A lot of those public bathrooms have stupid high pressure, back in high school one of my friends came up to the group and ushered us into the bathroom to show off that he had kicked a sink off the wall, and the water pressure from said sink was spraying water HARD against the opposite wall.
Your oven has a clean cycle for a reason, turns that and all the other disgusting shit you’ve probably been splattering all over the inside into much easier to deal with ash. Don’t worry about starting a fire in there either, the inside of the oven is supposed to get hot.
Edit: I should clarify what I mean by "don’t worry about starting a fire in there. Of all the places in your house, save for a fireplace if you have one, the oven is by far the best place for a fire to be. So if a fire does start in your oven during the clean cycle it’s fine, hell go watch it because it’s the closest thing you get to a fireplace in apartment life.
“The researchers estimate that if the system is scaled up to the size of a small suitcase, it could produce about 4 to 6 liters of drinking water per hour and last several years before requiring replacement parts.”
Is this really that early in the research or is there some other barrier to testing that in the near future, as in if it were that practical why didn’t they do it already?