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16 April, 2024

Why Still No Vertical Farms? #1

They were all the vogue a few years ago. Going to save the world from famines. FSM knows we could use them now, hey? What with the climate warming, and all?

If you want to hear what's going on, Two Bit da Vinci has a video. It's a 14m watch and lays out some issues that have seen Vertical Farms (I prefer the term I think I may have coined, Agricultural Vertical Farms or AVFs) go from venture capitalists' darlings to shunned money sinks. And it started me thinking. I pinned a lot of hopes on AVFs becoming a real thing. And they almost would have, if it wasn't for those pesky people building them... 

Why Are Vertical Farms Failing?

There were a few spreadsheets in the video near the latter half and they didn't paint a good picture. Because they used "agricultural technology trained" staff because their whole system of techno-farming is still experimental. Whole vertical farms have been wiped out by something as simple as mold. (True - at least one farm had to be turned into a warehouse because once it's in an ideal space with plant-friendly air and surfaces and lighting and recirculating air and water, it stays around...)

I can't recall the figures Ric used for "blue collar" labour. But upwards of $24,000 and the largest cost, easily outpacing electricity costs. Hang on - weren't they "agricultural technology trained" staff? I can't remember, but I do remember thinking that if you put people into the same space as your crops, you pretty much guaranteed that something random and not good would happen. A person who has mold in their home forgets and because they have a cold, bring their handkerchief into the grow area. Or sneezes...

There are people who say that greenhouse operations are among the most productive grow operations out there, and produce by far the best, most plentiful, and cost-effective solutions for a range of food crops. Then again, I've heard of greenhouses also wiped out by introduced pests and plant pathogens. 

Is There A Solution?

If you believe the doomers, no. It's always going to happen. (Which, I'll explain a bit later, would be a pity for colonies on the moon or any other moon or planet...) But Nature's done all this groundwork for us, and we're shutting it out. I think that's not the best approach. 

If you believe the bean counters, having to have plant biologists and botanical specialists on staff is another game-ender. Again - not the best approach that I can imagine. 

The solution is to rethink, rethink, and then get a man and a dog to sit in the control room of each AVF. The man to keep an eye on the computer and the dog t keep the man from touching the computer. (I know, a joke so old Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace chuckled about it... Git offa my lawn...

You know what doesn't bring pathogens and unwanted lifeforms into an otherwise pristine sealed environment? Keeping people out. Filtering the incoming air. Using the AVFs to scrub CO2 out of the filtered air. 

And you know what fixes pathogens and pests? Their natural antagonists. Certain bacteria and insects devour mold. Others, pollinate and hunt down pest species. Twenty-seven bazillion microbes and minutiae in soil, they balance out pests and nutritional deficiencies. Humans, don't. 

AVFs are good for fast-growing leafy greens, some vine crops, and some larger crops. But they can't be the total expenditure we make on improved agriculture. They can't be the Saviours Of Suburbs. They belong out in the fields. And there IS a solution. 

What's The Basis For This Article?

I've thought about this - a lot. Since I realised that solar farms were the way of the future, that our soil in heavily-farmed areas was becoming so denatured and impoverished that we were eating foods that were of lower nutritional density than the same crops in the same locations a century earlier due to that bastardising the soil,  and some trace elements and nutrients are all but gone from the food.

This all adds up to the whole list of challenges the human race is facing. We've poisoned ourselves with plastics, PFAS, and lead, to name a few, and it's affected our fertility rate to the point where it'll become a crisis in this generation. Not helping has been our profligate waste, and those waste dumps releasing greenhouse gases more potent than CO2 at an ever-increasing rate. Methane. From food waste. Food that's already nutritionally poor, and we throw between a quarter and a half of it away. 

(Estimates vary, depending on if, as well as the estimated one-third wastage rate of all the food we buy, you also count crops that farmers plough back into the ground because the supermarkets don't buy it - because they realise that we won't buy it if it has the slightest blemish. Either way - attributable to us, not those bastard supermarkets. Something to think about when you chuck out that half a cabbage you bought, but only needed half of for your recipe...)

We need a complete overhaul of our food systems. From coming up to going into us to coming back out of us. 

From In To Out, To In To Out, Again.

What's most missing from our supply chain? End-to-end connection. I don't care if that's a conventional farm growing food the old-fashioned way, someone's aquaponics system in their backyard, a greenhouse farm, a robotic vineyard, the Vegetable Production System (Veg-01) on the ISS, or AVFs. 

