en „Immobilien-Footprint“ – wie das Homeoffice unser Arbeitsleben verändert By www.welt.de Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 02:02:36 GMT Zu Beginn des Shutdowns hielten Vermieter von Büroflächen das Homeoffice für ein vorübergehendes Phänomen. Doch jetzt mehren sich Hinweise, dass viele Mitarbeiter auch künftig von Hause arbeiten. Dabei spräche ein Grund ganz klar für ihre Rückkehr. Full Article Immobilien
en Diese Immobilien-Aktien haben die besten Comeback-Chancen By www.welt.de Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 06:22:52 GMT Auch Immobilienaktien sind im Zuge des Crashs abgestürzt. Analysen früherer Pandemien zeigen jedoch, dass sich die Branche immer sehr schnell erholt hat. Deshalb stehen die Kurschancen für einige Papiere jetzt besonders gut. Full Article Immobilien
en Mit Geld allein lassen sich Südeuropas Probleme nicht lösen By www.welt.de Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 08:46:27 GMT Finanzhilfen für besonders von der Krise getroffene Länder wie Italien? Die Erfahrung mit der deutschen Währungsunion zeigt, dass das allein nicht reichen wird. Es gilt, die Wirtschaftsstruktur anzupassen. Dazu braucht es relative Preisänderungen. Full Article Geld
en Nur in Deutschland rufen die Vermieter laut nach Geld vom Staat By www.welt.de Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 13:43:00 GMT Geschäfte sind geschlossen, Mietzahlungen fallen aus. In Deutschland rufen Vermieter deswegen laut nach dem Staat. In anderen Ländern hilft die Branche selbst bei der Krisenbewältigung – und streicht Dividenden, Gehälter – und Mietforderungen. Full Article Immobilien
en Berliner Mietendeckel muss vors Verfassungsgericht By www.welt.de Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 14:27:00 GMT Seit zwei Monaten sind die Mieten in Berlin eingefroren. Während sich Mieter über die staatlich festgelegten Preise freuen, sind Vermieter sauer und fahren Investitionen zurück. Ob das Gesetz überhaupt gelten darf, wird nun in Karlsruhe geprüft. Full Article Immobilien
en Wir haben 150.000 Euro frei. Was können wir tun? By www.welt.de Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 07:20:29 GMT Die Krise hat viele Anleger in Panik versetzt. Jetzt suchen sie nach neuen Anlagemöglichkeiten. Das zeigt sich auch beim WELT-Finanzchat, wo viele Teilnehmer Rat für ihre Finanzen suchten. Viele der Fragen und Antworten betreffen auch Millionen andere Sparer. Full Article Geld
en „Es wird ein viel größerer Kurssturz um noch einmal 30 bis 40 Prozent folgen“ By www.welt.de Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 08:10:41 GMT Viele Anleger wähnen sich und ihre Börseninvestments bereits in einem neuen Aufschwung. Doch einige der bekanntesten Investoren mahnen zur Vorsicht. Ihre Szenarien sind deutlich negativer. Dabei haben sie die Historie der vergangenen Crashs auf ihrer Seite. Full Article Geld
en 03 - crows happen - vampire deer by pyramid termite By music.metafilter.com Published On :: Thu, 09 Apr 2020 17:32:16 -0800 my daughter has a treefull of crows outside her window and she's convinced they're as interested in her as she is in them she's sure they are her friends i've tried to tell her that i'm not sure they're really all that interested in her, but i don't really think that's getting through to her - and i don't know whether she really understands the current situation - why she has to stay home, why her dad had to stay in quarantine for 14 days just because he was a little sick, why her dad was worried about what was going to happen i guess this song is about all that i can't tell you if the crows like you even though you believe they talk to you they were created for another world but maybe we pretend that it's not our world too fly around and looking for a meal fly around and looking for a summer deal but it's april and where we live everything takes so long to happen well, it's not much fun, wondering if i'll be gone i can't even go for a walk on the lawn the days all count to the last fade away but then again, it's always really been that way do you think the crows don't think about all that? somehow i think they do - the way they gather at their friend lying there, complaining everything more or less has to happen but with any luck, it will warm up a little and i think my hourglass isn't ready to settle we can go out and watch the crows once again and you can tell me that they are your friends one day we'll get to walk out and feel free and not think about the things that could be we can be like crows and bluff our way through all the things, good and bad, that happen and the secret to life, so i've been told is you keep lucking out and then you find yourself old and you wonder, what the hell did i do with all that time? and it didn't make much sense, and it didn't even rhyme and if i gave you a ring for surety some crow would go and grab it and hide it in a tree and forget about it - that crow and you and me just more of those things that happen Full Article mefimusicchallenge psychedelic quarantine rpmaprilchallenge2020 solskifte vampiredeer
