>install crypto miner bumps into roads >cars move past bump, friction generates electricity and mines crypto currency >money generated is used back to maintain road, no toolbooths slowing traffic
Is this the solution to the road problem we have all been waiting for?
We should round up all of the fat people in the world and put them in human-sized hamster balls and make them run all day to power the electrical grid.
Henry Watson
Your roads must be really bad if you see this bad if you see this as a viable option
Or you know use hydro electric so I don’t get a sore ass and fucked up rims
Jordan Edwards
Bernie would endebt the road again by sharing the road money with roads not traveled
>amerian post disregarded, when you have a good president like boslonaro let me know
>anarcho capitalist enjoy your feudal system
storing electricity is not as effective as storing crypto, fuck off weakhands nocoiner
because they would take off like helicopers or planes you idiot
Jose Martin
>install turbine into toilet outlet >poo move past turbine, spins, generates electricity >poo mines cryptocurrency i call it poochain
Nathan Barnes
That added friction just means wasted energy. So people are paying for it with more gas. Basically this is an elaborate tax
John Peterson
>plopchain
Joshua Kelly
Damn nigga go back to playing LoL in your favila before Alberto Barbosa steals your computer.
Dominic Green
>the bumps cause local pressure spikes and introduce potholes in the road way quicker than if they weren't there at all >the 10 cents a month you generate can't even buy a coffee for the manager who has to fire the retard who thought this was a good idea
Wyatt Gutierrez
I'm fine with roads like this.
Liam Hernandez
>install bump in a curve >car would have to slow down anyway
It only takes a little of hue ingenuity really to fix the world's problems
Lucas Hernandez
was weed made legal in brazil this weekend too?
Henry Nelson
How about we use our power outlets to generate free infinite power for crypto mine
Christopher Williams
Maybe Brazil is different, but the people who pave our roads in the US are not capable of installing or maintaining such things, and most of them are on parole.