GuilhermePelayo

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

I believe the concept of nature is weird for some people and also not very informative. For uninterested people nature is everything that is green or outside of cities. I've actually have become progressively disappointed by the number of people I directly know, that are actively afraid, grossed out or bothered by the idea of just hiking very normal and marked trails very close to cities in places without any dangerous animals. For them nature is something to fear. So even if I think the nature is a alive angle may appeal to some people I'm not sure it fixes that fear.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Excellent question. I suffer from the same issue. In my case the only real investment I have is real estate because I need a house to live. But when I'm at a point where I have a surplus I think I'm tempted to do some investing too. It's the system we fight but also the system we live in. And overall you can help bring money to worthwhile causes by investing in some areas. But it sure is a complicated issue, thank you for raising it.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

Very interesting. It would be a great idea to pass on the benefits of renewables to consumers. It really makes no sense to base the energy price on the price of fuel in countries where most energy is generated from renewables like the southern European countries. It just benefits the companies. Even if it helps build more of those renewables at this point people need to see the advantages on their energy bills.

Also I think more encouragement/incentives for self production would really help people feel more involved in the transition. By allowing them go have a sense that energy does not magically appear from the air. This of course will need some grid improvements but would increase energy autonomy, reliance and a sense of local power to populations.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago

I thought about that too. A lot of people are too eager to blame this or that power generation when what I think failed was the network as a whole because it's such a massive system and a monolith. I really thought it was more modular than that.

Also in that day anyone with their own solar panels at least had some energy. So like you said, smaller systems are more resilient.

For me, it's a consideration for the future, making sure that if I have to, I have some power generating capacity, maybe even some storage.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 months ago (2 children)

What? Is the server Portugal based? I'm surprised to see fellow Portuguese people around here. Always assumed it was american or danish or something. Good to know!

About the blackout I would stay away from jumping to theories right now since the investigation is still on going and way too much was made up in that afternoon with no power. I think the latest theory is related to instability caused maybe by too much solar power suddenly injected into the network in Spain, which caused the network to crash which in turn crashed the Portuguese one. But, as far as I read this is the latest theory not a definite one so take it with a grain of salt.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 months ago

Is it? Maybe both? A movement against climate change makes sense? A movement for climate change in the sense of raising the issue could also make sense? What a funny language

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago

I got to ask. What is the deal with timed protests like no buying amazom for a week? Is the USA that addicted? That's like saying I'm going to stop smoking for a week as a form of protest against Tobacco companies. It can have an effect but at the same time doesn't sound very threatening. All the power to them regardless and I support them! But still a bit toothless

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

I do have a few things that are from outdoor brands so possiblity it impacts how long they last.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

I don't know. I think I got lucky with a few pieces of clothing and mostly try to focus on quality long lasting stuff. But like I said I don't really buy much. My jeans are all pure denim and my tshirts tend to be heavier. And I think that's it. The only thing I notice that doesn't hold up very well is knitted sweaters. They tend to stretch over time.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 5 months ago (8 children)

My clothes last me an unusual amount of time when compared with most people I think (15 year old tshirts) and don't really buy clothes at all unless something is at the limit of repairability or looking very bad.

I want to ride my bike more. I work from home so I use it mostly to go the gym but I want to use for more things. Like shopping and stuff like that. I'm thinking of buying an electric one to help out since I live in a city with steep hills and an electric one would make it more likely to use.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

I agree with you. They are good principles. I was just saying not every commit is merged into main and that doesn't make it less useful in the local context even if you don't adhere to those principles. Am I crazy to assume that people tend to avoid merging things into main that don't work? 😅 Git is more than a project sharing tool. I use for projects I do alone. I use it even when I don't sync it to anywhere because it's good to have save points

[–] [email protected] 5 points 7 months ago (3 children)

Good analysis, there are a few things that I think area bit opinionated and there is nothing wrong with that, I just don't agree with a few things out of context. For example I agree that code on main should be buildable and testable. Code in your own branch should be for yourself and should still have commits. Also lazygit really abstracts a huge chunk of git logic while making it easier to understand.

 

Hey so I'm sort of getting involved in my local XR (Extinction Rebelion) group but I have to say after a couple of meetings I'm feeling like it's not really my type.

I appreciate the enthusiasm and I like the ideas of how the organization runs in a decentralized way but I feel it's very demonstration oriented. Nothing wrong with demonstrations but I starting to think that the time for that has passed.

I had a sort of idea of the group also having initiatives to promote empathy with the cause, teach about what people can do both on a personal and large scale. From personal decisions to give them the knowledge to use their local political power to make changes. I know that's a bit utopian. Also I don't have many alternatives where I live...

I don't know. Is XR just a PR thing? All about making people either hate them or love them? Do you think groups like this make a difference?

 

This is a niche topic and I'm not sure this is the right community. Let's say we start to move on to a society less focused on capital. Not perfect but on the way there. There are still companies and there is an overall economy running around small businesses. How would a small business get started without access to "capital"? What are the alternatives?

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Has anyone read this book? I'm currently reading it and I find it an incredible way of looking at the transition to a Post Capitalist society in the 21st century.

I think the idea of a progressive transition to micro production in which small companies and eventually just communities being able to do things that are currently assumed to be dependent on mass production a great stepping stone to a decentralized and solarpunk future.

Also do you think there is a relevant amount of people in the instance interested in these type of books of this genre to justify a community?

 

Is anyone in this sub or instance a remote worker? I have been one first partially and then completely for a few years now and I began to think as a kinda of solarpunk way of live that has the potential to propel humanity to a more decentralized and sustainable way of life, specially since I plan to move to a smaller town because of it. What do guys feel about it? Do you do it? Don't do it but would like to? Do it it but miss interaction?

 

Hey there! So after taking your advice this is the result. Ended up going with the following setup, nothing too over the top:

  • OS: Debian 12 - bookworm
  • Color Scheme • Everforest - Good vibes!
  • Icons • Papyrus
  • Terminal • Alacritty
  • Desktop • Gnome
  • Gnome tweaks and extension for shell theme and dock
  • Showoff stuff • cbonsai, catnip (sound visualizer) and ranger (as suggested), still doing the dynamic wallpaper thing but because it's for KDE Plasma I'll have to find an alternative or code it myself.
 

Hello everybody!! This is my first post on this instance, glad to be here! So this is a bit of a tangent from most topics I saw here but I wanted to get the opinion of people that's immersed in the aesthetic of solarpunk.

I'm modding debian (linux) to create a sort of solarpunk software aesthetic. For this I take any suggestions you might have, backgrounds, color palettes small placeholders text anything.

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