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12 mo. ago

  • In New England we say if you don’t like the weather, wait 15 minutes, it’ll change.

    Which New England are you in? When it's rainy/snowy, that weather sticks around for days. Generally speaking, most places with high humidity generally have more consistent weather. It's areas with low humidity (and high elevation) where you get really big weather and temperature swings.

  • I appreciate the share, thank you!

  • It's been a fun time for shiny metals.

  • If "Find my phone" still works when it's turned off, then yes, phones are definitely traceable when powered down.

  • I lived without a cell phone for about 3 years (2022-2025), and once in a while there was a small hurdle but overall it was surprisingly easy. 2FA can be done via text/email, I never ran into an instance where I needed an app. Every ticket I bought could be printed at home, so it takes a little more forethought but not a deal breaker. Never ran into any parking stations that couldn't be paid via a kiosk/card, but YMMV.

    These days I own a phone per request of one of my business clients, but it stays turned off at home unless I'm on a job. Once in a while I'll break it out to use the GPS but most places I drive to I can find by memory. There are many "middle" ground solutions out there too (like Graphene OS), but as a general rule, I would make a habit of leaving your phone at home when you can, and definitely when engaging in anything spicy.

  • And not to go down the conspiracy rabbit hole - I think this is more of a blind "race to the bottom" scenario - but it makes a lot more money for the rent-seeking class when we're socially isolated. A couple shares a house/apartment, shares chores, may even be able to share a car. When they break up, that's now 2 apartments, 2 cars, individual trips for everything, etc.

    It's not quite that clean of course, and plenty of folks live with roommates. But there's definitely a perverse economic incentive to keep us detached from community and partnership, and everything from AI/social media/online dating to the gender/culture wars seems to be pushing us farther in that direction.

  • Thank you for this thoughtful and nuanced take on the subject. It's sad that constructive discussion around population is often shut down due to the link between eugenics and population control. It's often assumed that anyone advocating for lowered population is in support of similarly dystopian/authoritarian policies, when increasing access to birth control and education has the same effect while increasing personal agency.

    I would also note that the theory of evolution has been used to justify all kinds of absurd ideologies, yet we don't have a problem accepting its basic tenets.

    If we accept the fact that humanity is in a state of ecological overshoot, and that overshoot is a function of population x consumption, then it's entirely reasonable to want to address both sides of the equation.

  • According to this study, an income of $38,000/year puts you in the top 10% of carbon emitters. This study puts it at €42,980, or about $50K USD. That's a little higher than the median income in N. America, Europe, and Australia.

    That said, carbon emissions are just one way humans impact the environment; other facets are far less variable (we all produce about the same amount of human waste per day, for example).

  • Enshittification @lemmy.world

    The Enshittifinancial Crisis

    www.wheresyoured.at /the-enshittifinancial-crisis/
  • Fuck AI @lemmy.world

    AI Is Contaminating Online Studies

  • Fuck Cars @lemmy.world

    In an Ohio suburb, sprawl is being transformed into walkable neighborhoods

    yaleclimateconnections.org /2025/12/in-an-ohio-suburb-sprawl-is-being-transformed-into-walkable-neighborhoods/
  • Fuck Cars @lemmy.world

    Computers that power self-driving cars could be a huge driver of global carbon emissions

    www.eecs.mit.edu /computers-that-power-self-driving-cars-could-be-a-huge-driver-of-global-carbon-emissions/
  • Fuck AI @lemmy.world

    Everyone Hates Data Centers

    insideclimatenews.org /news/13112025/inside-clean-energy-just-about-everyone-hates-data-centers/
  • Enshittification @lemmy.world

    The end of optimization

    davekarpf.substack.com /p/the-end-of-optimization
  • Not sure why you got a downvote, this is absolutely true. If you have a low SSC you may be subject to travel bans, reduced employment prospects, being barred from attending certain schools, increased surveillance and police monitoring, and public shaming. Other individuals can also have their scores lowered by interacting with you.

  • Fuck AI @lemmy.world

    Black Mirror is not a Pinterest board.

    davekarpf.substack.com /p/black-mirror-is-not-a-pinterest-board
  • Fuck Cars @lemmy.world

    This car-free neighborhood was designed to revolutionize American cities

    yaleclimateconnections.org /2025/11/this-car-free-neighborhood-was-designed-to-revolutionize-american-cities/
  • Technology @lemmy.world

    Cornell Study Maps the Environmental Cost of AI

    insideclimatenews.org /news/10112025/ai-growth-environmental-damage-study/
  • Climate Migration @lemmy.world

    Winters in American cities have gotten 3.9° warmer since 1970.

    www.climatecentral.org /climate-matters/2025-winter-package
  • Climate Migration @lemmy.world

    Drought is pushing American cities toward a fiscal cliff

    grist.org /cities/drought-is-quietly-pushing-american-cities-toward-a-fiscal-cliff/
  • I don't see the AI bubble burst affecting people to the same degree; I think it'll wipe out a lot of investment portfolios, but non tech-sector jobs should be safe. I think it's useful to have some essentials on hand, but I wouldn't go on a buying spree if that means draining my savings; I'd rather have the flexibility of money. If it comes down to survival and you don't have savings, you could preemptively apply for lines of credit, use those to cover living expenses, and declare bankruptcy once they're wrung out. Not financial advice, but it's an effective stopgap.

