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hamtron5000 hamtron5000 @slrpnk.net

wandering library tech guy. me: anticapitalist, ecosocialist, fat, nerdy. interests: solarpunk, Buddhism, permaculture, everything.

Posts 16
Comments 43
praxispost
  • verdict: it was not terribly helpful. gonna try Hugo next. https://gohugo.io/getting-started/quick-start/

  • praxispost
  • i don't know if this link is great, but it's one that i'm going to read and try to follow along with. https://stablepoint.com/blog/how-to-host-your-own-website

  • praxispost
  • to answer my own question, i have planted two rows of potatoes this spring - my first garden that i've ever been involved with! and yes, two rows of potatoes is barely a "garden" but it's a start. i want to grow food i will actually eat, so we planted an apple tree last fall and potatoes this spring. i am hoping to also do a three sisters garden this year, but we'll see. i also potted a Scotch Bonnet plant that i bought accidentally online while trying to buy actual Scotch Bonnet peppers, ha! this will be great for the Nigerian-style jollof rice i make on weekends, and anything Caribbean inspired that i cook which calls for that specific flavor and heat profile.

    i also started a Calibreserver based out of my home server setup, which will be accessible to the neighborhood i live in - i bought a domain name and am learning about what all is necessary to statically host a website. this is the first part of my dream to start being a community sysadmin for my neighborhood, where i can provide resources that are freely available to my neighbors, and we can all add content and features as time, skill, and desire allow.

    finally, i have dusted off Laika, my old trusty two-wheeled steed. she belonged to a coworker's husband who never rode, so i got it for free last fall! I have not historically been a cyclist so I am working towards it. I bought a rack i need to add to the bike, and hope to get some different tires. add in a trailer, and you have a great errand-runner, which is my goal here.

  • praxispost

    (image via daily-dragon-drawing on tumblr, specific post here)

    happy spring to many - here in western Colorado we're vacillating between warm and cold in a true, classic Colorado manner.

    i do these posts about praxis periodically because i seek inspiration and motivation for concrete actions i can take in my life, and you, the community of people who are into solarpunk, are creative powerhouses. with that in mind, what kind of projects are you all working on, or have you seen going down? any ideas that you're excited about doing as the weather gets warmer?

    thanks for being rad, friends.

    14
    Discussion: what would you do in a post-work society?
  • oh man, this is a great question. i'd rest, first and foremost, for kind of a long while. i'm chronically exhausted right now. then, when my body starts to feel like it can do things again i'd love to grow food, write poems, play music, hike, explore, and interact with people over shared food and conversation.

  • Ideation - What to Run?

    Imagine I want to create a local internet for my community. Things that will be useful, helpful, and easy to use. Ideally, setup/maintenance would be relatively straightforward too, since I will for the time being at least be running this solo.

    So if I'm going to be the community SysAdmin but also have free choice of what to run, what would you think about the following ideas of things to share with people?

    -Radarr (movies) -Sonarr (TV shows) -Lidarr (music) -Calbire (or Readarr I guess, for books) -Jellyfin (media streaming) -Nextcloud (file sharing)

    And then as for me myself, I'd probably set up a Graylog Open instance to aggregate issues, and have a couple of separate physical servers for these different things.

    Do you think that would be helpful/useful/fun for getting community members to think about the potential of hyperlocal internet?

    Alternatively, are folks doing this already? If so, how do you have this kind of thing set up?

    If I'm dreaming big, I would also love to set up a mesh relay to offer this intranet stuff to the community.

    I'm hoping that these ideas are solarpunk enough and selfhosting enough to warrant community feedback.

    Basically, I guess, are there any other community SysAdmins out there doing this kind of work?

    Thanks for your time.

    4
    Early Spring Praxis Post
  • oh yeah, the Praxis test! I remember that from back in the day when i was in school to be a teacher. that's the subject-matter test, right? like, if you're going to be a math teacher it's the test that proves you can do math?

  • Early Spring Praxis Post
  • i'm no expert, but what we ended up using as mulch were wood chips from a tree we had to get removed from a fenceline. it seems to have worked for us.

  • Early Spring Praxis Post
  • that's a good question! my understanding is that praxis means the practical application of a theory; like, for example, if you're a socialist then praxis could involve sharing those ideas with friends/family, creating socialist spaces like community gardens or little free libraries/etc, or organizing your workplace. and it doesn't just have to be socialism, though that's the context i've heard it used in the most. for me, solarpunk is the theory and these practical application questions give me ideas about praxis. does that help? hope i don't come off as too mansplain-y!

  • Early Spring Praxis Post
  • I've never heard of coffeeberry, but I'm intrigued! I'll need to look it up.

