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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 24th, 2023

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  • Get an ebike. It solves several of your cons at once.

    No need to wear spandex or neon to ride on an ebike (or any bike honestly I bike everywhere and the only neon thing I own is my rain pants) just put lights on your bike and don’t dress all in black.

    Can’t help you with the helmet, that one’s pretty important but there’s lots of nice looking helmets out there.

    No getting sweaty on an ebike unless you want to, because you can crank the pedal assist if you’re starting to sweat.

    Have literally never had an issue finding somewhere to park my bike. Sure have an issue finding car parking though. At the downtown garage I park at, cars are $20 an hour but bikes are free.

    You’ll probably go faster than the cars if there’s lots of traffic. We’ve done a car vs bike race a few times when we had both starting the same place and going to the same place and the ebike always wins or is like 10 minutes behind at most.

    Bluetooth speakers and transparent headphones both solve the music issue.

    Many ebikes have extra cargo capacity, so grocery runs are easier. If you’ve got a large family then you might need a cargo bike or to rent a car periodically for large trips.

    The only real downside imo is the weather if you live somewhere extremely cold/hot and the safety from riding near cars. The rest is easy to get over once you’re zipping down the road at 20mph getting those sweet, sweet biking endorphins.


  • I have a cheap smartwatch (amazfit bip) that tracks sleep and I have found it to be very accurate for me. I assume it tracks when I fall asleep based on heart rate and movement?

    Anyways it plays nicely with my android phone and only cost about $50 and honestly I’m pretty happy with it! I was pretty skeptical at first but it’s really handy as a fitness tracker too and I feel like it encourages me to stand up and exercise more.

    I also have a somewhat erratic sleep schedule and it’s nice to know when I’m starting to get into a sleep deficit and need to get caught up.




  • And if a municipality underprotects against heat? What happens?

    People die of heat stroke, that’s what happens. And the municipality maybe changes the law, but only after someone dies.

    Protections in this situation are at the federal and state level because the consequences of doing them wrong are much more than just “suffering economically.”

    And because worker deaths aren’t always a strong enough motivator at the local level. Frankly, not every town cares about their migrant workers and other working class folks, especially if labor is divided along racial and/or class lines.