en Bach Prelude in C, but shifted by a sixteenth-note by mpark By music.metafilter.com Published On :: Wed, 15 Apr 2020 10:07:10 -0800 A very silly rendition of this well-known piece with the beat on the wrong note. It kinda works!? Also available on youtube if you want to see the score. Full Article Bach BWV846 cmajor prelude
en My Way (Roboticized) by q*ben By music.metafilter.com Published On :: Sat, 18 Apr 2020 22:13:24 -0800 I've always hated this song. But digging through my old sheet music I found a midcentury piano treatment that made it much more melancholy and interesting, so I decided to give the tune a synthesizer treatment and marry it up to the vocals to see if I couldn't do some damage. Also my first attempt at using Ableton, sorry for any production missteps. Full Article robots sinatra
en The Last Baseball Game - Part III by CarrotAdventure By music.metafilter.com Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2020 22:35:07 -0800 Special "came to pass in real life" edition! Full Article baseball
en Elkins - Dorrigo by CarrotAdventure By music.metafilter.com Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 21:41:10 -0800 Fiddle debut! Sorry for the cat scratches A couple of tunes - "Elkins" by Jerry Holland, followed by "Dorrigo" by George Jackson Full Article fiddle hammond trad
en Wenn der Reiseveranstalter das Geld nicht auszahlt By www.welt.de Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2020 12:31:58 GMT Eigentlich ist die Sache klar: Streicht der Reiseveranstalter den gebuchten Urlaub oder Flug, bekommen Kunden ihr Geld zurück. Doch momentan wartet so mancher vergeblich auf die Rückzahlung. Was können Urlauber tun? Full Article Reise
en Einsam unterwegs in deutschen Wäldern By www.welt.de Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 03:13:19 GMT Es gibt wilde Wälder in Deutschland, in denen man nur selten einer Menschenseele begegnet. Sie sind ideal zum Abstandhalten und zum Beobachten scheuer Tiere. Wir geben fünf Empfehlungen – von Niedersachsen bis Baden-Württemberg. Full Article Deutschland
en Diese Städte können Sie auch jetzt besichtigen By www.welt.de Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 13:00:00 GMT Vermissen Sie Paris, Wien, Tokio oder Sydney? Das muss nicht sein, denn vielen Metropolen kann man auch jetzt einen Besuch abstatten. Wir stellen zehn Beispiele vor, die sich virtuell entdecken lassen. Full Article Städtereisen
en Trotz Corona sind Jugendreisen gut gebucht By www.welt.de Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 03:54:54 GMT Allein auf großer Fahrt – darauf freuen sich bundesweit Millionen Schüler und Azubis. Zu Jahresbeginn registrierten Kinder- und Jugendreiseveranstalter Buchungszuwächse – und trotz Corona-Krise gibt es kaum Stornierungen. Full Article Deutschland
en Magnetische Erinnerungen an den Urlaub By www.welt.de Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 05:33:59 GMT Viele Menschen schleichen momentan wie Raubkatzen um ihre Kühlschränke, schließlich sind Mahlzeiten eine willkommene Abwechslung. Da fällt der Blick automatisch auch auf die magnetischen Urlaubssouvenirs. Full Article Fernreisen
en Plötzlich bettelt Venedig um Touristen By www.welt.de Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 14:48:00 GMT Jahrelang beklagte sich Venedig über die große Anzahl an Touristen – und die damit verbundenen ökologischen Folgen. Doch jetzt, wo der Tourismus brachliegt, bettelt der Bürgermeister um Reisende. Full Article Reise
en Der Sommerurlaub fällt aus. Wir müssen jetzt radikal umdenken By www.welt.de Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 02:13:08 GMT Wir müssen uns vorerst von der Hoffnung verabschieden, weit weg zu fahren, um den Alltag und alles Negative hinter uns zu lassen. Was macht das mit uns? Wie können wir uns trotzdem erholen? Eine Psychologin gibt Tipps. Full Article Deutschland
en So erklärt Maas die Verlängerung der weltweiten Reisewarnung By www.welt.de Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 11:35:29 GMT Den Osterurlaub hat das Coronavirus bereits auf dem Gewissen. Nun muss auch der Pfingsturlaub dran glauben. Zumindest was Auslandsreisen angeht. Dabei äußert sich der Außenminister auch eindeutig zu Rückholaktionen. Full Article Deutschland
