I found roasted crickets very bland and tasted like oats. I assume thats what they were fed.
I'd probably eat them if they were extremely cheap and accessible but I dont see the point when chickpeas, beans, lentils, and soy all taste better, are cheaper, and easily sourced.
I think they are making a good data-driven argument: If supply is the issue, why are prices so high compared to the 70s when supply per capital was lower? I think one could make the argument that this doesnt address where this new supply is distributed vs where people are distributed, but I would wager that since places like Toronto and Vancouver experience the most construction that it wouldn't change the story much.
I think if I were being very critical of the article, you could say that while it provides a simple but compelling argument as to why supply is not the cause of the housing crisis, it does not adequately show that financialization of the housing market is the cause. Personally, I believe that is one big aspect of it, but if you compare other statistics between now and the 70s, you could make arguments that things like the reduction of social housing stock being the cause of the housing crisis.
Pretty ironic coming from a mayor of a suburban city. Im sure Old Toronto would like to stop subsidizing roads for Scarborough, Etobicoke, and North York. Personally, I would be a fan of property taxes reflecting how much it actually costs to maintain infrastructure around your home.
Love that cities are forced to pay this expense and have close to zero oversight or control over how big the budget is or how those expenses are allocated.
Im with you. I got a beater bike with drop bars and o ly rode it a few times before giving up on it. They felt extremely awkward and uncomfortable. The only advantage was being able to squeeze between traffic more easily, but its not worth it.
I've settled on publishing all researxh-related code under AGPL. My reasoning is that academic research is funded by the public, so naturally the code should be public. Taken a step further, by licensing it under AGPL, I am ensuring that companies who may use the code for profit have to keep that code public and cant just privatize it and lock the public out.
Its unlikely anyone would ever even use my code though so 🤷
Are you talking about the episode where the enterprise first encounters the borg? One thing that sticks out about that episode after rewatching it is how well those sorts of scenes build dramatic tension. The score really contributes to that in a way that I dont think we see in modern television. Its incredible how scenes that are mostly just people staring at a screen looking concerned felt so intense.
When I stopped using proprietary software I noticed that I stopped fearing software updates. Proprietary software is always changing things in ways that dont necessarily improve the user experience, and often make it worse. My experience with OSS has (almost) always been the opposite, every update improves the software and either adds useful features or fixes old issues I've had. I think the only exception to this has been Firefox. I noticed this shift in thinking most obviously when I finally switched from Windows to Linux.
If you want a resource to direct people to for healthy eating, I really like the latest version of the Canada Food Guide, which came out a year or two ago I think. No food pyramid, emphasis on eating whole foods, encourages plant-based meals, and practical advice like "plan your meals" and "eat with others".
I'm really glad they published this guide because there was a lot of lobbying and controversy from the meat and dairy industry surrounding it, because it was encouraging plant based meals with large vegetable portions.
Im not a vegetarian but I get a lot of joy in cooking a tasty plant-based meal. I find that a lot of meat-based meals that im used to cooking really center the dish on the meat in a way that I feel kind of stifles my creativity in the kitchen.
This is an interesting project. Mining is a very capital intensive business so I really hope it works out for them. First nations do not often reap their due reward for mining on their land so I hope this proves to be a viable model.
On a seperate note, I find the tag line "more viable than the ring of fire" pretty funny because thats true for most projects in my opinion. I remember first hearing about the ring of fire ten years ago from one of the guys that helped discover it like 10-15 years before that. The fact that we are barely closer to mining it now than we were back then says something. Im sure it will happen some day because there is the political will for it, but it honestly feels like a money pit.
Europe is in a good position to capitalize on this but Canada does not seriously fund scientific research.