Look at the image! You just have to relocate the SMD resistor with the memory label to get the 8GB version from the smaller ones for free. Trust me, I'm an engineer!
float
The complexity behind this is fascinating.
You're god damn right!
Oder er hat gemerkt, dass die 20.000€ für eine Stunde "Beratung" dann nicht mehr mit Verwendungszweck "Taschengeld" unauffällig durchgehen und korrekterweise als Nebeneinkünfte angegeben und versteuert werden müssen. Wer weiß das schon.
Some industries, like the pharmaceuticals, may not be able to switch away from mineral oils so easily. That's why I prefer a balanced approach that makes unnecessary or even luxurious things way more expensive. The carbon tax approach would work in terms of "reducing carbon" but the people who are already struggling in day to day life would be hit the hardest. Those are the poor folks that have to commute to work with older cars because their bosses decided that there is no more home office.
The government making a list of what is wasteful and what not would probably fail, you're right about that. In the long term the carbon tax is a good solution. It's easy to implement but that doesn't mean that it's easy to make the transition for many people. And by "not easy" I don't mean "stop eating meat because of the carbon", which would be very easy compared to "buy 3 times more expensive gas to go to work or buy food for the week and loose your job".
Könnte trotzdem klappen. Die Gier sorgt schon für die nötige Motivation.
That might work theoretically. The problem with that is that you cannot differentiate between that absolutely wasteful things (like private jets) and things we need in day to day life (like pharmaceuticals). You might even want to exempt the solar panels from the example above, because they will probably save more carbon than what was used to produce them. So that's really the "sledgehammer" kind of solution.
I would love to see that guy getting drafted and thrown into the battlefield he's bragging about.
There's more than the oil. There's gas, other resources like lithium, deforestation and the list goes on. Let's say you buy solar cell panels. Were they produced using electricity from renewables or burnt oil? That should make a big difference if you want that tax to reduce carbon output. Right now there's no way to track that.
Edit: Maybe your idea is to tax the resources right at their sources. That would help indeed, but good luck with the leaders or countries like Saudi Arabia, China, Russia, ..
you could find yourself in the wrong place at the wrong time.
I like that one. It's funny because it's so generic.
The sound on the other hand..
I'm really not sure if I would name any stock Android in that list. There's not much "libre" about it. Compared to Apple, sure, but that's a ridiculously low bar. We're still missing good alternatives for mobile phones.