and functional one because I am apparently the scum of the Earth for not pre-registering. The pre-registered people got a very pretty badge. Same font tho, which is something, I guess.

Then I took a little while to rest in our room and acclimate before heading into the convention itself. Our room was fine, but not as fancy as some we have had in previous years. I particularly missed the full kitchen that our room had last year. That was marvelous. We brought a bunch of food from home, and were able to make our own toast and such. Made it feel a lot more like home. The room we had this year did not even have a microwave, and even more shocking, didn’t even have a minibar.

I have not seen a room without a minibar in at least a decade. Why would a hotel give up that opportunity to soak people who are too lazy to leave their room and are willing to pay $14 for a Tobelerone.

In fact, when you think of it, the minibar is just an extension of the same sort of thinking that lets hotel restaurants charge about $4 per item more than anywhere else. Sure, you could pay less… but then you would have to leave the comfy confines of the hotel. You would have to get your outside clothes on, and venture out into an unfamiliar place, and who knows what kind of food you will end up getting?

So you pay the extra money. And presumably, the minibar was invented by some genius who thought “Wait, if they will pay that much not to leave the hotel, imagine what crazy prices they will pay to not have to leave their hotel room!”.

Seems he was right! I mean, I have never taken anything out of a minibar because I am constitutionally incapable of paying that kind of markup. But a lot of people, especially those on expense accounts so it is not their money, probably clean that sucker out.

And speaking of hotel restaurants, Joe and I and a few other people had a meal there on Friday night. At first, we thought the place was way too expensive for us and that my theory that these place usually have a few reasonably priced low end items for the likes of us would prove not to be true.

But then the waitress, with admirable diplomacy, asked us if we would prefer something “lighter” and gave us the “bar menu”, where things that were merely ludicrously priced could be found.

I pulled a full gauche and got the burger and fries. And the burger, I must admit, was damned good. The fries were good too, but not exceptionally so. But the burger was almost as good as Boston Pizza’s very excellent prime rib burgers. So, pretty high marks.

After dinner, I took another little siesta in our hotel room, then I headed over 8 doors down to a room party that the inestimable Kathleen Moore was hosting, and I was having fun so ended up staying there for the rest of the evening. That’s the main reason I could never be much of a social butteryfly : when I am happy, I stay put. I only explore when I grow bored or unhappy. At parties, I usually just find a comfortable spot and stay there.

Not exactly power schmoozing.

I only ended up going to one panel on Friday, but it was an awesome one. It was entitled Thorium Reactors On Mars, and while it had very little to do with Mars, I didn’t care. I want Thorium reactors right here on Earth, right now!

And the talk was completely kickass. The presenter was funny and very knowledgeable about the subject, and basically gave us a light speed crash course on all the science and technology of nuclear reactors from the very first ones to the awesomeness of the Liquid Flouride Thorium Reactors [2] that are the blazing new hotness in the science of energy production today.

I really enjoyed the talk, although afterward I kind of felt like my brain was glowing red hot from all the knowledge. I am sure I did not truly absorb most of it. But it was a hell of a ride anyhow.

And I am totally stoked about the possibilities inherent in Thorium reactors. The efficiency alone would be spectacular. It would be a self-regulating reaction, Thorium is almost as abundant in the Earth’s crust as lead, it has only one isotope so there is no isotope separation process needed like there is with traditional nuclear reactors, the process does not make the kind of fuel needed for nuclear bombs, and the energy yield is enormous.

And those are just the benefits I can list off the top of my head. Hmmm, I guess I do retain some of it. Maybe not all the nuclear physics, but at least I recall the pitch reel.

Still, I wish I had the talk recorded to video. I would love to learn it all! But what I am most interested in now that I am totally sold on the idea is just exactly how much it would take to build one of these LFTR reactors, or better yet, to set up a factory that can produce them en masse.

This revolution can’t happen fast enough for me!

Footnotes    (↵ returns to text)

  1. Weird fact : there appears to be no visitor’s parking at the hotel at all. We had to park right outside the entrance to the hotel lobby in order to go in and check in. I stayed in the car while Joe went in and got our keycards. I guess that is to encourage people to pay seventeen bucks (!) for valet parking. Uh, not gonna happen.
  2. Shortened to LFTR, pronounced “lifter”.

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