Of all of them, Veg-01 comes closest to encapsulating the problem. I had a quick look at the system that the Vegan Society wants to see in the ISS, and it's - simple. And lacking. The system in the movie The Martian came a bit closer, but was still miles off anything that might work for more than one rotation. (Aside from the inconvenient fact that any food crop grown in Martian soil would kill anyone eating it.)

And all - ALL - of them have those other great big huge disconnect with the way growing anything works. Everything we depend on, is circular. We breathe out CO2, the plants absorb it. The plants breathe out O2, we breathe it back in. The thing that powers that magic cycle is the energy of the Sun. 

Similarly, a rabbit (or human) eats a carrot, they absorb all those nutrients that the carrot extracted from the soil and packaged as sugars and trace elements we evolved to make use of to power our activities and our growth. 

The first cycle, that's circular. O2 into human, CO2 out of human, CO2 into plant, O2 out of plant, repeat. The second one used to be closed. Carrot nutrients into animal, excrement our of animal on the ground, excrement into plant, nutrients out of plant. 

But we go to great lengths to mismanage our waste cycles at every step of the way. We like to have our food crops close to hand, but our shit as far away from ourselves as possible. The nutrient deficit gets bigger and bigger, the soil gets poorer and poorer, plants get less nutritionally dense. I've omitted a HUGE step in that cycle. 

Plants don't use our crap directly - the soil (with millions of tiny lifeforms in every single teapsoonful) first converts it to plant nutrients. THEN the plants hoe into it and use sunlight and photosynthesis to convert it into a nutritious carrot. A carrot that's BTW covered in nutritious microbes that made the soil fertile, and that, instead of allowing to pass through our systems, we wash off carrots with (usually) a bleach rinse, which kills all that microlife that was supposed to go into us and build up our immune system, our gut biome, and end up in our crap to further build up the soil we grew the next carrot in.

Did you notice an "ick!" factor creeping in there? That's why we're in this situation. I'm sorry, but your squeamishness is killing you and everyone around you. 

Sewage

We currently either kill our sewage and pump it into oceans, or convert it to a compost and try to sell it to farmers  - who try to avoid it because of that "ick!" reaction you experienced earlier - or dry it and burn it. 

And one of the reasons we do that is because of another of your habits. Drugs. Illicit drugs, and prescribed drugs. When you partake, it ends up in your wastes. Your wastes, in a well-designed city or town, end up in the sewage, which is as a result loaded with antibiotics enough to cure a third world country of all its sicknesses, enough illicit drugs to power three Splendour In The Grass festivals, and enough rat poison and insecticides to demolish a farm's worth of every "pest" species. 

No-one back when we were first designing ways to get rid of the shi in the streets thought about how best to get it back to the farms that grew the food that we ate back then and turned into that shit. And as a result, we now have a perfectly fucked food system that has pipes that go nowhere, pipes that go to the wrong destinations, and starting points that aren't capable of producing what each articular pipe was meant to carry. 

Farmers whose 

The Answers Won't Be Easy.

A Deeper Dive Into What's Wrong.

At the moment, our toilets are wrong. Our sewage systems are wrong. Our cities are wrong. Because we started with the purpose of increasing productivity and speeding progress - not per se of course, but because we wanted life to become easier through our ingenuity and cooperative efforts - and didn't think about the planet as a life support system which is what it in fact is. That's in fact why I also referred to Moon / Mars / other planet colonies. They too will need carefully-balanced ecosystems - and then try not to throw a spanner in them like we've done here. 

I'll start at the farms, since I started this article with them. AVFs are a small part of the equation. By producing some food in a small footprint we're in effect freeing up farmland for other purposes. (Which, knowing us, won't be to regenerate the planetary ecosystems, although that should be our priority right now...)

Conventional farms should stick to things that can't be produced better and easier in greenhouses and AVFs. They should also stop specialising and monocultures. They need diversity, the ecosystem needs diversity, to manage properly. If you can grow spinach in an AVF then rather than give over twenty acres to spinach, use that to grow a range of other greens that aren't so easy to grow vertically. Split your fields between cereals and legumes and animal grazing. 

Plant rows of trees between fields. Not just local native forest trees, but maybe a few rows of local fruit trees. Run a few pigs here, some sheep there. And rotate plot usages where you can. Leave nature strips, let nature have them back. 

