H1ld3gunst
H1ld3gunst t1_jcvjtk5 wrote
Reply to comment by whatistheformat in Anyone have experience with these? by Different-Bunch-7618
As it’s a Vibram sole, it’s probably good quality for the thickness. It’s pretty thin though, by design of course.
In my experience, the soles of such barefoot shoes wear down very little, as you don’t wear out the heels like you would with traditional shoes.
Depends on how often you wear them. The quality seems good.
H1ld3gunst t1_jc5uf25 wrote
Reply to comment by TheUglyCasanova in PotatoP Laptop Aims for Two Years of Battery Life by diacewrb
That’s why everything needs to be USBC. Problem solved.
H1ld3gunst t1_jc17924 wrote
Reply to comment by CptnBlondBeard in France to Invest €100 Billion in Railway Infrastructure by Winstonoceaniasmith
While continuing not taking care of the homeless veterans…
H1ld3gunst t1_j76caqw wrote
Reply to comment by Yoate in New rules would limit sugar in school meals for first time by quigleyupunder3
Hopefully, yes
H1ld3gunst t1_j76c70s wrote
Reply to comment by Disastrous-Soup-5413 in New rules would limit sugar in school meals for first time by quigleyupunder3
She attempted to do it, but was forced to shift to “more activity” by the lobby. I don’t know how they were able to foil those plans, it probably was the old “jobs are in danger” and “expensive” argument. Which should be irrelevant, because less sugary food creates the same amount of jobs, and one less ingredient shouldn’t make anything more expensive.
Don’t get me wrong, more activity is great. It just doesn’t change the amounts of sugar in children’s diets is far too high.
H1ld3gunst t1_j5h7ogr wrote
Reply to comment by Ceratisa in Minister: Germany won't block Poland giving Ukraine tanks by Brave_Conflict465
Yeah, but why? If they‘re serious, they could just ask.
H1ld3gunst t1_j3hj6v4 wrote
Reply to comment by Leading_Professor_80 in Tobacco firms to partly pay for clean-up of butts by egapx
The plastic in the filters is. The filter itself is cotton.
H1ld3gunst t1_j3ddhcz wrote
Reply to comment by Leading_Professor_80 in Tobacco firms to partly pay for clean-up of butts by egapx
It’s not the Plastic that filters anyways. It’s just in there to make the cigarettes keep their shape
H1ld3gunst t1_j3d83ff wrote
Reply to Renewable energy generation between July and September (2022) was up 55.3% on the same period in 2021, The Scottish Government has revealed. by Querch
This is the beginning of the revolution. Areas not investing in renewables will fall behind quickly.
H1ld3gunst t1_j1hbu00 wrote
Reply to comment by joepeoplesvii in US Postal Service commits to buy 66,000 Electric vehicles— finally by MrMike
1 ev needs 1 battery. Not millions of gallons.
The batteries are not recycled because they are reused first. Stationary power storage does not need new batteries. Only EVs do.
Just mind that a lot of the information out there is sponsored by the oil industry. If you try to read up on it in professional sources, ICE cars have been overtaken by EVs in sustainability long ago.
The sources arguing they are worse are easily found out: They usually start with a pre built ICE car, and only count environmental impact from combustion itself. But the EVs are calculated from scratch, including mining, production, transport. ICE cars need cobalt too. They have chips, too, in fact, almost the same amount. Oil needs to be drilled or fracked. Then refined. Transported. Now we are at EVs being more sustainable.
If we wanted to be fair, now we would start to calculate health problems caused by combustion taking place in front of where we work and where we live. All the particles and NO^x and the health care costs it produces every year.
Don’t call people stupid if you haven’t understood the statistics yourself.
H1ld3gunst t1_j1ezqgu wrote
Reply to comment by Combatpigeon96 in US Postal Service commits to buy 66,000 Electric vehicles— finally by MrMike
Not at all, I’d be honored
H1ld3gunst t1_j1ctd49 wrote
Reply to comment by joepeoplesvii in US Postal Service commits to buy 66,000 Electric vehicles— finally by MrMike
Most Lithium is sourced in the Atacama Desert.
Remember all those Oil Spills in the Caribbean? Exxon Mobile? Whole Oceans covered in Toxic Liquid? The Rainforests of Nigeria and Borneo being cut down? Saudi’s Arabia, Venezuela, Iran and Russia making Trillions while being able to hold the whole world hostage?
Now tell me that’s better than exploiting small amounts of Lithium in a lifeless desert in the democratic states of Chile and Bolivia.
H1ld3gunst t1_j1csyh9 wrote
Reply to comment by alexa-play-idontcare in US Postal Service commits to buy 66,000 Electric vehicles— finally by MrMike
They aren’t going to buy them from Tesla
H1ld3gunst t1_j0g1n8n wrote
Reply to comment by YourMatt in Valve answers our burning Steam Deck questions — including a possible Steam Controller 2 by retroanduwu24
Same. Even though I rarely use it, just the few times I do and not needing a mouse and keyboard on my couch is worth a lot to me.
H1ld3gunst t1_j0dqr8c wrote
Reply to comment by FlatulentWallaby in Valve answers our burning Steam Deck questions — including a possible Steam Controller 2 by retroanduwu24
It was great, I bought it for 5 Bucks. It’s just so god damn loud. Not the vibration, the buttons click so loud you wake your neighbors.
Did that for most steam stuff (steam machine aswell, still use it) I’m really bummed the Deck didn’t bomb, so I could get it for basically nothing
H1ld3gunst t1_iwymzrt wrote
Reply to comment by momentimori in UK: Electric car drivers must pay tax from 2025 by nastratin
The gap is constantly closing
H1ld3gunst t1_iwtrfuv wrote
Reply to comment by Relaxmf2022 in Bankers bet billions on new wave of debt-for-nature deals by NotACapedCrusader1
It’s strange that conservatives are so against conserving nature
H1ld3gunst t1_iw22mpz wrote
Reply to comment by Madmax1245 in 'Humble' worm saliva can break down tough plastic by No_Dependent_5066
Nano Plastics are just carbon atoms. Ita only Microplastics that are a problem.
H1ld3gunst t1_ivqxviu wrote
Reply to comment by thefpspower in In France all new large parking lots must now be covered in solar panels starting in july 2023. by BuildingBabel
I don’t know how it is in France, but in Germany there is higher payout if you only provide the net, without using any yourself, for bigger scale projects. It’s still not high, but it does pay over a while. The land directly next highways is often plastered with solar cells. Obviously it is profitable.
I’m guessing even more so on parking lots. You still have the parking lot. Only now it’s shady.
H1ld3gunst t1_irxdwr0 wrote
Reply to comment by jbarrera03 in Mexico's second largest city plans to build 18 "green corridors" of trees to combat climate change. [Translation in Comments]. by Wandering_Mobiler
Paradoxically, plants help with droughts, especially trees. Their roots open the soil, so it can absorb water more easily, and store it.
This helps immensly with floods and droughts.
H1ld3gunst t1_jeaf7vz wrote
Reply to comment by MelancholyMushroom in Thousands of women join club to combat loneliness - BBC News by idreamofjiro
Try Mastodon, make a community in your town. It’s not that popular, but fully free.