  • Early Spring Praxis Post
  • for me, since i live in the high desert of the Colorado Plateau, i have hooked up the first rain barrel of the season to start catching moisture. my plan for this coming weekend is to lay down more cardboard and mulch on our front "lawn" to suppress weeds and allow for the growth of native cover cops we're planting. i also got a decent gift certificate to a local nursery for Christmas so once they open, soon, i will be excitedly acquiring a Mormon tea bush for my native pollinators garden.

    on a different front, my wife and i are practicing living with one car. it should be easy for us, but we've never had to think about some of the implications of the single-car life until now, so we are trying a practical experiment in February and March, and if we can make it okay we plan to sell our second car in the late spring or early summer.

  • Early Spring Praxis Post

    Hello all, happy early spring to those of you who are experiencing it! Here in western Colorado, we've got our tiny rainy season going on. what are you doing in your communities, in your gardens, in your organizing spaces? what kind of cool praxis have you got going on?

    15
    februrary IT guy pocket dump
  • it's so handy. 99% of the time I use it to clean my glasses, but if I'm with someone who's crying, if I need to clean off a screen, if something's dusty or gross but I need to pick it up, if I get sweaty and need to wipe my brow, if something gets spilled and there are no napkins handy, etc I can use it. when my dad passed I got all his; he was a high school principal most of his career and carried one every day.

  • februrary IT guy pocket dump
  • Ascent for business, Outback for pleasure, lol. the Ascent is the car I drive for work, the Outback is my personal car.

  • februrary IT guy pocket dump
  • good eye! my own car is an Outback (2018) and my work car is an Ascent (2022).

  • februrary IT guy pocket dump
  • I think it's designed for outdoorsy stuff as it also has a firestarter component. but it definitely works well for basic networking stuff too!

  • februrary IT guy pocket dump
  • lol, yes it is! I got my glasses from there ages ago before I knew there were cheaper options. I like my glasses and need lens cleaning cloths all the time, so it works.

  • februrary IT guy pocket dump

    middle-aged IT generalist guy, United States. from left, lens cleaning cloth, REI 1L nalgene, handkerchief, coffee tumbler, ridge wallet, generic grid lined notebook, Leatherman Signal, Pilot G2 .07 pen, keys for work with included tiny flashlight, and phone case (Peak Design Mobile) to represent the phone (Pixel 7 Pro) used to take the photo.

    not pictured: car/bike keys, as the wife has the car today and it was snowing so i didn't bike, and wristwatch because i forget, constantly, that i'm wearing it; it's just a part of me. generic Timex Weekender with a nylon strap. does nothing special but tells me the time, accurately, on a face i can read, even in the dark.

    12
    Building A Badass Utility Cycle?
  • nice idea, there - i might go that route because it is fairly rare for rain around here. i already have front and rear lights, a bottle cage and an oversized holder, and a phone holder so we're in business there!

  • Building A Badass Utility Cycle?
  • Thanks! I do have a decent set of lights which are USB chargeable, but it wouldn't be a bad idea to get a dynamo as well. Thanks for the suggestions!

  • Building A Badass Utility Cycle?
  • I am a coffee addict, and I need a bottle holder that can hold my thermos, lol! But yeah, it's also nice for a quick grab.

  • Building A Badass Utility Cycle?

    https://imgur.com/a/ivFq4VE

    Hi all,

    A coworker gifted me a free Trek 4500 from the early 2000s, largely unused in the last many years. It sat in my back yard for a few months while I thought about what to do with it; I've finally made the first movement towards having a badass utility bicycle.

    Step one involved knowing that I like a more upright riding position and am not the most comfortable or agile person on a bike (that's nice-speak for "I'm a pretty fat guy" and "I never really rode bikes as a kid so I learned how in my mid-20s and am still not 100% comfortable with it"). So I bought a pair of swept-back handlebars which I then kept in a closet for a month, lol.

    Finally I decided to just move forward, so I took the bike to the local bike shop and had them do their inspection, basic needed maintenance, and installation of the handlebars. Now I have something fairly comfortable which also looks kind of neat.

    Four more things I have planned to do:

    • Add a back rack that I have on an old trashed frame also in the backyard.
    • Acquire and add fenders. While it rarely rains here, when it does I'd like to be prepared.
    • Acquire and add a front rack, since this is going to be largely for groceries and errands.
    • Add a bike trailer, again for groceries and errands.

    Other possibilities include a different seat, a handlebar bag in lieu of a front rack, essentially anything else to make it cool and functional.

    Do y'all have any recommendations for stuff that might be worth adding or doing to this bike to make it comfortable for someone overweight to commute with and do basic errands and groceries with?

    6
    DIY book scanner project
  • DIY book scanner project part 6, "Distribution", might have a few leads on how to do this. https://annas-blog.org/blog-how-to-become-a-pirate-archivist.html

  • What's Up?
  • dang, cloth diapering is no joke. good for you!

  • What's Up?

    Hello, comrades! What kind of stuff are you up to these days? Anything cool, anything you want to share about?