Greenhouse and orchard lots are going to need to do much the same. Surround each stand of trees, each greenhouse, with natural habitat. Find new places to grow food. I've mooted using the land under solar panels to grow crops intensely. It's one option. Moving AVFs  near solar panel farms is another. 

AVFs themselves need to undergo some pretty deep changes before they become viable.

Ditch the humans! At present I see so many verticals with medium trays that are made for humans to handle, plant, and harvest. What sort of BS is this? Humans introduce (as I said a little while back) most of the pathogens that destroy AVFs. 

The stacks are spaced so that humans can get in between them and handle those trays, there are floors for those humans to get in amongst the trays. There are complex mechanisms to rotate stacks for the convenience of those humans. 

And nature - specifically, a diverse biome - is zealously kept out while the walking pathogen-spreaders are specially catered for. 

All of our AVFs are in development phases, our greenhouses and roboticised farms are in development, alpha, or beta stages. There are no "release" versions anywhere. Imagine transporting ANY of these technologies from a broadacre farm to a cutting-edge AVF to another planet. It's Destination: F, isn't it? There's a zero chance it'll keep the initial colonists alive, let alone another generation. 

So our whole approach has been wrong all this time. To how and where we live, how and where we grow our food, and how and where we deal with our waste. There's a LOT of infrastructure involved. And notice I'm steering clear of the whole fossil fuel debate... 

I won't steer clear of the whole "pests eating a peach" thing though. You know the one, bugs that are born to eat peaches because they've lived all their life on a peach, and they eat and eat until the weaker ones drop off and die, and finally the last surviving bug is on its deathbed clinging to a shrivelled peach pit and going "But it was all going so well! What happened?"

Summary:

ALL of agriculture needs to change.
ALL of city infrastructure needs to change.
ALL of our transport infrastructure needs to change.

It all has to change by a handful of years. Welcome to the peach pit. We're sooo screwed.

To Be Continued

This has reminded me about several thoughts I've had on the subject of farming, and I'll have to go find those older articles, knock the concepts in them into a more cohesive shape, and post them as I get time. Life's still very up and down at the moment, and will continue to be so for a year or maybe two. But with your help in donations, my beloved wife and I will weather that storm and I'll be able to devote more time to writing and Making and sharing projects with you again. 

So please, share this article and others off any of my blogs to give me some reach, if you don't know about my other blogs use the newspaper icon below to see my latest twenty posts across all my blogs, and while you're there subscribe to my once-a-week newsletter. 

And finally - do make a small donation via any of the links included below, and consider making it a monthly one... 


Stay awesome, check back often, and enjoy!

.

10 April, 2024

I'm A Craarrppp!

Drinks like a fish, flops about like a fish, has a decided enmity for any shapely carp that crosses his path. Perhaps he's had a chance encounter end in disaster in the past? Wouldn't put it past this shagmeister. Or perhaps he thought he was merely fondling a trevally. (Sorry - you have to sit through a whole ten seconds or so of preamble to get to the trevally. Life's tough.) Or maybe - who knows - he's not really part of the Government and there's a "higher authority" who's judged the whole world only worth destroying and not judged Baaaaarnaby at all for being the drunken philandering pile of shit that he is. 

Ah crap. I've just about used up all the time I have for Joyce and that party. Put the LNP in the bin where they belong.


Keep The Bastards Honest!
(and sober FFS!)


01 April, 2024

Social Media Platforms Compared - Where Would You Like To Be Today?

Why Are We Still On FB? It's become a pile of stuff (euphemism) and basically assaults us using psyops and propaganda, and is now blocking news from Canada and Australia. So why have we not moved on?

I like The Conversation, it's an alternate news resource like The Guardian and The New Daily that offer good alternatives to MSM Murdoch-opoly. I haven't gotten my news from Facebook for years, other than friends and family stuff, but for everyone in Canada and Australia that were hoping to get their local news, bad news. Facebook are pulling an Elon - refusing to pay their way. So tell me again - Why Are We Still On FB?

I backed right off FB for a few years, found some great alternative sites where the tendrils of corporate control aren't ever going to reach. Some are independent and trying to become the next big thing, some are federated and thus fiercely independent of any corporate interferings. I only come back to FB because of inertia. And it ain't my inertia, I've pretty much ballistic'd myself outta there. I just wish more friends and family would come over to the Good Side.

