sous-merde

islamiste, car les dernières théocraties le sont, gloire à Dieu

démocratie directe, évidemment, qu’Athènes continue d’inspirer

r\etardataire(, depuis plus de 12 ans), principal coupable(, yay).
Si tou.te.s(>95%) les milliardaires avaient fait autant pour le progrès techno-scientifique qu’E.Musk, alors je ne serais pas communiste(, critics : surplus value, lucrative properties, negative externalities, oligarchic influence, neo-colonialism)

https://github.com/dessalines/essays but also, that’s an interesting system, close to solidproject.org → Nostr id : npub17gtj29ndk2fpx7ghey62yhg9fj05na0wzz0un9l3d0xmrfcz30fsxmktfh

alts : https://lemmygrad.ml/u/soumerd_retardataire, https://lemmygrad.ml/u/sousmerde_rtrdataire

Speaking online is a waste of time, my paranoia stupidly telling me it wasn’t pointless, silly me. Off.

  • 5 Posts
  • 8 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: April 5th, 2022

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  • Most people instead buy pre-hung doors.

    Bad example i.m.o. since when the hinge break they don’t buy a new door(whole), but swap the broken hinge(part) for a new one.
    Good example in the case of DIY though, since the hassle may not be worth the time spent.

    most components can’t be so easily replaced.

    Every module in my computer, mouse, keyboard, screen, or, i.d.k., lamp torch, can be easily replaced with a screwdriver.
    Even phones could be made easy to open. If you have a counter-example in mind to « unless when the part is difficult to access, which doesn’t seem to be an engineering necessity in most cases ? » written above, then i’m interested.

    Even if you have access to spare parts, it takes a lot of time to repair something even as simple as a radio.

    But opening it and swapping the spare part(, well, welding it back then,) took less than 5mns.
    What took a long time was opening it without breaking anything since it was fragile, with parts glued together. Radios were more complex than nowadays.
    And they didn’t stop at swapping the spare part apparently, but ran a full diagnostic because other parts aged as well and, e.g., a shorted transistor could overheat a transformer.
    To me, it seems like asking for an individual to repair his watch himself by getting a spare part, these are the kind of situations that should be done by pros. But then even if it takes many hours we’re not talking about a 20€ product, so it’s usually worth it to repair instead of buying a new one(, which is why people repaired them instead of buying new ones).
    Other examples could include houses or cars, which are repaired because buying new ones wouldn’t be worth it.

    But the example of the radio still goes in my direction, because back it was difficult to swap the spare parts and yet people still went through the trouble of repairing it.
    How much more would it then be pertinent for objects that are thrown away while a pro could easily swap the spare part in 5mns(, or an individual do it h.er.im.self).

    Unless you can automate the entire repair process, increased automation will make us more likely to throw things away.

    You’re saying that more human labor would be required to swap a part than to build the whole product, and i disagree 🤷
    I even think that less human labor would be required to swap a part than to build it.
    Many humans will be involved with the production process, which starts from mining and end with selling.

    And worse, automation makes it easier just to start from scratch.

    Not easier to build the whole than the part

    You can always take a broken device, throw it in a crucible with a mountain of other broken devices, and just melt the whole lot down.

    Not really :)



  • I looked into buying a DIY kit for making a mouse recently in order to easily repair it(, and eventually improve/customize it i.d.k., at least understand it better), but there’s not much choice so i gave up and bought one at 30€.

    you often find it is made of parts you can replace

    But good luck to find these parts, they have a serial number but from my experience with a computer screen, the circuit board is really expensive and takes a long time to ship, so they told me to just buy a new one. That’s probably why most objects are just thrown away and people don’t even attempt to repair them(, if it was cheaper that practice would probably be more widespread)

    I have repaired my computer mouse recently

    You opened it and found a spare part online for a cheap enough price ?



  • Industry and automation made production way more cost efficient

    It should be cheaper to build a new part(, and change that part,) than a new whole(, and buy that whole).

    And i.d.k. if it’s the only reason : the cost of producing is much cheaper outside the west, it’s cheaper for westerners to buy from non-westerners, and conversely.
    If i keep the example of the computer mouse, it couldn’t cost 20€ if it was produced locally, if only because it takes much more than 2 cumulated hours to build one, at a minimum wage of 10€/h.
    Conversely though, it’d mean that it’d be very expensive for a non-westerner to buy products made in the west, which is the case, but we can still manage to sell them because we have a monopoly on new technologies(, with e.g. Japan or South Korea, but then again their minimum wage is high as well so it’s the same remark), such as planes or softwares.




  • I’d be curious to hear their explanation as to why the Tiktok “addictive” system of switching from one video to the other is more addictive that YT shorts who does the same(, or Instagram reels, switching videos on 𝕏, Vine back then, …).
    For now, their arguments are : infinite scroll and push notifications(, present on every social media), autoplay, recommandations, …
    Tiktok is being accused of using the same system as other social platforms, sure we believe that our arguments are more coherent, or everyone knows that they’re just lazy excuses, and nobody cares.
    Yeah, it’s probably that we gave up on democracy, and nobody with power cares about Tiktok.