That's very disheartening, all in all.
Damage
Uhm, if you've worked all your life, you deserve retirement, regardless of the job you held.
Well, there are only so many places in the world where coconut trees can grow... Although they're increasing.
CEOs are on the clock 24hours a day after all, and keep working way into old age! Not to mention all the investment they usually do, that's a lot of work, and they do it until they die!
Uhmmm... At this point, what if you guys set up like a GoFundMe for everybody? Like you all agree to put a part of your wages into this common GoFundMe, which is a small cost all in all, and when the time comes, each worker gets their own payout! You could even have it pay monthly, to make sure that nobody can waste all their fund too early and end up destitute.
From this dude's wiki page:
His popularizing treatise on algebra, compiled between 813–33 as Al-Jabr (The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing), [...] The English term algebra comes from the short-hand title of his aforementioned treatise (الجبر Al-Jabr, transl. "completion" or "rejoining").
Patient gamers at least have the steam deck option now
Here we have door-to-door pick up now, which replaced dumpsters as a way to encourage recycling: you have limited pick-ups for unsorted trash, the bin has a transponder and a barcode, if you go over the limit you pay extra (albeit very little), while recyclables have unlimited pick-ups; but if they catch you putting normal trash in the recyclables they can fine you.
For door to door we sort as follows:
- bags: plastic, cans and cartons (such as milk)
- paper bin: cardboard and paper, but only if clean (no pizza boxes!)
- compost bin: food leftovers and such, as well as used paper tissues
Then we have dumpsters for glass and dumpsters for gardening refuse, such as wood, leaves, cut grass. Now we have one for cooking oil as well.
For batteries there are usually bins near some stores or at workplaces.
Everything else you have to take to the recycling center, say metal, building materials, furniture... Usually each community has one, when I lived in the country side, my 3000-people village had its own. For furniture in some places you can arrange a curbside pick-up.
All of this is the same for urban and rural areas, though there are small differences between regions as the recycling facilities can be different. For example in some places milk cartons go in the paper bin instead of the plastic one. Of course rural in my area is probably way less rural than most of Utah.
As for caps, yeah, those are now attached to the bottle.. I guess the recycling facility has a way to separate and sort them.
IoT gonna IoT
Do you make potato fries in a pan?
Take it to the recycling center? Here they recently introduced a few oil dumpsters as well
I think an older Ryzen and an RX590 can be had for decent prices, no?