Is there a chance the track could bend?
vividspecter
Might be worth just mandating it since you can also fix thermal efficiency issues at the same time. And that affects everyone since poor thermal efficiency = more pressure on the electricity grid and increased risks of extreme cold and heat to individuals.
But transparency would certainly be better than nothing.
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Gen Z (especially women) are typically a bit more progressive than millennials. There's a minority of Gen Z conservative men, but it's overstated.
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Arguably better media literacy amongst Gen Z, likely because they grew up with social media at its peak.
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Better tech literacy amongst millenials perhaps due to multiple major technical changes during that period and harder to use systems
I'd say though that millenials and Gen Z are actually very similar on the whole in their beliefs, just with differences in degree. There's a bigger gap from both of these generations to Gen X and Boomers. You can see this from the much higher conservative voting rates that kick in from Gen X and later.
I'll add some aspects for the areas outside of the main CBD street:
- Separated, protected bike lanes that run the entire city with easy access from the suburban parts
- Traffic calming measures including speed bumps, reduced (and narrower) lanes, continuous sidewalks, and speed limit reduced to 30 km/h (around 20 mph)
- Free public transport
If you care about this, but still want smart home tech, look into Home Assistant and use local-only devices.
You joke but it's a good idea to have greater than 100% production, as long as you can store and/or export it. And having some redundancy is a good idea.
I wish it was the default (or at least a built in option). It's a bit annoying to still have to use workarounds to remove the default tab bar.
I put all docker data in one directory (or rather, a btrfs subvolume) and both snapshot and back it up daily to multiple machines. docker-compose
files are also kept in the same subvolume.
My latest server is NixOS, so I don't even bother backing up the root subvolume, since the actual config is tracked on git and replicated on multiple machines. If I want to reinstall, I can just install NixOS and deploy the config, then just copy over the docker subvolume, and rebuild the containers. Some of this could be automated further (nixos-anywhere
and disko
look promising for the actual OS install) but my systems don't typically break often enough for that to be a significant issue.
You can go even further and either just use nix for the services, or use nix to build containers themselves, but I have a working setup already and it's good enough, and I can easily switch to another distribution if issues start occurring in NixOS.
Efficiency doesn't have to be consumer led, though. It could be stuff like higher building standards and subsidies for insulation, subsidies for heat pumps for AC and hot water, even seemingly trivial things like free/subsidised LED bulbs can add up (there is still a significant amount of non-LED bulbs in the wild in many countries).
There's moode as an alternative to Volumio and only really supported on the Pi.
You can do most of this stuff manually too, but of course that's more work.
Induction stoves are well ahead of gas. Your views are more than a decade out of date.
It's
svt-av1
, as can be seen from theffmpeg
command in the article.