When Musk turned the bluebird to Xitter, I bailed for another platform that isn't ever going to be able to be screwed over like Twitter - and FB-Insta-Threads - are. I found more than a couple more that are all good, all have a decent user participation, and Zuck and Musk and Bezos et al aren't going to get their hooks into.

When Youtube got to be a shittified platform I found many alternatives, one that had almost all the video creators I enjoy, several independent platforms, and a few Federated ones. 

The No-No Go Zone:

For me, the following platforms are anathema. I can't freely post what I want, and it's one of the reasons to Get Out Of Dodge. Read that link - it puts the case very well. On FB and Google properties, you're at their mercy. I can't count the number of platforms and apps Google created, that attracted a large userbase - and then they shut it down. 

On FB, I can't format a post with different typefaces or font weights, but there used to be one case where one could. You'd think a rather easy editor and database change would have been - but no, they chose to do experiments on some of their users by slewing their newsfeeds, they still do that to this day and are now doing it to our local news resources. 

The advantage of going to independent platforms is that a) it breaks your "brain rust" that you got from the Old Order of social sites, b) it's hard to leave a cosy comfy little cave even though it's been filling up with feces down there near the servers and c) where will all your friends go? Will they go to the same services as you? You took ten to twenty years to cultivate that particular bunch of friends. (And yet you seemingly can't get even 10% of them to take the plunge with you. Some friends, huh?)

Facebook's parent company Meta owns and operates FB, Instagram, and Threads, all of which started out as good ideas but became enshittified. Instagram started off as a great independent thing, was bought by FB/Meta and the developer promised free rein -but wouldn't you know it, they were lied to and let go. It turned into poop pretty much from that moment on. 

Threads was meant as a competitor to Twitter, but I think it was only ever considered as a  REALLY distant sort-of maybe kinda replacement because of Elon Ego and the Xitterapocalypse. Which brings me to Xitter, the shitterbox of IM platforms now. And 'nuff said about that.

Youtube started to become a terrible platform for smaller creators quite a while back, and rang its death-knell for me when they started encouraging the brainless short-format videos over longer more thoughtful content. 

They were doing it to compete with Tiktok, which I've visited a few times and I'm still trying to get the mental stain out of my head. There's crap and there's crapper-worthy and then there are short-form videos. (Even FB has gotten onto that bandwagon, so maybe a majority of short-form content is a good way to tell which platforms are enshittified beyond redemption?)

So far I've provided no links because that's just the problem - they're so well known that you can find them on your own, and the noise is drowning out some good and very useable platforms, so I won't give those bigger platforms air. 

Here are some alternatives, with my personal preference rating:

The Better Choices

MeWe

MeWe is an almost perfect FB replacement. It has Newsfeeds, a lot of Chat channels associated with every Timeline, Group, and Page, so that in mnany ways it thrashes the hell out of FB. It's also extremely privacy-oriented, so it's hard to make Public posts and that makes it hard initially to follow particular Pages Groups or people because nothing is public by default. It's also hard to share your MeWe content to another platform because - privacy. They're now experimenting with federation but once again it's going to the walled garden approach in that the federation mechanism they use is not open. That "walled garden" approach is admirable, but also the one main reason I find it hard to rate it more than a 5.

BlueSky

BlueSky is made by the people that made Twitter. It's a work in progress but very useable and already populated with a huge number of users from all over. It takes almost no getting used to if you used early Twitter. It's still missing some features like multiposts, but it's also being worked on constantly and dropping out improvements from time to time. I have to give it a solid 8. I'm not sure if registrations are open by now but if not I have invites to give away. 

Matrix.

Matrix is a an open framework, you can share a document or workspace across different platforms or direct on the web, and while it's not social networking per se, it does allow you to do things that otherwise you'd have to use a proprietary and thus controlled-by-others platform for. Not being proprietary means no proprietor will suddenly decide to enshittify it for personal, financial, or political reasons. 

This is the main reason I'm suggesting these alternatives at all, the very real (and now proven over and over by Meta/FB, X(itter), Google/Alphabet, and all the other disappointing original Old Order of apps) enshittification going on in those apps we once loved and that are now become just plain abusive. The high investment you have to make in getting an app to access into Matrix (at the moment I've only ever used Element) and so forth means I give this an 8 for concept but a 3 for usability.

Nebula. 

