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	<title>Gopher.ICU - Philosophical-ramblings</title>
	<link>gopher://gopher.icu/0/phlog</link>
	<description></description>
	    
        <item>
	   <title>Barriers-to-entry</title>
	   <link>gopher://gopher.icu/0/phlog/Philosophical-ramblings/Barriers-to-entry.md</link>
	   <description></description>
	   <media:description type="plain"><![CDATA[# Barriers to entry

The barrier to entry into some technology or discipline is there to
ensure the worthiness of the participant. When these barriers are
artificially reduced, by technology companies wishing to allow mass
access or by the easing of some entrance exam or personal investment
on the part of the would be participant. The result is reduced
quality of those new participants. This is usually much to the
annoyance of the existing participants in that technology or
discipline.

Maybe you feel that your particular profession or hobby is dying and
needs some new blood, but at what cost?

If people don't have to earn their place they will not appreciate it.
Because of this the technology or discipline is doomed anyway.

Keep those barriers high!]]></media:description>
	   <pubDate>Tue, 23 Jan 2024 13:30:35 +0100</pubDate>
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        <item>
	   <title>Convergence</title>
	   <link>gopher://gopher.icu/0/phlog/Philosophical-ramblings/Convergence.md</link>
	   <description></description>
	   <media:description type="plain"><![CDATA[# Convergence

```
Convergence is the fact that two or more things, ideas, etc. become
similar or come together.
```

Like all things, there are both good and bad aspects to convergence.
However, I perceive it as mostly detrimental.


Convergence of mobile electronics (PDA, phone, camera, music players,
...) means that we're not hauling about a lot of separate
devices. However, once your phone breaks or the battery runs out then
all of these functions stop working.

Convergence of communications seems to be bringing everything to the
internet. The majority of consumed media (music, radio, movies and tv
services) are now streamed over the internet. Our PSTN telephone
services are being updated so that they are essentially VOIP and our
messaging applications and email too all run over the internet. This
has the same issue in that it's a single point of failure, no
internet connectivity means all these services are unavailable.

Convergence presents single points of failure, centralisation for
control, big targets for espionage or ransomware, surveillance and 
censorship.

The more we converge the more load we put on the infrastructure, the
more likely it is to fail, the less choice there is and the less
resilient we are.


Hold onto your radios, tv-tuners, music players, cameras and hard
media (CDs, dvds, bluerays, records, ...). If we stop using discrete
services, devices and media they will steadily disappear.

```
Two is one and one is none.
```]]></media:description>
	   <pubDate>Tue, 12 Dec 2023 19:10:04 +0100</pubDate>
	</item>
        <item>
	   <title>Degrowth</title>
	   <link>gopher://gopher.icu/0/phlog/Philosophical-ramblings/Degrowth.md</link>
	   <description></description>
	   <media:description type="plain"><![CDATA[# Degrowth


> 1) A negative growth (i.e. a reduction) of an economy or a
>    population.  
> 2) A political, economic, and social movement based on ecological
>    economics and anticonsumerist and anticapitalist ideas.)


Let's establish some fundamental truths before proceeding:

* Our planet is a limited resource which sustains our species and
  many others.

* Developed nations consume these resources for greed rather than
  need.

* False markets are created by advertising and we buy things for
  desire, not things that we require.

* Things that we buy are often designed with a limited lifetime so
  that we have to re-purchase and continue the consumer cycle.

* Many green technologies are in fact just as destructive and
  require mining and energy intensive processes for their
  production (solar panels, lithium batteries, ...).

* Our current expansionism is unsustainable.


Since the 1930s the measure of a nation's wealth has been it's GDP
(gross domestic product). This has lead to a constant striving toward
growth.

The only way out of this cycle is to step back from it, as consumers
and as producers.


## We are the problem

Your government is not going to make this problem go away.

We are both the labour force which facilitates all of this and the
tax payers who finance it.


## We are the solution

If we are to save this planet from becoming a scorching desert for
future generations then *we* need to change.


## Prevention is always better than the cure

As with personal health, if you smoke, drink, don't exercise and eat
lots of junk food, you should expect to suffer in later life.  Our
planet too is a living organism which we, and other species, depend
upon for survival.

Don't wait until it is too late or leave it to someone else. We must
all take responsibility and play our part.


## What can we do?

We all have choices which can directly influence organizations that
are having a negative impact on the environment and our society by:

1. Not working for them

2. Not financing or purchasing from them 


We can also make efforts to live lightly. 

Here are some suggestions how we might do that:

* Reducing our energy consumption as much as possible

* Growing some of our own produce

* Learning practical skills to make useful things or be useful

* Trading or exchanging, skills, items or produce with others locally

* Repairing and repurposing items (recycling should be a last resort)

* Sourcing items with no, minimal or recyclable packaging

* Sourcing items which can be repaired and will last

* Sourcing used items where possible

* Sourcing only things that we need]]></media:description>
	   <pubDate>Tue, 30 Jan 2024 12:16:41 +0100</pubDate>
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        <item>
	   <title>The-flywheel-effect</title>
	   <link>gopher://gopher.icu/0/phlog/Philosophical-ramblings/The-flywheel-effect.md</link>
	   <description></description>
	   <media:description type="plain"><![CDATA[# The flywheel effect

A flywheel takes a little time and energy to put into motion, but
once in motion it maintains momentum and smooths out small
fluctuations in acceleration or deceleration. However, if the drive
stops completely, it will gradually slow and eventually stop.

I believe groups of people are subject to a similar phenomenon. There
are usually only a handful of movers in a group, the driving force.
They are the ones who put in their time and energy to further their 
shared goals. Maybe they are doing this for selfish motives, but the
momentum, enthusiasm and energy they generate carries the whole
forward, giving momentum to the group.

If for some reason these people are stifled, they will move on to
somewhere else to continue their work. The momentum will slow and
eventually stop and the group will become largely inactive with no
one willing to expend energy, even for their own sake.

If you have such movers among you, let them do their work. Keep them
happy and they will continue to add momentum.]]></media:description>
	   <pubDate>Mon, 12 Aug 2024 12:07:42 +0200</pubDate>
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