  • You're catching downvotes, but according to Google Trends, searches for "gold price" and "ai bubble" are positively correlated, and there's plenty of historic precedent for people flocking to "safe haven" assets when the markets nosedive. Gold went up by 30% from Jan-Sep 2020 (COVID), and nearly doubled in value between 2007 and 2009 (housing crisis), although it did take a dip before rebounding during the dotcom bubble (2000-2003).

    That said, I would recommend keeping a significant portion of your money in an HYSA as precious metals are subject to large fluctuations in price and markets don't always behave rationally.

  • This is all great stuff to have on hand, but not relevant for OP's question. They're wondering how to prepare for the equivalent of the dotcom burst or the 2008 recession, not a grid-down scenario.

  • If you'd bought silver (or silver ETFs) a few months ago you would have made a whole bunch of money, and society hasn't ended yet.

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  • Poorer nation’s peak population estimates are declining every year, as life gets better and child mortality falls population growth lowers everywhere

    Yes, that's a good thing.

    (another racist shit that’s spreading that poor nations are reproducing too much, btw).

    Race doesn't enter into it. If we accept that we crossed into overshoot over 50 years ago, then any birth rate above replacement is ultimately unsustainable.

    Energy consumption is more or less useless measure with the rapid rise of renewables, although there are also efforts there to lower that everywhere.

    Energy consumption is the measure. It's a direct reflection of the degree to which our lifestyles impact our environment. People seem to have this idea that the only real issue with industrial civilization is that it runs primarily on a fuel that destabilizes our atmosphere, and that if we could simply transition away from this fuel (to solar/wind/nuclear/fusion) we'd be on our way to utopia.

    But let's consider what we direct all that energy towards: first, we use it to harvest massive amounts of natural resources, degrading and destroying the environment in the process. (Mining, logging, farming, fishing, etc.) We then transform those natural resources into towns and cities, which pave over and fragment the natural environment in which they're built. We transform them into consumer goods (cars, electronics, plastics, clothing, etc.), the vast majority of which end up as waste in less than a decade. We transform them into all manner of industrial chemicals, many of which end up becoming individual ecological disasters of their own.

    Transitioning to a "clean" form of energy does nothing to address what we do with it. Living sustainably requires drastically downscaling our total ecological footprint.

  • But the famous director gets hundreds of thousands every year to make shitty movies nobody sees, because that one time 20 years ago he did something good.

    To be fair, this is also how it works in Hollywood.

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  • We are not over capacity at all

    We're in a state of ecological overshoot, defined as a population consuming more resources than its environment can replenish. At its simplest, overshoot is a function of individual consumption x total population.

    The Global Footprint Network calculates that we crossed this line in 1971, when both our global population (3.8B) and individual energy consumption (15.8kWh) were far lower than they are today (8.2B and 21.7kWh, respectively). Consider also that population is both a cause and effect of energy consumption.

    the wealthiest 10% causes over 50% of the pollution.

    You're referring to CO2 emissions here (and it's actually closer to 60%), but there are many other symptoms of overshoot. Habitat loss, species extinctions, overharvesting of resources, and other forms of pollution (industrial, particulate, trash) are huge problems in less wealthy nations. In South America, for example, we've seen a 95% loss of wildlife species over the past 50 years. The planetary boundaries framework is helpful for looking at overshoot more holistically, instead of focusing solely on emissions (although that's important too).

    In wealthy nations, populations are declining but consumption is unsustainable. In poorer nations, individual consumption is low but population growth is unsustainable. Only by reducing both do we have a hope of living equitably on this planet.

  • Yup. I'm old-school, I like owning my music. Streaming platforms are notorious for dropping artists due to licensing/royalty disputes, and artists also pull their music from platforms for various reasons as well. I love my Sony NW-50, it's got room for thousands of tracks in lossless (FLAC) format, and you don't need an internet connection to listen (great for road trips).

    It's a different mindset; you can still have a huge library, but you get to know your music, since you're not constantly getting random recommendations. I have a few albums that I've absolutely worn out, and it feels a little nostalgic in that way (anyone who grew up with CDs has that one album that you listened to 500 times in your car because you were too lazy to take it out).

  • True, but consider that a huge amount of retail investors' portfolios are tied to the S&P 500/NASDAQ. Think retirement savings, IRAs, 401(k)s, pensions, etc. Then consider that the entire market is effectively propped up by AI right now (see: The entire stock market is being carried by these four AI stocks). If the market gets a 60% correction, it's going to be the middle class losing their shirts all over again.

  • Sorry about that, I pasted the thumbnail URL instead of the article URL. Post is updated.