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Solar powered with and AC unit to cool the cellphone. Perfect.
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that blimp was one big hydrogen fuel cell. so is a hydrogen bomb. they're plenty safe until they explode.
Natural lightning is DC though isn't it?

Nuclear batteries actually wouldn't be too bad. The scientific instruments left on the moon (or, in the case of Apollo 13, meant to be left on the moon) use batteries that power their components through radioactive decay. Those devices still function today, over 40 years later. Your smoke detector uses a small amount of radioactive americium to function.
^Lightning, not lighting.
We also developed AC.
Same thing. Light is light.
Well, light was already AC, we just harnessed its powers.
Edison developed the diode which converts AC to DC, which, ironically, was the wrong thing to do with power lines. Tesla won that argument and was made into a pigeon feeder for that.
Edison developed the diode which converts AC to DC, which, ironically, was the wrong thing to do with power lines. Tesla won that argument and was made into a pigeon feeder for that.
Obviously there won't be DC mains into your home, but for long distance transmission it can have it's benefits.
Wasn't Edison basically a patent troll of his day?
Patent US181613 - Improvement in electric lights - Google Patents
Patent troll - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"For example, a search by Thomas Edison uncovered a prior patent by two Canadian inventors, Henry Woodward and Mathew Evans for carbon filament in a non-oxidizing environment, (U.S. Patent 181,613), the type of light bulb Edison wanted to develop. Edison bought the patent for US$5,000 ($120,948 in present-day terms[41]) to eliminate the possibility of a later challenge by Woodward and Evans."
Edison was pushing DC for powering cities and the homes therein, Tesla was pushing AC. But DC loses its charge as distance increases, making it useless for the above. But that was then... who knows what’s coming up.

Wireless charging requires a constantly changing field - in other words, what you get from AC.
A field from DC is just a magnet, doesn't transfer power.
The greater the distance, the greater the power transfer required, the higher the required flux.
Whether the fields in question would be harmful or not comes down to ionizing vs non-ionizing radiation, total field strength and at levels below all of that, whether medical appliances such as pacemakers are involved.
Maybe see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inductive_charging
That leaves inductive charging and then we hit the rules about power squaring and distance as well as frequency.
I want to see this on Tablets, and laptops. We may have to never charge again.