![]() ![]() Would that really preserve the wood? Perhaps it would because of the salt in the water, but I don't know. I've thought about wood in water, but I defer to the scientists. The wood burning energy could also be used for power, it doesn't have to be a complete waste. You could potentially use solar energy to ignite the wood. Ashes won't be broken down by bacteria like wood. You can do that by burning wood and then burying the ashes. The only way to make up for the carbon we have burned from oil and coal, is to create more stable carbon and then bury it. Having massive amounts of wood buried in an attempt to trap carbon won't work long term and is dangerous. When wood starts to be broken down by bacteria, it heats up. It can actually be a dangerous fire hazard if we bury tons of trees. ![]() But that won't work because the trees in the ground will rapidly break down and release carbon gases. ![]() ![]() I imagined that we could grow trees, cut them down, bury them, and then grow more trees. We can regrow all the forests in the world that we have cut down, it won't be enough to make up for all the oil and coal we have burned. So, the only way to get stable carbon that won't be broken down is by creating ashes and then burying them. You can't just grow more trees, as they will eventually be broken down by bacteria and released into the air again. However, the idea is that we need to remove carbon from the air. That's what I thought initially too when I first hear it. For example, the boards from a 3.5" HHD is about 8$ a pound, we take the boards off of the drives and build them up along with everything else until we have around 26 pallets to ship, which will fill up a 52' trailer on a semi. We sell the motherboards, boards, power supply units, op drives, aluminum, copper, fans, and batteries from all of this stuff to a company that buys it from us to basically tear it down to it's raw materials and sell from there at a higher price from which it was bought from us. We dissasemble anything that can be taken apart, mainly computers, servers, and networking equipment. Also hard drives cost 5 dollars per drive to shred, which we sometimes get jobs where we need to shred nearly a thousand hard drives. 05$ per pund charge on all recyclable materials. We actually charge them for us to come and collect everything that they want to recycle, which we accept anything with a battery or can be plugged into the wall. These companies can't just go to the scrap yard to dispose of it, so they call us. So companies of all sizes tend to build up a storage of old and seemingly useless electronics that the IT department usually has to handle. To see what fun facts people are finding out look at r/TodayILearned!Ĭheck out r/LifeProTips to pick-up secrets of overcoming everyday problems!įind out what every man should know over at r/EveryManShouldKnow! It is advised that you use the search function in this subreddit or any other technology based subreddit to search for posts containing shortcuts for your OSĩ) Citations are required for YSKs regarding health and science related topics.ġ0) Don't shitpost. YSKs that are spamming websites, products and services will be dealt with at the discretion of the moderators and may result in action against the user posting the YSK.Ĩ) YSKs regarding computer shortcuts are no longer allowed as of June 2, 2014. The post must be a YSK as defined above.Ģ) Within your post you must include "Why YSK" which should have an explicit statement of how it helps people improve on a task, skill, or ability as noted in the 1st Rule (and not your personal story).ģ) YSKs regarding Reddit, Facebook, Twitter or any other social media are NOT ALLOWED.Ĥ) YSKs with referral links to sites such as Dropbox or Amazon are NOT ALLOWED.ĥ) YSKs regarding ideas or concepts based in conspiracy will be removed at the discretion of the moderatorsĦ) YSKs that are a call to arms, which can be asking for support for charities, organizations or political parties WILL NOT BE ALLOWED.ħ) This subreddit is not the place to be self-advertising your websites, products and services. Rulesġ) Your post MUST begin with YSK and have appropriate flair. Look here for some thoughts about difference between a YSK and a TIL. YSKs are about self-improvement on how to do things, not for facts and figures, which is what /r/TodayILearned is for. A community to share tips and tricks that will help yourself improve on activities, skills and various other tasks. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |