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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: March 13th, 2026

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  • Well, kinda. Depends a lot on where you live. My soydrink and egss would freeze fast if I put them outside at -40°C. And spoil when it suddenly gets warmer to like +1°C… It would take monitoring and I would need to build a bird/vermin proof case/box, but I have thought about that in the past and it is something I have used in my advantage when I have cleaned and thawed my freezer.

    I do have cellar which I often use as an extended fridge tho, I just need to monitor the warmth. (Summer it can get as warm as +8°C, winter it can go as low as -1°C.) And at my family’s cottage we do have an old ground fridge. It’s like a cement “box” that has lots of ground and plants growing on top/around of it.



  • Here people can get social services to buy them a cheap smartphone because it’s “necessary”. (Well, only necessary because public transportation is allowed to do BS like this and so on…) So everyone can obtain one, if they wish. But elders and disabled people might not know how to use one safely, and the internet still costs money…




  • I think it will be difficult for everyone, me included. But it’s a decision still. Majority will comply without batting an eye. Only a few can truly unplug AND keep it unplugged, not just try it. I’m not sure I can manage it either. For example, some cities in my country have 100% mobile app based public transport, meaning that there is no way of buying or showing a ticket unless it’s the app. Not even website, the real app. (And if the app don’t work for some reason, boohoo, pay a fine for 80-100€.) The world is build on these phones and apps.

    Even more weirdly, since I somewhat practice unplugging already, many people have straight on nasty reactions when I say that sorry, can’t scan that QR code or that I can’t check their Insta-whatever post on social media. So it’s not just the infrastructure but social norms too…