[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 28 points 3 weeks ago

Articles like this really float my boat! It reminds me a bit of the discovery of the Wollemi Pine in Australia.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 28 points 1 month ago

I am genuinely impressed that this has happened. Wow.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 31 points 1 month ago

Was playing Civ6 the other day and can confirm: wine is a luxury resource.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 25 points 2 months ago

Dang, that reads like a commercial for pharmaceuticals.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 26 points 4 months ago

Most recently? My wife was wfh and out of the kindness of my heart I brought her a coke. She was on a zoom call with her entire team. I was pantsless.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 31 points 6 months ago

Gotta hand it to them. They've perfectly managed to capture that feeling of driving on a highway with endless billboards.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 26 points 6 months ago

You have to understand that religion was banned by the communist regime of the day. Admitting to it could get you locked up.

But my dad, as a tourist making this casual observation about flagrant rule-breaking going on in plain sight even as he spoke, broke the tension completely and made the locals admit there is a lot of rule-breaking going on everywhere.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 30 points 7 months ago

This is where it starts to get exciting. Up to this point in human history, we have had no firm evidence of life on another world even though speculation runs rife. It is always just beyond our reach to detect it, but we may soon collect enough bio-signatures to infer its existence with reasonable confidence.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 32 points 7 months ago

In fairness, a typical PV cell is somewhere around 20% efficient at converting solar energy into electricity with the rest lost to heat. The article mentions that renewables are not perfectly efficient either but that their losses do not contribute pollution, making the losses less egregious. I guess the conclusion to draw from this is that if you must burn coal, you should look seriously at cogeneration schemes where you use that heat directly for other purposes such as industrial processes or even municipal heating to get the most out of the energy.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 32 points 7 months ago

Being of mixed race, I have experienced racism everywhere. Western society certainly has no monopoly on it.

For me, western racism involved a lot of schoolyard bullying. I don't remember coming home with a black eye while I was enrolled in the Japanese school system. But there, it was more of an exclusionary racism with people talking shit behind your back. In some sense, this could be worse in that there is a systematic component to it as opposed to a few worthless individuals using any pretext to go after anyone they can pick on.

Otoh when Trump got elected, we learned just how many closet racists there are in the west and how alarmingly quickly they could get organized. I think in general, racists are in the minority and I've met many more wonderful people everywhere I've gone. But when they reach positions of power and influence is when you've got a problem.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 29 points 9 months ago

Ah, so it's not just my kids (I'm Gen X). Neither has expressed any interest in driving. One's a starving student, so I guess there's that. But the other's graduated and scored a cushy job where he could certainly afford wheels if he wanted. I asked him about it and he's like nah. I'll just take a lyft or whatever if I need it. And he's a software dev so he spends the time on his laptop. I guess if he were driving, his time would be less productive? I dunno.

We actually went to the same tech convention last fall in Denver and shared a hotel. I knee-jerk rented a car thinking Denver sounds like a driving town. But parking at the convention was exorbitant and we wound up ride-sharing there anyway, so I am beginning to see the merit in his way of thinking? The only time we got any use out of the rental was the last day when we had a little free time before the flight and drove up to Red Rocks. But seriously, for that one trip, the rental was hardly worth it.

[-] tunetardis@lemmy.ca 31 points 1 year ago

I think the pros outweigh the cons? Anything that steers us away from car culture is desperately needed at this point, and this is one of the only practical alternatives in suburbia.

I would be for bike safety being taught at schools, though I feel licensing for minors would be a quagmire? Let's not go there. I would be for speed limiters that are harder to bypass. For example, I can disable mine by phone app. If I had any trouble I could ask, well, a teenager? lol

But perhaps most importantly, cycling infrastructure, at least in North America, is a joke and there is so much that can be done on the safety front it's not funny. I wish the decision makers were all bike commuters. Then they would understand the level of impracticality in their well-meaning but futile attempts to improve the situation.

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tunetardis

joined 1 year ago