    8

    Winter eBiking

    well, my plan was to fix up a free entry-level mountain bike a coworker gave me - and, to be clear, i still intend to do it. however! i ran out of time, money, and know-how, all relatively quickly. and combined with that, i also decided somewhat last minute that i don't really want to drive to work any more in 2024 if i can possibly help it.

    so instead i dusted off my electric chariot, my Shadowfax, my E-Motion ebike which i have named "Thora". she's my go-to ride in nice weather, but has been packed up for the winter. last night i got her out of her "garage" and charged her up, and this morning i did my quite short 1.5 mile commute in cold weather for the first time. 21 degrees F, -6 degrees C.

    just wanted to say, i super appreciate all the advice shared in my other thread about winter biking. i wore my snowshoeing coat, gloves and glove liners, and a stocking cap. it worked! the only rough part was my face; it got so cold i got a headache. that said, i can just try a scarf tomorrow.

    here's to functional transportation, even in the wintertime.

    6

    Praxis Post: Welcome to 2024!

    welcome to the first day of the New Year here where i am, in Western Colorado, USA. i am feeling an uncharacteristic sense of optimism today; any day can be full of new beginnings, but how great is 1/1/24 to also be full of opportunities?

    speaking of which, what kind of actions have you been taking recently, or do you plan to take in the near future? how are you bringing solarpunk into the world?

    may 2024 be a good year for you and yours, and me and mine, and ours, and humanity, and the earth.

    5

    what do y'all actually host?

    hi there, comrades! just curious, what do you all actually host for yourselves?

    i currently run a two old PCs refurbished as Ubuntu servers and am looking at adding a Raspberry Pi 400 that i was gifted and don't know what to do with. i have ideas though!

    anyway, i'd love to hear what you've found useful, helpful, and/or fun to run. my own answer will be in the comments.

    36

    Praxis Post! (What Are You Working On?)

    'sup, comrades?

    hope you're well. what's going on in your worlds? how have you been spending your time, energy, and interest? any cool praxis in your worlds?

    9

    winter commuter ideas?

    hi all - i am wondering what your daily riders look like - for example above i have my ebike (a secondhand Eco-Evo by Easy Motion), which is my summer daily driver since i can charge it with solar energy and don't get as hot cycling (i'm fat and i live in a desert, which is a miserable combo sometimes).

    right now i'm working on putting together a winter "acoustic" bike by putting together a bunch of parts stripped from old bikes i've salvaged or been given, but i'd love to see any ideas for what folks ride.

    6

    What Are You Working On?

    Hi friends and comrades! What are you working on these days? I'm really interested in praxis and in new ideas of what to do in real life to advance towards a solarpunk future.

    Hope you're all well!

    19

    weekly - er, monthly? - What's Up?

    'sup, comrades? i meant to do this thread weekly, but oops! forgot for a month. oh well - what do you have going on, what are you working on?

    8

    Weekly What's Up?

    'sup, comrades? i figured we could maybe do with a weekly DIY thread on what we're working on, inspired by the rad "Show & Tell" thread from two weeks ago.

    what do you have going on, what are you working on?

    10

    Lasagna Gardening with Junk

    crossposted from Reddit:

    hi all - my wife and I are doing our best to amend our terrible soil in climate zone 6b/7a (western Colorado, near the Utah border). our logic and philosophy is that at this time we can only do what we can do, so that's making our home as solarpunk and permaculture-centric as possible right now (without losing sight of building collective resilience and empowering the disenfranchised).

    to that end, our soil: it's pretty abiotic. to grow food, which is a future goal, we need healthier soil. also we're not flat broke but we're relatively close; being frugal and cheap is a necessity. so we determined that we're going to try to amend our soil using cheap, locally sourced, and recycled things - and maybe more sweat equity than I'd love, ha! we elected to go with the lasagna method.

    the lasagna method is to lay down different strata of materials to encourage the breakdown of "brown" and "green" materials, in composting terms. also our yard currently is mostly dirt with a few weeds for good measure, so even if we eff it up, it'll be okay.

    I work in IT and my wife's a librarian, so we have access to a LOT of cardboard. I've been collecting it slowly over the summer, and today we decided to lay down our first layer.

    here's the plan: lay down a layer of cardboard (brown only, tape and labels as removed as possible) two sheets thick. soak the cardboard so it doesn't blow away in the wind. cover that with a layer of wood chips, which we happen to have from removing a tree along our fence line with our neighbors and chipping it up. the wood chip layer is about two to three inches thick, and then we soak that, too. finally, we cover the wood chips with a layer of greens; for us, this is getting on our local Buy Nothing group and asking for lawn clippings. we are also going to plant fall cover crops and once they have grown in the spring, do a chop-and-drop layer of that.

    over time, we will plant a few trees (looking at either a local growers apple variety or a multi-graft we can buy online) and have a rotating group of garden beds.

    so that's our plan: a bit of couples labor each weekend over a long period of time, with the hopeful result of improved soil biology and then the growing of native.plants and flowers and food crops.

    I hope this is solarpunk enough to warrant this post!

    good growing to us all. !

    11

    What Are You Working On?

    In this thread, post what you're working on! Guerilla gardening? eBiking? planting/pruning? Let us know!

    56