Yeah, I just saw that video. I may be wrong, but I believe I am right. I'm curious to see if it's just the radio frequency that is required for the burning, and of course does it exceed the energy required to maintain it...
-edit-
"Efficiency-wise, they started at around 76 percent of Faraday's theoretical limit."
http://www.peswiki.com/index.php/Dir...ng_Radio_Waves
So technically, it does work. I was looking at it the wrong way, they have no intention of replacing anything as an energy source, they just want to replace the gasoline combustion engine with a saltwater combustion engine. If we had an ultra-capacitator for a battery, this would be really great. Energy could be used, charge, and stored efficiently, and life would be great. Unfortunately, we would have to use Lithium Ion batteries or worse, and they are expensive and slow. So, the technology is there, it just requires other technology.
So in other words, Gourav was right for once. I remember seeing this article I think on Physorg, when it was announced...