Nebula is a subscription-based video platform like YouTube, and in fact many of the video creators on there are YouTubers, the difference is Nebula isn't ad-supported but rather based around a very reasonable subscription. As with all the other sevices I mention , it's here to allow you to avoid the Old Order of now-enshittified content. Rated: 8.

DailyMotion, Vimeo, Twitch, D-Tube.

These are all video sharing and streaming platforms that do what YouTube does, some with subscriptions, some free, all accessible and less likely to enshittify than YT. There's also Peertube on the federated networks but I'll get to the Fediverse in a second. Ratings: PeerTube: 7, others also solid 7s.

And here's the Fedi:

The Fediverse - MissKey, Mastodon, Peertube, PixelFed, and a whole galaxy of others. 

This link will take you to a guide of Fediverse services, server instances, and give you some idea of how much social media ground the Fedi covers. It's impressive. 

Mastodon is one of the best known Fedi services because, well - Elon Ego / Xitterapocalypse had people trying them all. It's all of what Twitter was but without algorithms to direct chosen content to you as X and the FB properties do, and it has a different interface and terminology for stuff you already used in FB ab Twitter.

Because of that, a lot of people felt overwhelmed and went off Fediverse stuff. But it's at its core just the same principles as those that guided you to create the social graph you now have on the carp platforms. I'm rating it an 8.

But the whole Fediverse of different servers has to get at least a 9 from me because they cover such a wide range of platforms and services, are pretty much undisruptable being so widely distributed, and did I mention they all interoperate? There's even a plugin for WordPress to connect into the Fediverse. 

I predict that with a few more people aboard, this could become a whole new paradigm of Internet. There 13,000 server instances around the world, meaning it has staying power. Seven million people use the various Fedi services, that cover every aspect of online social activity from IM chat to chat to social networking to forums and even blog platforms.

One upside of the Fediverse is that ALL the servers talk the same language. If you happen to come across a mentioned post that mentions a good creator on PeerTube (yep, the YT alternative) and have their handle (@brilliantcreator@diode.zone, which happens to be where one Peertube group serves from) you can enter that handle into Mastodon, find follow and -  -  -  you will now see their Peertube posts - including videos - scrolling in your home feed. And be able to reply!

First, a better look at the Fediverse. This link will take you to a guide that shows the range of different services, and each services has a range of servers located all around the globe, most maintained by private individuals or small companies as a social service. I'll write more on the whole Fediverse as I write a (short, not comprehensive) list of types of services that are available in the Fediverse. In fact, here's another great list of resources.

Choosing servers.

It's important to know that the choices here are pretty wide-ranging. If you want to mainly interact with a group of Allies, there are servers maintained by LGBTQI+ communities, if you want to join a bunch of computer geeks, there's a server for that too. 

Then the choice - IM style chat, longer-form chat, discussion-group / forum, photo sharing, video sharing, blogging? Just like with the established and now thoroughly enshittificated Old Order social apps, you'll want to join several. 

Also consider: the service server's location, the community registered on that server, and the size of the community. 

  • The location helps with language, and also ensures you get to see a fair proportion of local content. 
  • The community of people makes a difference. This will ensure you see a fair proportion of content relevant to you. 
  • And the size of the community matters too. A server with a lot of users may tend to offer long-term service, but it can become lagged, and your local newsfeed will be quite frantic. A tiny server with fewer than a hundred users is likely to be a closeknit group and may not offer you the content you want. 

Notwithstanding those three points, just joining ANY server is a good first step, and a larger one might be helpful in the beginning. You can always move stuff to another server later. It's been made really easy, and I encourage it.

I initially joined a large server some two - three years ago, lost interest, and then the "Xittastrophe" happened. So I promptly forgot I already had an account, and started another one on another big server. mastodon.social. It was noisy and busy but I got good tips on where to find server instance lists, found another more local 

found that joining a Mastodon instance that's operated by a few individuals and with a few thousand users here in Australia was a good move. For a start, my local newsfeed is populated by more Aussies, for another, that sorts out the language issues, and - more importantly - this is a medium sized server in terms of membership. That means it's not going to get hammered by tens f thousands of people accessing it, but it's large enough to avoid instability and any kind of radicalisation. (Not like, ahem, various organisations have become lately...)

The other thing to keep in mind is that this is probably not going to be your only account. You might want to join a chat service, a video service, a discussion and forum server, and a social platform that's a bit more FB-like. And you can. Right now I bet you have a FB account, a X(itter) account, another on a forum site like reddit. 

