The principle is simple enough. Look into 'swamp coolers' or evaporative coolers. They work well with adequate airflow, until the air reaches the point where absorbing more moisture becomes less efficient, somewhere around 60-100% humidity. More airflow with low humidity air helps. The solid state/ no moving parts is what fascinate me about this design.
The wall panel one in the first left picture is also aesthetic, and modular. Makes me want to cast some terra cotta. I"m trying to think thru how one would channel the cool air in the direction one would want it to flow, without electricity or moving parts. Sort of a funnel shape leading from the cooling part, to guide the cool air in the right direction regardless of the wind's direction.
How about, and work with me on this: 1. Every citizen over 18 y.o. is automatically registered to vote. 2. DItch 1st past the post elections and instead have some form of ranked choice voting. I know, so radical, but that's my solution.
Except they are only 'scurrying away' as a public position. In private, it's the exact opposite.
""Remember everyone who died from COVID?" Dans said. "Remember that disastrous pullout in Afghanistan? Even remember what happened on Saturday? All these are products of this deep state, and we need to re-infuse political control over this bureaucracy. And that's the importance of Project 2025.""
I'm going to assume he has his vaccinations up to date, and will have already started Paxlovid before this article even 'hit the press.' My hope is he'll be just fine. OTOH, I heard an interview years ago that demonstrated convincingly that if you want the worst health care in the US, become president, e.g. bloodletting Washington for a sore throat that led to his demise, and the physician probing Lincoln's bullet wound with their finger causing the infection that ultimately led to his death.
In the 80s I had a non-biologist friend who told me about something in development which could act as a blood replacement. They wanted to fill a swimming pool with it, sit on the bottom of the pool, and meditate. I suggested the viscosity of a pool filled with anything like blood would be a whole lot more viscous than air, and so would require a lot more muscular effort to move in and out of their lungs. And so the experience wouldn't be as relaxing as they thought. All these decades later, and researchers are still working on it.
LoL, I appreciate the input anyway. It's all about getting us thinking, and creating solutions.