Āé¶¹“«Ć½

Feedback: Do solar cells suck sun?

The thorny question of sucking solar cells, spotting the first fruitloop of summer, a no-energy energy drink and more
Feedback: Do solar cells suck sun?
(Image: Paul McDevitt)

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

Do solar cells suck sun?

SOLAR energy is part of the mix we need to avert climate catastrophe (21 June, p 32). Improved efficiency may be on the cards (page 42). But what of the risk that solar cells suck sun?

Four readers alerted us to a story appearing on a website called National Report in May: ā€œSolar Panels Drain the Sun’s Energy, Experts Sayā€, . ā€œIs this the biggest load of tosh you’ve ever come across?ā€ asks David Cross.

ā€œScientists at the , a privately owned think tank,ā€ the National Report specifies, ā€œdiscovered that energy radiated from the sun isn’t merely captured in solar panels, but that energy is directly physically drawn from the sun by those panels, in a process they refer to as ā€˜forced photovoltaic drainage’.ā€

The myth-busters at dug out a 2013 in which the National Report announced that ā€œAny resemblance to the truth is purely coincidental.ā€ Indeed, when we looked the site was also promoting a report by the alleged Wyoming Institute on ā€œchemtrailsā€ (22 June 2013).

Feedback rather fears that won’t stop people believing it, or some wanting it to be true. We’ll try to keep a watch out for this meme resurfacing.

Alan Branford’s new modem announces that it ā€œfeatures advanced security for your piece of mindā€. He feared a pact with Mephistopheles, but happily still had a whole mind after plugging it in

The first fruitloop of summer

SUMMER is getting into swing in the northern hemisphere, prompting a whole new round of fruitloopery. First, we regret the wide coverage given to claims by a Colorado company called Osmosis. As the Daily Mail : ā€œWorld’s first DRINKABLE sun cream goes on sale – and just a teaspoon will offer three hours’ protectionā€.

ā€œBut does it work?ā€ asks Jacqueline Houtman. Let’s see. Osmosis founder Dr. Ben Johnson that the so-called Harmonized H2O UV Neutralizer ā€œis made by manipulating radio waves that naturally occur in water to give them UV-cancelling properties, then duplicating that process hundreds of thousands of times, and bottling that water upā€.

He’s lost us there.

No-energy energy drink

NEXT – has the sun made you sleepy? Do you need some get up and go? But have you resolved to cut down on those fattening drinks? Then clearly you are the target market for the ā€œZero calorie energy drinkā€, a poster for which puzzled Nick Daggit.

We surmise that Nick does something rational for a living and doesn’t appreciate the magic of marketing, for he observes that ā€œSince calories are how energy is measured, it seems unfortunate to call it an energy drink.ā€

Powdered booze to go

NOW, after a day in the sun you may fancy a stiff drink. But it’s such a bore schlepping heavy bottles around. Perhaps powdered alcohol might help? Not yet. The US government’s approved the labels for seven flavours of ā€œPalcoholā€ in April, and . There is controversy about possible Palcohol abuse.

Feedback was concerned about how it could work. We were rather surprised to discover it’s possible; but it may not taste good. Likely recipes use cyclodextrins, which are also used to mask flavours.

Repetitive invention syndrome

WHAT is more, we seem to remember ā€œinstant boozeā€ – mentioned above – being one of those stories that comes around once every decade or so, much as ā€œvideophonesā€ used to (until they finally happened, not as predicted but as a side effect of mobile technology). Can anyone refresh our memory?

The music of the spams

AFTER the sun and a sangria, perhaps some poetry?

ā€œWalnut door clip is also nourish the brain over it? Slip squatting.

ā€œUnconsciously big belly, have a child no father. Flower Bucket.ā€

These lines come from Feedback’s archive of spam email headlines, courtesy of a machine translation from the original traditional Chinese.

A translation shift scheme

MACHINE translation: can we trust it? The example above makes us wonder whether there is a way of gaming it.

It seems that computer translation mostly works by taking phrases from human-translated documents that are statistically likely to be appropriate.

Our first thought involved the creation of thousands of web pages that are easily detectable as accurate translations of each other – except for carefully chosen words. Possibly, we could convince it that the German for ā€œhomeopathā€ was ā€œquackā€, and so on.

Then we recalled the suggestion that the point of Google scanning books – despite legal challenges from authors and publishers – may have been to build an authoritative corpus of translations. Do we have to publish prolifically on paper to influence its results?

Anti-marketing masterpiece

FINALLY, Windows 8, the latest operating system from Microsoft, has been unpopular with users. But dealers trying to sell new computers have to be careful what they say about it. Feedback is taken by the in an advert from Misco. It offers a Lenovo Thinkcentre machine with Windows 7 Professional 64-bit Edition – and the option of a ā€œWindows 8 Pro 64-bit Edition downgradeā€.

Do you have more examples of such anti-marketing?

More from Āé¶¹“«Ć½

Explore the latest news, articles and features