That comment is a bad take to be sure, but it isn't really about eliminating every vehicle in existence. We'd still need individual vehicles to serve for delivery and emergency services, as well as a bunch of other stuff.
The main thought is just that it's a bit silly to have half the population driving a two tonne vehicle to the grocery store. There's already communities where golf carts are used instead of cars.
The whole concept of ripping out every road and installing solar tramways is just as much a nonsensical extreme not worth taking seriously as 'what do I do if I order a computer and I work from home'. I get your use of the example though, it is the equivalent counterpoint.
I did of course mean ecologically friendly and not economically friendly.
That said - less than ten times the price to help the environment and of course make the country smell like a pancake breakfast? Sign me up!
They run on maple syrup though, which means they're eco friendly.
'Gish gallop' is the perfect descriptor for this onslaught of every hour insanity we're going through.
Professor Santiago Gallino specializing in retail management was interviewed last year by NPR for a piece about these tags.
While the labels give retailers the ability to increase prices suddenly, Gallino doubts companies like Walmart will take advantage of the technology in that way.
“To be honest, I don’t think that’s the underlying main driver of this,” Gallino said. “These are companies that tend to have a long-term relationship with their customers and I think the risk of frustrating them could be too risky, so I would be surprised if they try to do that.”
Rather than seeing an opportunity to use surge pricing, Gallino says retailers are likely drawn to electronic shelf tags to ensure consistency between online and in-store pricing.
What a prophet.
Again, you repeat the same words as the Americans did some hundred years ago when Hitler was rising to power.
I hope for the sake of your neighbours that you are correct and that the Nazism of the west does not bleed beyond the borders of the United States.
Do check in four years down the line. Best of luck.
Given the noise Musk has been making surrounding the political landscape in Germany, the United Kingdom, and lately Canada, it stands to reason that the richest person on the planet is actively trying to make the world revolve around him.
Sentiment similar to yours was undoubtedly stated a century ago throughout Europe; 'You overestimate the impact Germany has on the citizenry outside of it.' Look where that attitude got the world, and here you are saying the same thing.
I still have installed a dozen or so clients, so I opened Voyager to remind myself what it is in comparison to Jerboa, which is also my preferred client.
Suddenly my android device has an iOS user interface. To me, this is lazy development. I'm sure it's fine for someone accustomed to it, but even having a static header and footer seem out of date.
I'll stick with Jerboa for the time being.
Certainly not an expert in the field here, but I'm not sure there's much environmental benefit from laundry bags of that sort, given the collected microplastics optimistically end up - Germany excluded - collated in your local landfill.
Guppyfriend even recommends sealing them in a container for disposal to ensure they don't blow around during waste collection and transport. This assumes of course that you can successfully transfer microplastic fibres from a large bag into a small container without spillage, but that's a matter separate from my conjecture.
While I don't think any particular company that makes similar bags is purposefully guilty of this, the marketing strategy used to promote these as environmentally responsible products just smells like greenwashing to me.
The ones I've had are also made of synthetic materials, and so eventually break down and begin releasing their own fibres.
Frankly, the true environmental benefit I see is something I've never seen advertised: I can wash groups clothes I want kept from intermingling in the same load and therefore run the machine half as often.
That's understandable. I imagine a large section of the user base doesn't navigate to a specific community to look through posts, and instead just skip through the main feed. I didn't realise the community until you pointed it out.
While I agree with your sentiment that no one wants to be so bombarded with foreign politics, at the very least the joke that user made was in keeping with the theme of the meme.
Regarding your final question, depending on your method of consuming this content, you may be able to entirely block comments by setting a blacklist of words, perhaps including 'Republican' in this case. The same I know is true on most applications for post titles, but I'm just assuming here the same is applicable to comments.
Either way, best wishes with the situation in the fatherland, I do hope to visit some day.
If the word 'Republican' were omitted, that comment could be applicable in most countries on the planet.
It's kind of nitpicking anyway, don't you think? Almost as nitpicky as pointing out when the country of the United States is referred to by the name of the continent it shares with other nations.
Right - I wouldn't benefit from such a thing either. The market exists in China probably due to the density of people living in apartment buildings without access to home based charging.
Battery swapping is common practice in China. Far as I know, these swaps aren't for huge capacity batteries, and moreso designed for smaller ones. Takes about as long as filling a sedan tank with fuel. We could have this technology, but there's not really a push for it.
Right, I should've been more specific. I haven't shipped for a bike in eons so I don't know when they became common. Last I remember using everything was 3x7 or so.
Would be funny to use a single speed on a trail though.
Ah well I can see that kind of distance being an issue. While I'd say cold is a solvable problem with bar mitts and stuff, that time of day is certainly dark.
I don't know your area of course, but maybe there's an early morning commuter train or bus or something that could get you closer? For a time I rode to a station 20 minutes away, hopped on transit, then got off and rode another 15 minutes to get where I was going.
Maybe carpool? Though it might be unlikely any of your coworkers also live in your town.
I was surprised too. Went into a local shop and every single one of their mountain bikes, be it full suspension or otherwise, was 1x.
They said most of the time a chain gets spit off a ring, it's the front, so people have been converting over to 1x to keep the chain on, and going to 10-12 on the back to make up for the lost range.
No idea if it's bologna or marketing but it seems to be the new trend. I'm guessing it's beneficial moreso in competitive circumstances, but the only time I spit my road bike chain out is when I shift under too much pressure. I don't really do much trail riding on account of not having an appropriate ride, so I'm just going off what this one person said.
They look nice though without a front derailleur. Makes me want a fixie.
I was looking at mountain bikes recently and found out the new norm is 1x. Been ages since I rode a 3x, but going to 1x seems attractive if only to remove the shifter.
I too bike around town, on 25mm tires, and usually with a trailer though. Such a joy to get everything done under your own power. Obviously this isn't the post to tout such ideas, but more people should be riding around the city.
Is a bicycle an option to get to work? I'm guessing there's no bus option nearby or running early enough to be of use to you.
I use my bike to get around my entire city. I even built a cargo trailer for picking stuff up. It's not the norm, but I get to places I need to be in roughly the same time I would had I driven.
I always enjoy hearing of people that use their vehicles as the tools they are. Cheers.
Once upon a time I knew someone with a small contracting business. Needed to move sheets of plywood and tools and whatnot around town. Anyway, fed up with one of the pick ups breaking down, he wound up at a used dealer to replace it. He ended up leaving with a wagon instead of a truck, and later on replaced the other trucks he had with wagons. Seems to be a win, it's been about a decade now.