en „Muss davon ausgehen, dass man einen sehr aktuellen Corona-Test mitbringen muss“ By www.welt.de Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 09:21:00 GMT Im Interview mit WELT verteidigt Außenminister Heiko Maas die Entscheidung für eine Verlängerung der weltweiten Reisewarnung bis 14. Juni. Auch wenn eine Reisewarnung kein Reiseverbot sei, werde die Bundesregierung weitere Rückholaktionen im Sommer nicht wiederholen, so Maas. Full Article Deutschland
en Hier blieb ein Stück altes Portugal erhalten By www.welt.de Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 04:00:49 GMT Einsame Wanderpfade, Schäfertradition und archaisch anmutende Feste: In der Serra da Estrela erleben Reisende ein Portugal, das woanders längst verschwunden ist. Man sollte sich das für die Zeit nach den Reisebeschränkungen merken. Full Article Europa
en Eine Reise durch die eigene Wohnung By www.welt.de Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 03:16:50 GMT Wer wegen der Corona-Krise seit Wochen kaum das Haus verlässt, erblickt nur noch wenig Neues. Was aber sieht man wirklich noch? Jetzt ist es an der Zeit, sein Reich in den eigenen vier Wänden neu zu entdecken. Full Article Deutschland
en Eine abenteuerliche Odyssee in der Ägäis By www.welt.de Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 03:56:32 GMT Die Haare im Wind, salzige Luft in der Nase, immer nah am Wasser: Eine Segelkreuzfahrt durch die Inselwelt der Kykladen ist ein Erlebnis. Zur echten Herausforderung wird sie, wenn der Meltemi in Sturmstärke bläst. Full Article Europa
en Nichts wie raus, und zwar jeden Tag! By www.welt.de Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 03:54:46 GMT Momentan ist unser aller Bewegungsfreiheit stark eingeschränkt. Doch Gehen ist erlaubt – und hilft. Wer dazu auch gerne lange Wanderungen macht, hat es nach Ansicht unserer Autorin momentan gar noch leichter. Full Article Deutschland
en Backstein, Rum und Pinguine – auf in den Norden By www.welt.de Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 02:17:34 GMT Als Reiseziel wird Deutschland dieses Jahr so gefragt sein wie nie. Interessant sind gerade dann Orte, die noch nicht überlaufen sind. Im ersten Teil unserer neuen Serie stellen wir fünf Städte im Norden des Landes vor. Full Article Deutschland
en Mehr als ein Andenken an den letzten Urlaub By www.welt.de Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 03:05:34 GMT Zur Erholung im Urlaub gehört für viele das Reisen dazu. Sehnsüchtig warten sie auf Lockerungen der Reisebeschränkungen wegen Corona. Bis dahin bleiben aber die Souvenirs vergangener Trips. Zeit für eine Würdigung. Full Article Fernreisen
en Eine Liebeserklärung an das Fischbrötchen By www.welt.de Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 03:54:22 GMT Fischbrötchen sind ein Stück nordische Lebensart. Erst mit dem Genuss eines solchen beginnt der Urlaub an Nord- oder Ostsee wirklich. Was ein gutes Fischbrötchen ausmacht, ist aber Geschmackssache. Full Article Deutschland
en Warum es weltweit so viele Schweizen gibt By www.welt.de Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 02:50:41 GMT Die Eidgenossenschaft ist ein Exportschlager: Von Europa über Afrika und Asien bis Amerika tragen mehr als 100 Landschaften die „Schweiz“ im Namen. In Bern hat ein Künstler die „Auslandsschweizen“ zusammengeführt. Full Article Europa
en Mutige Pionierinnen auf Weltreise By www.welt.de Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 05:28:52 GMT Abenteurerinnen, Entdeckerinnen, Flaneusen: Die Geschichte ist voll von Frauen, die nichts zu Hause hielt und hält. Dabei mussten sie alle gegen Vorurteile kämpfen und gesellschaftliche Grenzen überwinden. Full Article Fernreisen
en Dubspot Radio Rewind: J.Pennyworth + Exclusive Interview By blog.dubspot.com Published On :: Fri, 27 Jan 2017 16:16:15 +0000 Dubspot Radio Podcast revisits an exclusive interview and chill mix selection recorded live by a Dubspot student known as J.Pennyworth./files/2014/09/J_Pennyworth_Thumb.jpgThe post Dubspot Radio Rewind: J.Pennyworth + Exclusive Interview appeared first on Dubspot Blog. Full Article Dubspot Radio Podcast Students Chill Music dubspot radio Electronic Music Electronic Music Production J. Pennyworth
en Ableton Live Techniques: Creating Complex Sequences By blog.dubspot.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Feb 2017 18:28:41 +0000 Dubspot's Rory PQ explores Generative Music and demonstrates an effective technique used to generate complex sequences of music using Live's native devices./files/2017/02/Complex-Thumb.jpgThe post Ableton Live Techniques: Creating Complex Sequences appeared first on Dubspot Blog. Full Article Ableton Live Dubspot Homepage Featured Production Bass Sequencer brian eno drum rack Drum Sequencer Generative Music music production tips Rory PQ
