I run SC2 at 1080p on "high" settings on an HD 5670 (with i3 530 and 4GB DDR3). Ultra is just the slightest bit choppy. Any of the 57xx or GTX 4xx cards will give you Ultra without breaking a sweat.
I'm pretty sure you're dead wrong, but this is a bit unclear. I think you mean this:
1. Connect a voltage source to either side of a capacitor, charging it up
2. Disconnect the voltage source, leaving the capacitor charged
3. Separate the plates
4. Bring the plates back together
5. Measure the...
If it looks good, IT LOOKS GOOD! What's with people always worrying about "is it right?" If it looks good and sounds good to you and your cohabitants, great! You're done!
You're right in that the protons don't move. You're wrong in that the source of the force is asymmetrical. If we take a length of wire, apply a voltage across it (by sticking a battery in the middle, for example) and look at where the protons and electrons are, we'll see this:
The protons...
Oh man, so many of you are so wrong on so many basic principles of electricity.
Should we have people sign their posts with their educational level?
Anyway, the question posed in the OP ("can you store electricity") is just semantics. In the OP, a working definition of electricity was...
Stepping in with some life-advice:
If you just had to sell a PC to pay YOUR BILLS of all things, I don't see you can afford a PC at all. Build up some sort of emergency savings before you go spending cash on toys.
Absolutely backwards IMO. The original Deus Ex was revolutionary, engaging, complex, open-ended, and broodingly mysterious. The sequel is a load of poo in comparison.
Your problem needs more constraints, or it's trivial.
You minimize the peak force by accelerating very, very slowly as you move along whatever path you like from A -> A' -> B' -> B
Next time, encrypt your personal data from day 1. You're worried about an identity thief recovering your info from your hard disk after you throw it away AND zero the drive, when they could just break into your house/apartment and take your computer?
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