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Enron Egg, Nuclear reactor for home explained The Enron Egg is a fictional product marketed as a micro-nuclear reactor capable of powering homes for ten years.
Something is stirring beneath the surface of a revived Enron, and it's pushing a fake stylish at-home nuclear reactor.
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has accepted the Tennessee Valley Authority’s (TVA) application to build a small ...
The microreactors eVinci (Westinghouse) and Kaleidos (Radiant) each produce only 5 megawatts and 1.2 megawatts of power. The ...
Nuclear egg: How does it work? According to the campaign, the Enron Egg is a compact nuclear reactor that uses Uranium-Zirconium Hydride (U-ZrH) fuel rods to generate heat through nuclear fission.
One of the pranksters behind “Birds Aren’t Real” is back to revive a company synonymous with corporate malfeasance — it has merch and what it’s claiming is an at-home nuclear reactor.
Enron has announced the “Enron Egg”, a micro-nuclear reactor that the newly reformed company claims can power homes for a decade. The only catch is that the parody company’s “revolution in ...
Enron left the internet in an uproar after it unveiled a fake product launch of an egg-shaped nuclear reactor, dubbed The Egg, that's sparked a wave of social media jokes and memes.
A parody product launch for a “micro nuclear reactor” for home use using the name of collapsed energy firm Enron Corp. has misled social media users online, some of whom took the item to be real.
But the Enron Egg is no normal egg, company leadership claimed the device is a "micro-nuclear reactor" capable of powering entire homes. Enron CEO Connor Gaydos made the announcement in a video ...