en Dubspot Winter Sale Extended: Enroll Today! By blog.dubspot.com Published On :: Wed, 01 Mar 2017 15:44:36 +0000 Dubspot's Winter Sale offers new students 15% off all courses and returning students 25% off until March 13th at midnight EST. Enroll Today!/files/2017/02/2017-Winter-Sale-Thumb.jpgThe post Dubspot Winter Sale Extended: Enroll Today! appeared first on Dubspot Blog. Full Article Dubspot Courses Dubspot Homepage News dj courses Dubspot How To DJ how to produce music mixing and mastering Music Production Music School Music Theory Sound Design
en God and the Covenant By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 17 Nov 2019 00:00:00 GMT 'Covenant is a legal establishment of a relationship. We broke it with God, but He is always faithful to His part, even when we are not to ours.' Full Article Ezra and Nehemiah
en Backslidden People By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 08 Dec 2019 00:00:00 GMT 'The seventh-day Sabbath was, and remains, a powerful means of helping keep faith alive in those who by God’s grace seek to observe it and enjoy the physical and spiritual benefits it offers us.' Full Article Ezra and Nehemiah
en From the Lions’ Den to the Angel’s Den By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 09 Feb 2020 00:00:00 GMT 'What kind of witness do we present to others in regard to our faithfulness to God and to His law? Would people who know you think that you would stand for your faith, even if it cost you your job, or even your life?' Full Article Daniel 2020
en From the Stormy Sea to the Clouds of Heaven By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 16 Feb 2020 00:00:00 GMT 'With the coming of the Son of Man, God’s dominion is restored to those to whom it properly belongs. What Adam lost in the garden, the Son of Man recovers in the heavenly judgment.' Full Article Daniel 2020
en The Uniqueness of the Bible By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 29 Mar 2020 00:00:00 GMT 'So many different writers, in so many different contexts, and yet the same God is revealed by them all. How does this amazing truth help confirm for us the veracity of God’s Word?' Full Article How to Interpret Scripture
en Metatalktail Hour: Open Thread! By metatalk.metafilter.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 03:48:04 GMT Just chat it up, fuzzballs! Full Article
en By Dee Xtrovert in "Where to buy emergency kit items and water rations in Canada?" on Ask MeFi By ask.metafilter.com Published On :: Sun, 25 Nov 2007 08:25:21 GMT People tend to overthink this, and I am speaking from real experience. Just keep the requisite number of gallons of water you'd use in the timespan for which you're planning and change them every couple of years, just for the sake of doing it. They'll last for eons in reality.In an emergency, water's great, but in a longer-term bad situation, it falls pretty far down the list. Unless you're in an unusually arid place, a means to obtain the water necessary to live (maybe not to shower, run the dishwasher or laundry though) will make itself known. And you'd never store enough to matter for *that* long, while a few gallons of cooking oil or a bag of salt would make you a local hero for a long, long time.What people tend to really wish they'd planned for, but don't:1) cooking oil2) toilet paper, paper towels3) spices, herbs, pepper and salt4) sugar, chocolate (especially for its fat), candy, honey5) soap, shampoo, cleaning products6) seeds for easy-to-grow stuff 7) vitamins8) if you can keep a couple of hens, you won't regret it. Nothing's as tradeable (relative to effort) as eggs!Aside from the last three, these things can be stored for a long, long time. And in reality, #6 and #7 would be good for a few years. I am a Sarajevan who lived during the siege with no heat, electricity, water, phone (etc) for the most of a three-year period. What's on the list above is what I was almost always missing. We got "dry" food packages from various sources. These tended to be Truman eggs (good for a little protein, but thats about it), macaroni, rice, powder potatoes, Vietnam-era "biscuits" - supposedly with vitamins, but these were from the late 1960s and of dubious nutritional value.What was missing was: fat, protein, flavor and variety. Boiling was the only way to cook things, due to lack of any cooking oils. To fry something was a rare miracle - even if you were frying reconstituted potatoes from powder. And to have a little pepper or salt was nirvana. Full Article
