Do you mean in construction or in daily living?
foyrkopp
I suspect similar to what we're already seeing in terms of "tuning kits" (solar thermic energy kits, decentralized power kits, new insulation...)
The main direction for improvements from an SP perspective would probably be in the realms of
-
increased efficiency of those kits
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decreased production and maintenance requirements for those kits
Supplying people with basic life necessities should not need to garner a profit.
This goes for food, water, shelter, but also electricity, healthcare, public transportation, and internet.
(Coincidentally, most of these are basic human rights.)
Society as a whole experiences net benefit (even am economic one) from those, so society as a whole should fund them.
Yes, this requires taxes.
I'd still disagree.
The core premise is that average worker productivity on eclipse day will dip by 1/24th (assuming 20 mins of "eclipse break" on a 8 hour workday).
And that's BS on several fronts.
For one, many people have taken days off (PTL or similar) or move their break to the eclipse, which is already accounted for in the averaged productivity statistic.
Second, people in positions they can't just leave (factory workers on an assembly line, cashiers etc.) will often have to skip on the eclipse.
And people who can leave (I'm thinking of white collar desk jobs here), are often spending a similar amount of worktime off-desk on other days, too, for a myriad of only indirectly productive reasons (networking, thinking on a thorny problem over a smoke...).
The formula assumes
- that all of the American workforce spends every minute of their 8 hour day actively working on their desk/station/etc.
- that every minute they don't, is "lost", work-wise.
- that all of that workforce is on the job during eclipse time, but will take a paid break during the actual eclipse
All of which are questionable at best.
I actually don't think their logic is that implausible.
Obviously, it's not about giving people more time for baby making.
But (just as an arbitrary example) if you're spending two hours per day driving to and from work, slashing that down to a single hour can massively reduce a family's overall stress level.
And "Less stressed people have more room in their lives for bigger families" is an equation that doesn't sound that dumb.
Obviously, there might be better ways to go about this. Or there actually might not.
There's definitely more impactful ways to improve people's work-life balance, but most of those aren't as easily implemented.
In an ideal world, they might have done extensive studies into why people don't have more babies, and then selected an efficient parameter to tune.
(As a rule, investing into public transportation will usually pay socio-economic dividends either way, as long as it's done at least halfway decently.)
In a less ideal world, massive lobbying by the very people profiting off this investment first might have been involved.
Overall, this whole affair has decent odds of becoming some sort of net benefit overall.
She appeared there because she really wanted to.
There's a neat bit of two-part history hidden there:
Part 1:
(Taken from an interview with Michelle Nichols)
Sometime during the original run of ST TOS, Michelle Nichols wanted to step back from playing Uhura. Roddenberry asked her to think about it on the weekend.
During that weekend, she happened to be at some fundraiser, where the host asked her if she could spare a minute for "her biggest fan".
She said "of course... but hold on, there's MLK right over there, I've got to take the opportunity to talk to him first."
Host: "Yeah... um, that is your biggest fan. He wants to talk with you."
MLK told her how much of an impact her role had (for pretty much the same reasons Goldberg mentioned later).
Monday, she rescinded her resignation.
Part 2:
When the staff of TNG heard that Whoopie Goldberg wanted had asked for a minor role, they thought it was joke.
(TNG wasn't yet the juggernaut it'd become and Goldberg was a top tier Hollywood star.)
But she told them explicitly that she'd been inspired by the Role of Uhura from the start and just wanted to be part of ST.
So they tailored that minor role to her.
To me, she always looks happy as a clam on screen with that.
OK, I'll bite:
You appreciate civilization because you've lived in nature.
What’s the most danger you’ve lived in
People die of starvation in a world that literally has enough food for everyone - because speculating with food is more profitable than feeding them.
People die of diseases that have known cures with low production cost - because the market will only finance medical research if the resulting drug comes with a net gain price tag.
There are literal wars being fought and people being shot for economic gains.
Humanity doesn't have a resource problem. It has a distribution problem.
And the current method of deciding distribution of goods is capitalism.
that you think getting rich is equivalent to predation?
Genuine question: Where do you believe a millionaire's millions ultimately come from?
There is only so much net economic gain one can create with their own two hands. Everything beyond that is created by other people's hands.
The genre is usually divided into "soft" and "hard" fantasy.
Cyberpunk is generally considered hard fantasy, as is stuff like The Expanse or Interstellar.
Star Wars is unabashedly soft SciFi, it's a straight Fantasy story in space.
Star Trek is a half-breed - it pays some lip service to scientific "plausibility", but much of it stretches that envelope beyond the breaking point. Scientific accuracy was never the point of the series to begin with.
The problem isn't straight-out corruption.
It's wonky incentivation.
Judges that are not measured by how many people they send to jail will always be, on average, less trigger-happy than cops who are.
Or did we become okay with being ruled by tyrants all of a sudden?
If so, what's the point of federation?
The point of federation is not to prevent tyrants.
The point is the option to exclude or include any instance due to whatever metric you want.
If you don't like tyrants, you can defederate your instance from any tyrant-ruled instance.
And, obviously, you can run your own instance as tyrannical or democratic as you want - users who don't like that are free to leave, instance-owners who don't like that are free to defecate from you.
If you're just a user on the relevant instance, all you can do ist petition the people who have that power.
I understand that's basically what you're trying to do, but your argument shouldn't be about federation or lemmy's inherent structure - the question should be "is anyone else annoyed by that behavior?"
Depending on your definition, this actually is not peak performance.
Subways are.
Obviously, the tunnels are absurdly expensive, but nothing moves as many people as quickly around a city as a subway.
They're also extremely reliable, meaning people are even more likely to actually use them, and their above-ground footprint is essentially zero.
Far less work than a conventional house - it's just that for the latter, there's a ready-made supply of specialists, so you can just replace the work cost with money.