It is still an new technology, it still has to take it course and see what happens
no
Hydropower is the cheapest way to generate electricity today. No other energy source, renewable or nonrenewable, can match it. Producing electricity from hydropower is cheap because, once a dam has been built and the equipment installed, the energy source-flowing water-is free. Although Hydropower does present a few environmental problems the inherent technical, economic and environmental benefits of hydroelectric power make it an important contributor to the future world energy mix,
Carbon resistors can be used on an variety of electronics and are widely used today. They can withstand very high pulses of energy like that from a medical defibrillator.
$100.
The early railroads established "polelines" to carry telegraph wires and electricity alongside the railroad tracks. These looked like what are called telephone poles today, but could have large "crossarms" at the top to carry many wires. These began with just 2 or 4 wires for telegrph use, which later had 2 wires for electricity added. As technology advanced, more wires were added to control trains and send other messages along the lines.
My teacher gave me that wack question as homework today :(
yes it is
yes hydro power is used and accepted today because it is a renewable transformation of energy and 7.2% of the world uses it!
Yes
yes
yes because it is renewable
no beccause you could get arrested for that here in the U.S.A
Widely accepted in my big fat bum'ole
yes biomass is widely accepted today, because it is renewable and it reuses our garbage
Is technology widely accepted today in America? We'd probably die without it. Life as we know it would vanish if technology did. To cite just a single example, people would almost certainly wander around like zombies without their cell phones to talk on. In India, yes it is.
some are dangerous ,cost alot of money or are developed technology
yes it is
Yes, most advanced countries are either building nuclear or considering it, but there are always groups who oppose it as well, so it depends what you mean by 'widely'