en By sevenyearlurk in "So how's that work from home working out for you at home?" on MeFi By www.metafilter.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 15:50:40 GMT My work has been doing mandatory, camera-on videoconference "socials" every Friday -- scheduled at 4pm just to twist the knife. I hate them so much and finally told my manager I'm not going to attend anymore. People seem to think that because we're working from home, they're free to push on the boundaries between work life and private life in a way that is super uncomfortable for me and it has definitely been adding to my COVID stress in isolation. Full Article
en By NoxAeternum in "Aren't You a Little Short For a Stormtrooper?" on MeFi By www.metafilter.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 13:50:26 GMT If you're so ignorant that you think any promotion involving a gun on the streets in this day and age is appropriate you are a fucking idiot and detainment is the least of your worries.This is the sort of mentality that leads to minority kids getting killed for having the temerity to play with toy guns. Full Article
en By rikschell in "Third quarter phenomenon: the bacon wars" on MeFi By www.metafilter.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 01:08:08 GMT I've found that about two-thirds of the way through any large knitting or crochet project, most stitchers get bored and antsy and often start a new project instead of finishing, so I'm familiar with this type of thing in another context. But I think anyone who thinks we're in the third quarter of this situation now has another think coming. Full Article
en By mochapickle in "What do you do while waiting for a potentially terminal diagnosis?" on Ask MeFi By ask.metafilter.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 11:09:12 GMT I have a health condition with a high mortality rate, where about one quarter of us die within the first year, and two-thirds of us don't last five years. I'm on Year 4 now and I'm doing okay, and I'm thankful to be receiving excellent care, and I'm generally optimistic that I'll get to stick around for a while.Ramping up to my diagnosis, I thought my life was over. And that was both utterly untrue and completely true at the same time. You can't really know what it's like until you have the actual diagnosis, and even then it's been a world of surprises. You may or may not be able to do some of the things you would like to do.For me to deal with it in a healthy way, I kind of had to create a hard line in the sand. I had to take time to grieve the person I'd been before falling ill, take stock of my accomplishments, and most importantly, I had to REALIZE MY ACCOMPLISHMENTS WERE ENOUGH for my lifetime. If I'd been hit by a bus, my life would have been over in a snap, and whatever I'd accomplished by that point would have had to be enough. Taking that pressure off myself was the kindest thing I could do for myself.I found I had to let a lot of things go and not compare Previous Me to Sick Me. Previous Me was active, enjoyed travel, able to hold down complex and interesting work. Sick Me can't do much of that, but Sick Me does pretty okay for a sick person, and Sick Me does so much more than Dead Me could possibly do! Seriously, compared to Dead Me, Sick Me is a total winner. Sick Me can do a little modest gardening, enough to keep the weeds away. Sick Me can care for my dog and handle the occasional load of laundry. Sick Me finds a lot of joy in my friends and family and internet communities, and has transferred my social life to text, email, and the occasional dining out when the stars align and energy allows. (Metafilter is a lifesaver because I can pick it up whenever my energy level allows and people are so welcoming and understanding.)As you're waiting for news, it's easy to fall to worry. Please be kind to yourself and don't suffer those fears and losses before you need to. Right now, you are there for your children. Don't put yourself through the punishment of losing them multiple times unnecessarily. And don't say you won't ever get to do a painting class -- I took my first painting class last fall and it was a boon to my soul and it renewed my capacity for beauty.In the meantime, take as much control of the situation as you need to. Write down a list of questions to review with your doctors. (I've actually typed them out and distributed copies for them to follow along.) You can google, and it's hard not to, but please never tell a doctor that your questions or concerns are coming from google. Also, do not call yourself a hypochondriac -- what you are feeling is what you are feeling, and your concerns are valid and deserving of respect.Waiting is hard. Please be extra kind to yourself. Full Article