It's the same on the Fedi. The only difference is that on those other accounts, you can log in FB and see your messages from X in your newsfeed, can you? If you still have Flickr, will you see your friend's hoilday snaps while logged into X or FB? You can in the Fedi. 

You'll still need to have accounts on Friendica, Mastodon, pixelfed, and Peertube. But you can follw accounts from one platform, on your account on another platform. And reply to them. That right there is the beauty of Federated services.

Mastodon.

Mastodon evolved out of Diaspora, the OG federated chat service. It's the best place to get started, and also the best place to get over the initial learning curve. If you follow that link above it'll take you to the easiest way to pick a good server to join. (Some servers are occupied by photographers, some by technical people, the majority are social. In almost every case, starting with a server in your country is the best option.) Once you've found a community, you'll get lots of news from that community, and then from the broader Mastodon community worldwide. 

And once you have a few followers and follows here, you can start deciding which other services will interest you, create accounts there too, and then follow people across accounts and services. 

Friendica. MissKey. Pleroma. 

Much like Mastodon, but with a wider range of features making them more like a FB alternative with a Mastodon-alike streams setup. The thing is, like all the other Fediverse services, is that they can interoperate, you can join one but follow people on other services.

pixelfed. PeerTube. 

Miss good old photo-sharing apps? Like what Instagram and Flickr once were? pixelfed. Youtube? Try PeerTube.

Lemmy. Mobilizon. 

These are designed more for discussion groups, forums, link sharing, and the like. 

Writefreely. Plume.

These are writing and blogging services. There's even, as mentioned, a plugin for WordPress that allows you to reach the Fediverse audience. 

Fed.brid.gy. 

An interesting one because you can add a website such as a blog, then follow it just as though it were an individual on any of the Fedi services, and see when new stuff gets posted. Great for giving blogs an identity people can follow in their timelines wherever they are. 

I already added one of my blogs, you can follow @ohaicorona.com@fed.brid.gy or also follow it on https://fed.brid.gy/web/ohaicorona.com from any web browser, it's a great idea. 

And look - most of the Fediverse is operated by individuals off their own back, they carry the costs themselves (or some may have a link where you can donate to help cover costs) and that's one of the attractions of the Fedi - you can talk to the person running your server instance, and they're generally the nicest people. Try getting support out of Google or FB or (these days) X(itter)...

But also, and right on schedule, this happened. For the first time in the year and a bit I've been on this server instance.

This kind of thing does happen: 

Went to log into mastodon.au only to be presented with the following message:

Due to some scheduled maintenance, one of the links between two of our datacenters is down.

This should IN NO WAY have broken anything. But it did. It turns out that "someone" needed an extra 10gbit link in a certain area, and replaced a simple optical joiner with a switch, instead of running a NEW optical cable. Network switches need power. Two optical fibres joined together don't. Now, because that "someone" didn't want to run a new optical cable to keep everything isolated AND managed to not write it down in the network map, that switch was installed in the an area that was scheduled for a power outage this weekend.

The work was meant to be finished by this morning (Sunday), but the outage window is until 6pm tonight. As this is out of my control, and as I explicitly agreed and confirmed that they can do this and it won't affect anything, I can't even go and ask them to hurry up. Sigh.

For anyone concerned about data loss, everything is up, I can get into everything out-of-band, it's just that they can't reach the internet.

Feel free to ask me stuff, I'm 'xxxxxx' (obscured by me. Ted/PTEC3D, to maintaion Rob's privacy) on pretty much every social, but I don't get notifications from the Xitter, try anywhere else!

Sorry!

In this case Rob was hit with an issue where the service provider he uses (just the way I use Digital Pacific ) made an unrecorded blunder and he's now stuck waiting for them to fix the issue. You take it on the chin because Rob's set up a system which is now quite large, to handle the amount of Aussie users he was getting. I've asked where I can make a regular donation but he's steadfastly refused to accept any. All out of his pocket. 

I lost a day of connectivity but guess what? I was still following quite a few regular contacts on MissKey and several other Fedi services, that's where the power of federation really shines. I hadn't lost touch with the people I follow. I also have two alt accounts on two other servers, but because I knew everything was going to be fixed in a few more hours I didn't even bother to fire either alt account up. Try THAT when Elon shuts his toy site down in a fit of pique...


 

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