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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)M
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2 yr. ago

  • Woa, cool to see my home city as the thumbnail/headline image and main part of the article! I knew it was high on the list of sustainable cities but wasn't aware it had been number one for several years!

    The apartment building I currently live in, originally built as a flophouse/dosshouse in the 60s, was completely renovated during the past few years with a major focus on sustainability.Old materials from it were used to make furniture for the public areas in and around the house and for art pieces on the outside walls and inside the lobby/entryway.We have smaller laundry rooms on all 4 floors and also a larger one on the ground floor, all have special machines that reuse water and filter out microplastics. We can see how much water is saved and scan a QR code on each one to get more info on how much stuff they've filtered out.We also have water and electricity meters easily visible in each apartment. A baseline usage of water and electricity for the size of each apartment is included in the rent, and the less we use the less rent we pay. Every 3 months the savings are calculated and added to the rent. I've saved over $100 some months through it. Of course we pay more if we use more.

    The building and apartments are also part of something they call a "digital playground" for testing new technologies and stuff for possible further use everywhere else. There's a huge screen in the lobby with all kinds of information like weather, times for the nearest tram and bus stops, the building's lesser climate impact compared to "normal" buildings of similar size and more.A bike room with a workshop, tools and lockboxes with chargers for bike batteries.Our mailboxes send notifications to our phones when we get mail, we can book times in the laundry room and also request things from the landlord via the web and a phone app.There are cooled lockboxes for grocery delivery so we don't have to be home when it's delivered, which means they can deliver to more people at once and save on trips. Of course the basics like solar cells on the roof, sustainable materials used for everything and so on.

    There is also a public area with a kitchen, sofas, TV, gaming consoles and pool table. We have weekly events there like baking, painting and crafts, movie nights etc. We can also rent stuff like sewing machines, tools and grills for use in the yard. And there are biweekly meetings for how everything is going and to suggest changes and new ideas. All plants in and around the house are native to this area.

    There's more that I'm forgetting right now, and surely things I'm not aware of yet. It's a cool place to live, and surprisingly cheap! I live in a 1 bedroom apt. with a full kitchen that's 32 square metres (about 350 sq ft) and pay $450 a month (before savings from electricity and water use) and that includes everything.

  • Thanks for the laugh! The idiocy you've put on display here is just chef's kiss

  • There have been so many movies and series just the past few years though... many really good too, and many that go pretty far in showing how horrible the nazis were.

  • This is like someone saying a book is bad because they don't understand some of the words.

    All the things you mentioned were specific choices made, not failures.

  • That's not the way they made grapples at all. They soaked apples in the chemical that's used for "grape flavor", which is kinda what he does in the video, there's more to it though. All you did by writing that comment is show everyone you think you know something and spread that false information without even trying to look it up.

  • I really doubt the numbers. It's so common to see people complain about ads online, even in places like here where you'd expect most people to use adblockers.

  • This works for clothes, kitchenware etc. but it's not the same for tech products. The vast majority of people just want to buy something new that will work for a couple of years. Even cars are less trouble to buy older models and second-hand. This is obviously not an unfixable problem. If everything was designed to be user-repairable, upgradable and with longer support for both software and hardware we'd have less of an issue. But sadly the world runs on capitalism and people have voted with their wallets and gotten us into this mess.

    Most people don't have the time, energy and/or knowledge to make the better choice of getting old and used tech.

  • IMO the important detail is about the control the country's government is able to have and use over the company. What things are they sharing with the state? We know the big American social media companies are either forced or choose to comply with sharing data, or the data is used without asking. I don't trust Meta, Google, and Microsoft any more than I trust ByteDance (the makers of tik tok), and I don't want my data to be used by the US, China or anyone else.

  • I played Andromeda about a year ago and absolutely loved it. I went in with low expectations and was thoroughly proven wrong. I've loved all the mass effect games but I think I liked Andromeda most, which people seem to get angry about when I say it.

  • Pretty sure you failed to understand what happened. You didn't recognise the name, but you pretty damn surely know of her.

  • I've never seen tomato soup look like that, canned or not. It looks super diluted and very weird in colour. It looks more like a weirdly dark strawberry lemonade or something.

  • Taking several for the nation!

  • 100,000 "russian" soldiers get sent to a farm upstate.

    The question is, how many non-russians will be sent with them? Obviously as few as possible but any number based on logic is too many.

  • Pretty sure it's 1.5 cats.

  • 53k monthly active users is way less than I expected. But makes sense with how slow things are here.

  • Natural selection.

  • As a Swede I often find myself thankful we don't have the military brainwashing the US has, even though we have a strong military for such a small country. The army stuff is there if you look but if you don't care you don't notice it much, if at all. I'm not invested enough to have a really informed opinion about us joining NATO. But from what I know it'll be a good thing, just being able to help countries more that need it is enough of a reason IMO.

  • For many, like me, coding just isn't how our brain works. Even if we are interested in it it's basically impossible to get a grip on it. I can figure out code that's already written and do basic editing of it but anything more than that just doesn't click no matter how much time I spend trying to learn.

  • How are people having problems with these? They're better in every way, you gotta be dumb as a brick to have any issues with using them.