en By mittens in "Really, 2020? I mean, really?" on MeFi By www.metafilter.com Published On :: Sun, 03 May 2020 23:58:07 GMT So like, nobody else finds the timing of this story kinda culturally suspicious? We had years of warnings of Africanized bees, and now we've got deadly Asian hornets, at a moment when anti-China rhetoric has reached a fevered pitch? Literally two of these bugs have been spotted in the US, and the guy who is the focal point of the NYT story isn't sure these were even involved, but now the Paper of Record and the entire American internet is talking about Asian Murder Hornets? Gaaaaaaaah I'm just going back inside for a while. Full Article
en By wenestvedt in "Bye, Amazon" on MeFi By www.metafilter.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 17:47:26 GMT Tim Bray is a smart guy who's been around tech for a long time. Presumably most people here know that, but in case you don't, he's got a very solid nerd pedigree. To have him get near the top of Amazon, and then walk away because of his principles, says both that things at Amazon are really bad, and also that he's got integrity. Yes, he probably has a decent retirement nest egg stashed away, but it's still nice to see someone with privilege (particularly in Silicon Valley) be vocally on the correct, humane side of an issue. Full Article
en By ananci in "ultimate goal: go off grid, live self sufficiently" on Ask MeFi By ask.metafilter.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 03:55:32 GMT I live most of the year in a small, fairly self-contained village of about 8 people. We do use grid power where we can't get micro-hydro. There's not enough sun to make solar workable (we're in a valley). We all have wood stoves to heat and cook, big gardens, forage for food and medicine, and hunt and fish for meat as well as raise chickens and sheep. Our main needs from the outside world are salt, grains, cooking fats, sweeteners, tobacco, and tea/coffee. There is a large vegetable farm our friend owns up the road, and most of us work there during the summer and we get lots of free produce. We have neighbors we visit to harvest from their orchards and wild berries. Being totally self-sufficient all on your own is honestly almost impossible unless you are willing to really, really rough it. The things you need depend on your climate, but outside of a few outlier 'lives in the woods by himself in a cave' folks, this is not easy to achieve.So you need a house. Insulated from heat and cold. This means building a good shelter with air flow and heating. Wood burning stoves are a good solution. If you're in a 4 season climate, you will need between 2 and 4 cords of wood, (60 hours or so of chopping if you know what you're doing) which have to cure for a year before you can use them, even from dead standing. So chainsaw, axes, wedges, and probably a truck. Which means gas. This means money on an ongoing basis.You need water. A well or a spring, or a creek close enough to the source to not need filtering. This all means pipes or tubing and maybe a pump unless your sources is higher than your house. Also costs money, and needs to be replaced eventually. You need food. Most gardens are geared to fruits and veg, and you'll need a lot of space to grow enough to live on without supplementing from stores. Depending on where you are, you might be able to harvest some berries and fruit if you have producing bushes/trees on your land. Or you can plant them and wait until they are mature enough to produce. You will need to freeze, dry or can what you pick or it's gonna go bad before you can eat it all. So you need canning stuff (big pot, grabber tongs, hella mason jars, and those lids have to be replaced every couple years). A root cellar (lots of digging! So much!) will keep your root veggies and apples fresh through the winter if it's deep enough. Wash your cabbages and carrots in bleach water every now and then. You'll add a month to their viability. You'll want a dehydrator for sure. you can build a passive solar one, but we use an electric one as fall fruit in an outdoor space is a bear fun time pantry. You need garden tools. They cost money and need to be replaced periodically.You still need protein. Say you live in a place where you can fish and hunt (in season). You need to pay for licenses for