Sustainable Tech
Sabaidee, Welcome!
This is a community for promoting sustainability in tech and computing. This includes: understanding the impact that our tech/computing choices have on the environment; purchasing or re-using devices that are sustainable and repairable; how to properly recycle or dispose of old devices when it is beyond use; and promoting software and services that allow us to reduce our environmental impact in the long term, both at work and in our personal lives.
This isn't a competition, it's a reminder to stay grounded when making your decisions. Remember: The most sustainable device is the one that you are already using.
Rules:
- Stay on-topic. Everything from sustainable smartphones to data centers and the green energy that powers them is fair game.
- Be excellent to each other.
Note: This is hosted on Lemmy at SDF. If you are browsing from the larger Fediverse, search for
[!sustainabletech@lemmy.sdf.org](/c/sustainabletech@lemmy.sdf.org)
and hit the Subscribe button.
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Awesome. I'd definitely buy one from an enterprising recycler! (I'm disabled and assembling this is probably beyond me)
Alternatively build loads of these and hand them out during power outages. I wonder how many would be needed to power an energy efficient home?
Honestly I wouldn't expect too much, one may be enough for light-use emergency power. 30 km/h wind is not something you see every day in most places, and 60 km/h sounds like the kind of day I would stay indoors.
If you live in a windy place, you could probably power your house lights with a couple of them, if you use LED lighting, but don't expect to power an electric oven or heat your house with it unless you have a yard full of them.
Honestly, even lights would be good. I've been without power for up to 4 days several times, and lanterns/torches just don't do enough.
Plus charging phones, keeping router+modem alive, and charging CPAP batteries would all be useful.
That's an amazing idea RE power outages!