With rent prices in this kind of fantasy land in bigger metroploes like San Fran or NYC , I’d doubt you’d find tenants. Maybe in rural laboratories it might be an issue but not the cities. That’s just my thoughts. Might be wrong.
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That’s a very interesting video. But I still have to ask WHY is it ok for an office to lack the lighting and escape routes when the same is not ok for residential areas (which was the main reason given)? It makes no sense to me. Water and sewage poses no problem because large office buildings have to account for mutiple toilets on each floor. Electricity is also a non issue (I’d argue electricity usage would vastly decrease when coverted). That just leaves shared air circulation and conditioning which also shouldn’t be an issue since it would just be maintained through the landlord (and could even be cheaper for the individual since they don’t have to pay for their own systems but just a flat fee on the rent).
They could just rent it out. Or convert it and sell. But nooo that’s too much hassle
Beliriel@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.ml•The world’s largest democracy is collapsing before our eyes
5·3 years agoI think we also underestimate just the sheer mass that India has. The chances that you talk to an Indian on an English website is pretty high.
The auto-tldr bot was/is pretty useful
Beliriel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@beehaw.org•The end of Reddit? Why the blackout is still going – and what happens nextEnglish
1·3 years agoSame brother. Same. I’m actually surprised how good the Jerboa app works. I thought it be way crappy since everything now is scrambling to get away from reddit and catching mass exoduses is a hard thing to do. But it’s smooth as soft serve ice cream. I think that’s why Lemmy might work. It’s not a single break, it’s more like an ABS and it’s kinda magical (to me) how you can go and discover new communities. If one instance breaks you can always go to another one and it works almost the same atleast on a technical level.
Beliriel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@beehaw.org•The end of Reddit? Why the blackout is still going – and what happens nextEnglish
1·3 years agoWhy not? I honestly loved Reddit as a community. Sure it’s toxic like just about every online space but people actually weighed in with their own actual opinions. Also it was just about the fastest and easiest place to get other peoples experience and opinion on something you’re not sure about yourself.
I can’t even list the times I googled “<new gadget> worth it reddit” and almost without fail I got a good discussion about pros and and cons, what to watch out for and alternatives. No place on the internet comes even close to that. Youtube, Insta and FB are pushing ads and sponsored content like mofos. Tumbler shot themselves in the foot with the no porn stuff (atleast it seemsto recover a bit). Twitter is just a cesspool of noise and I never joined it. The only places close to Reddit in actual useful and fast human conversation is Stackoverflow and the stackexchange communities.
Beliriel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@beehaw.org•The end of Reddit? Why the blackout is still going – and what happens nextEnglish
2·3 years agoI replaced RIF with Jerboa. So far it seems to work great. Even the layout in the comments looks nice.


I believe working 2-3 days a week would actually be enough and with the right organization method would allow even crucial 24/7 positions to be manned (like nursing and care staff). Plus you’d basically never be understaffed because you’d have lots of backups.
8 hours a month sounds a bit too utopian to me.