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Cake day: August 6th, 2023

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  • grass is always greener on the other side. …but, sometimes, it actually is, depending on who you are.

    In my case, the forest was, and still is, the greener side. can’t really complain, and I don’t think I’ll be switching back to tech anytime soon.

    Can confirm, though, a lot of people approach farming or homesteading with really unreasonable expectations.


  • actions are a language. Some people speak love. Some people speak power. It is ok to speak back in the language you are spoken to.

    …and yes… … better off with abortion in that case.

    one of the things about sovereignty - Nobody may force you to anything without potentially enduring those consequences themselves.

    with abortion, the action is to refuse to feed and to cut someone off. The only response someone else could reasonably “attack” with in reply would be to cut you off.


  • Any right we refuse to grant another, we may find taken from us. It is justified to kill those who are actually trying to kill you.

    “trying to kill you,” though, does not include cutting you off. Nobody has to feed you, nobody has to give to you from their own energy or life, even if it kills you. Those things are gifts of society or individuals who care (or are guilted enough to motivate them). When someone cuts you off, the only right you get from that is to cut them off - which you already have.


  • The Gnome overview is simple enough to use that people think there’s nothing to it.

    I’ve never had a better tool for interacting with apps, and I’ve worked with a lot of tools / DEs. There are some that are arguably more fun, or that clearly give better customization options.

    …but just being a clean tool that works, provides what you need, looks good doing so, and gets out of your way? Gnome, hands down.




  • bastion@feddit.nltoNo Stupid Questionswhy is fossil fuel still used?
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    5 days ago

    Solar is, on a consumer level, possibly more cheap than gas for a car now, in many areas. But more is actually done with oil->gasoline framework, including plastics and chemicals which would all need to be developed into new processes. I don’t disagree that we need to replace these, but oil is literally free energy, and it’s a substance with a lot of uses.

    And that fact is one of the big reasons that oil is so hard to compete with - it is literally energy we do not have to generate. All other forms of energy we must actually capture the natural energy flow. In oil, it has already been captured - we’re burning biomatter from years long gone. That’s what makes it hard to compete with. Although, the competition is getting better, and that’s good.

    as far as the costs for a vehicle go - I actually live on solar, with a very cost effective system at $25k, 14kw.

    If I had an electric car and drove 15k miles per year, I’d need up that system by 11kw at least. That’s adding about $20k to that system.

    Where I am, gas is cheaper tha than $3/gallon, but let’s say it’s $3/gallon.

    at 30mpg gasoline, that’s about $1500. At 30mpge, with my lower-than-average system costs, that’s $2000. …and that’s not including maintenance and repair to that system.

    Sure, there are a ton of other factors to take into account, both for and against. But electric is no clear winner from a personal-benefit perspective - particularly when you take cold weather into account for lithium batteries, and the inability to resolve an out-of-fuel situation easily. Sure, there are services. …maybe. depending where you are. But, it’s far from ideal for a lot of people.

    anyways - no, nuclear is definitely not as cheap, but it provides base load power, which is critical. only alternatives there are fossil fuels, geothermal, and hydro. But the main draw for 3rd and 4th gen nuclear is how low-impact and environmentally friendly it can be, while still providing base load power.

    now, if Sodium ion batteries live up to their promise of cycle longevity, then providing base load could be done by lots and lots of storage. maybe not cost effectively, yet, but it could, maybe.


  • Agreed all around, with one caveat.

    On chemistry - Sodium Ion is a pretty solid bet for many reasons - material availability, energy density by weight, longevity (for some chemistries - others are only comparable to lithium), low-temperature operation for charge and discharge, cost, power (charge and discharge speed), very high round-trip efficiency… Also, it’s ecologically sound, in comparison with any other battery tech out there currently, and it’s at the beginning of it’s innovation arc. Also, it’s a tech heavily invested in by China, which has already spurred competition in other countries.

    I’ll be attaching myself to that chemistry here in the next couple years to the tune of what I expect to be about ~$8k for about 50kwh of battery, as I’ll need a bank of them for my place soon that can handle quite a few days without sunlight while running a modest workshop and basic home needs. I might need to go larger than that, but… …energy storage isn’t cheap, and I can add to that at any time, unlike with lead acid storage.


  • I think that both putting your pet down and not doing so must be an honest consideration.

    As their caretaker, you can empathize with them the most. Imagine what you would want in their situation, and do it. You have the ability to cognize this - they do not.

    There are humane services that will come to your home so they don’t even have to leave a familiar environment. But sometimes, your buddy still has joy in life, even though he’s all wobbly.

    …in the end, the truth is that it’s a judgment call, and you do the best you can - and make your choices in a way that, if they were there in your head with you, and could understand your choices, they would love you for it, and that you can love yourself for.





  • Because we don’t need to generate the energy, therefore it’s got a cost advantage, even though the true cost of it is that it contributes massively to climate problems.

    That is: batteries must be charged, the plants to make biofuels must absorb solar energy for at least half a year to have energy present, the solar panels to power the grid must sit and soak up that energy, generators must be physically turned for hydro.

    the only things that have pre-existing energy that we just “tap for free” are oil, coal, natural gas, and nuclear.

    the best track for us to go on is to go for 3rd or 4th gen nuclear, and sodium ion batteries, imo. Solar is a close second. Hydro would be up there, but it’s too disruptive ecologically.




  • bastion@feddit.nltomemesEmpath
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    12 days ago

    projecting personal dialogue into others doesn’t make you a messiah

    Why would I think it does? do you not see that you are projecting that?

    If someone doesn’t like what you’re doing to them, and you know it’s making them uncomfortable and you even go as far as to tout it to shame them and give it an excuse “oh they don’t like having their thoughts said out loud”, you are doing what an abuser does. Minimize their victims. You don’t even allow them to defend themselves. This is abusive behaviour.

    I don’t think you’re fighting me here. …and I’m not interested in fighting you. I am not doing or saying what you think I am, and you have clearly placed me in the role of your abuser. I’m uninterested. …and if that is something you consider abusive, that’s on you.

    Abusers also try to turn tables and call themselves a victim at the moment someone calls out their abusive behavior.

    I am not claiming to be a victim, and I am uninterested in victimizing others (though I am interested in patterns of behavior in general, including trauma loops). My goal here is to converse and discuss interesting concepts.

    I still think that what I actually said stands, regardless of your interpretation, which I disagree with.