Elder at Anchor Church Regina.
Backscratch aficionado.
Regina, SK // Treaty 4
| Anchor Church | https://home.anchorchurch.ca |
| Anchor Church | https://home.anchorchurch.ca |
The thing on the left is a common adornment of streetside utility poles, attached maybe a meter off the ground. It is colored with highly-reflective yellow paint, and clearly intended to help night drivers avoid the pole.
I imagined that it was manufactured in three steps:
1. 3mm sheet metal cut to size
2. Spray-painted yellow
3. Little rectangles cut out with a die
This raised questions: why all the little holes? Does it improve visibility? And what do you do with all those little rectangles afterward?
Eventually I realized: this thing isn't the primary product. It's the waste material left over from manufacturing the little rectangles!
Every 20 meters or so, every highway has a little wooden or plastic post on its margin, topped with one of those little rectangles, to help people stay on the road. At night you can see a long line of them stretching out, following the curve of the road.
But after you punch out the rectangles from the sheet metal, what do you do with the leftover sheet? Might as well nail it to a utility pole somewhere, since it's already painted.
So that cleared that up. At least, I was satisfied enough that I didn't look into it to verify my guess.
Today, though, there was a new wrinkle, seen at right. Apparently not enough waste material was available to meet demand, because this one appears to have been manufactured for the purpose. I didn't think to feel it to find out what it was made of, but I suspect vinyl.
(Also, it has been installed sideways. Normally they are oriented as the one on the left.)
Mastodon isn't perfect.
But the fact a social network exists that is completely free to use
has no venture capital investors
has no shareholders to answer to
has no growth targets
with a web interface with zero tracking cookies
and mobile apps with zero trackers at all
with ten thousand server administrators who donate their time for user safety
is - in my opinion - mindbogglingly cool, given the state of the world we live in. Not everything has to be shit. People make things better.
STUDY: Car and truck tires are responsible for *one quarter* of all the microplastics in the environment.
(Friction degrades the rubber in the tires into a form of microplastic.)
https://www.plasticstoday.com/medical/tire-wear-a-major-source-of-microplastics-say-researchers