these things. You can trap smaller game, but that's much more challenging. If you are hunting larger game you will need a deep freezer to store (electricity!) or be content with a massive salting / smoking process that will allow you to store meat long term.You also need carbs. Grains need a lot of land space, and the right climate. Getting them to an edible state means you'll need to thresh, winnow, and grind your wheat/oats/spelt etc. Grinding means you need a stone mill. A hand crank meat grinder isnt going to cut it (literally) but you'll want one anyway for other stuff. Potatoes are a good source, and are easy to grow in the right climate. These need to be stored in a cool dry place away from rodents and insects to last all year.You need fats. Wild crafted diets are low in fat, which is not always a good thing. Game meat is low in fat, and you can't make cooking oil from it. Deer tallow will make soap and icky candles. You need bees for good candle wax (and honey!) Raising chickens can get you both fat and eggs. But they need a place to roost that keeps them safe from predators. You'll need fencing to protect your garden from deer and bears. Without an electric fence, your garden and chickens are going to get eaten or trampled. Dogs help with this, as do shotguns.So you need micro hydro (only if you have an accessible, appropriate water source that has enough flow rate) or solar (if you live in a place that gets enough sun all year round.You need medicine. Our mainstays are tinctures and teas. A very small sampling: nettle, mint, mullein, poppy, willow bark, chamomile, chaga, lions mane, spruce tips, elecampane, milky oat, pearly everlasting, ghost pipe, pine pollen, raspberry leaf, and red clover. If you really want to go all out, you need clothing and cleaning cloth, so you'll need to tan leather or weave flax or cotton. We have alpacas we shear for fiber. They are cute and less trouble than llamas, but won't haul anything, so sometimes we have to borrow a donkey if we're pulling things up a steep path. You'll need soap, so save your tallow. I could go on. But really, this is a massive, MASSIVE effort for a single person. Without access to money or the outside world it is going to be a slog. But wow, if you're into it, go try it! I don't recommend you buy some remote property and cut yourself off from the world to see if you can hack it. One bad winter where you run through your firewood? One bad frost or dry summer that kills your crops? There's a reason people tend to settle together.So yeah, you need good land, good water, good equipment, many years to get established, some friendly neighbors, and some way to get money when you need it. Or a bunch of people already doing this that like you and want your help.Go look up a victorian household guide on Project Gutenberg. So many good ideas! They have instructions for making everything from soap to paint.Good luck! Full Article
en By chavenet in "So how's that work from home working out for you at home?" on MeFi By www.metafilter.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 16:08:16 GMT Hire good people; review their work; correct errors.This is the "eat food, not too much, mostly plants" of modern management. Full Article
en By nebulawindphone in "Third quarter phenomenon: the bacon wars" on MeFi By www.metafilter.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 03:24:46 GMT Oh for fuck's sake. There's some really interesting stuff in these links, most of it has nothing to do with the three-quarter point of anything, and none of it is making any kind of claim about when this will end. It's a bunch of interesting stories about how people fail under isolation, and fail harder when relief still feels out of reach. Sure, one thing that can make it feel out of reach is knowing you've still got a quarter of your mission left. Another thing is having no clue how long things will last, which hopefully we can all agree is relevant? Can we take a deep breath, pretend that Athanassiel chose a pull quote that wasn't total pedant-bait, and start over? Full Article
en Georgia Playlist: Glenn Jones By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 17 Dec 2019 21:40:37 +0000 Glenn Jones got his start in the music industry at a young age, signing to gospel label Savoy Records at just 17 years old. Later, his single “Here I Go Again” reached the top of the R&B charts in 1991. Now, Jones is based in Atlanta and releasing new music under his independent label, Talent Room Entertainment. On Second Thought invited Glenn Jones into the studio to share his additions to the Georgia Playlist. Full Article