
Flowers are an essential part of healthy coffee plant growth, but can producers use them to diversify their income streams?

They use an enterprise or custom government version which has a lot of the tracking and annoying crap disabled
Run your window AC with just 2 solar panels when sun shines. Easy DIY project you can do in one day.
Thank for sharing, this is pretty cool!
This is a good article. Has a lot of examples showing why streets have a good or bad pedestrian experience.
It's not as simple as number of lanes or even the quality of the sidewalk. A lot of it really comes down to development patterns. You can really feel the difference when you're in a place not built for walking. Being on a well constructed sidewalk far away from any buildings because there's a giant parking lot in between just feels wrong.
There are a few places very close to my house I refuse to walk to because the pedestrian experience is terrible. You feel out of place, unwelcome, and unsafe.
Yeah I think the show is harder to watch if you've read the books.
I had some issues with season 1, but I'll give season 2 a fresh chance. My wife who hasn't read the books enjoyed it
This is very cool. I'm looking forward to seeing the progress!
I think they might go the other way and use it as leverage to push Sony to release cross platform games
What about cargo bikes??
How different is neo vim from regular vim?
Omg that's a lot of tomatoes. I wish my garden was half as productive as that!
I've used it and like it except I noticed that it apparently has a lot of 3rd party trackers. It apparently tries to send data to many 3rd party companies including Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Twitter.
I'm not sure why it needs to send this much data to third parties, but it makes me feel a little turned off by this app.
I bought it right before the price increase so I told myself it was like getting it on sale
A lot of people in this thread talking about how it's not feasible because content creators wouldn't get paid and I agree if you expect that same quality of content.
But I think peertube opens the door for a lot of the more organic content of just people sharing interesting/entertaining/educational videos with others without any expectation of being paid. I've already watched some really good videos on peertube that feel a lot more like the old days of YouTube.
If you're really serious I would first recommend you familiarize yourself with the needs of blind users generally. Like try using the internet with your eyes closed and a screen reader to understand how a blind person would interact with a website. Maybe you can ask around or Google some tips for getting started with that.
I had a former coworker who was a UX designer and he taught himself to use a screen reader for this reason since he was required to ensure anything he designed was accessible.
If you edit the URL and remove everything before reddit.com and the change it to old.reddit.com you can view it without the app
Oh that would be amazing. I like that idea but I'm not sure if it's likely
Yup, I've checked it out anonymously with AdBlock a few times and I click links to posts from mods and things like that but I deleted the app (Boost for Reddit) from my phone and I'm not installing the first party one
Flowers are an essential part of healthy coffee plant growth, but can producers use them to diversify their income streams?
However, it’s important to note that unlike other coffee waste byproducts, flowers can be used as natural fertilisers. Ultimately, this means that they already contribute to a circular economy model in the coffee industry.
No way am I going to pre-order a game in this era of half baked releases and especially not a game from Bethesda which is as well known for their rampant bugs as their compelling gameplay
How I wish this saga would end already
What's the best Linux alternative to Windows for gaming
I use Windows for my desktop PC but I'm also a fan of Linux for work and programming.
I'm not really liking the direction windows is taking so it would be nice to explore some other alternatives. I mostly use my desktop for gaming, so I'm interested in how people are gaming on Linux
I live in Atlanta and going entirely car free would be a challenge for my family of four, but we did manage to go from a 2 car family to a 1 car family which has been a nice shift.
It's had a few lifestyle changes for us, mostly me since I try to leave the car for my wife when I go somewhere by myself. The sale of our second car funded the purchase of 2 ebikes, so we like to ride bikes around which has changed the kind of place we like to go around our city. It's been a lot of fun for us.
When I occasionally need to go to work I've found that bike+transit works fairly well for my needs. Sometimes I'll also just take only transit on days when the weather is bad but it's a lot less flexible that way since the bus schedule is so infrequent.
Overall, I'd say that you don't necessarily need to go all in on being car free to care about urbanism and reducing car travel. There are so many things out of our control with regard to the state of our city so sometimes taking smaller steps to reduce our car usage is all we can do.