Given you wrote "focusing energy on a documentary doesn't scream serious", you give the impression you are just going to ignore the findings they have published. There's plenty video showing the plasma running for far more than the "world records" of these external-magnet reactors (Tokomak, and that other Helion one), so I don't know what to point you to that can actually help you.
In the documentary they published, they do waste the viewer's time with "look at this lab we built", but if they feel passionate about telling the story of their journey, that's fine. Also in the documentary, they share some of their data and what they did to validate that data with a third party.
I suspect the current record for sustained plasma is owned by fluorescent lighting, so not sure that's a valuable metric.
My comment that it doesn't seem like "serious science" means that I'm going to ignore anything not peer reviewed and I suggest others do the same.
I honestly still wish them the best, they just have a lot of work to convince anyone they're really dealing with anything new or interesting, and I don't think that video production is the path to that.
> If you aren't intelligent enough to see in the raw video footage that you are looking at something new and novel, that's not their problem.
What does intelligence have to do with seeing a video? To make an analogy, you think you'd be able to discern Intel Pentium IV from 14900K from a video footage of a working processor that would have its model number scraped out?
Fusion is just going to produce light of a certain spectrum. I don't think your brain is good at spectrometry.
>> What does intelligence have to do with seeing a video?
The raw video footage of the multi-layered plasma fusion reaction in a laboratory conveys meaningful and complete information, directly validating the larger assertions made by the Safire team. The information is right there.
If you are not able to comprehend what is right there on video not just in one place but many videos over several years, and you still want to present non-arguments against it, then you aren't very intelligent. Simple as.
>> you think you'd be able to discern Intel Pentium IV from 14900K from a video footage
The topic is not about CPUs, the topic is about plasma fusion.
>> Fusion is just going to produce light of a certain spectrum.
The fusion in question shows multiple separate plasma layers, this key information is literally shown in the video in question, not mere spectrometry.
You argued against novel scientific information conveyed in raw footage providing proof of the scientific claims made. You don't even know what the video is yet you present a bad argument where you don't even know what it is you are arguing about.
What a fucking waste of time. God damn you are stupid. You should be ashamed for posting such garbage.
In the documentary they published, they do waste the viewer's time with "look at this lab we built", but if they feel passionate about telling the story of their journey, that's fine. Also in the documentary, they share some of their data and what they did to validate that data with a third party.