Here is a list I have formed:

-Switch to Esim

-Build more apartments

-Use shampoo/conditioner bars

-Put carbon labels on products

-Buy stuff at the store

-Eat plant based

-Prioritize transit over cars

-Switch to Ecosia

-Recycle

-Give homemade gifts

-Compost

-Be organized

-Avoid synthetic cloths

-Switch to green burials

-Buy reputable carbon credits

-Mandate microfibre filters for washing machines

-Install Linux on old computers

-Switch to Electric car -Shut down all oil operations

-Pickup litter

-Ride your bicycle instead of the car

-Adopt kids and companions instead

-Build more green spaces

-Convert animal agriculture land to wild lands

-Support repairability

-Ban private jets

  • CameronDev@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    Formatting is broken.

    How is eSIM green?

    Using old computers can be a pro or a con, depending on its efficiency and your electricity source.

    Avoid synthetic cloths and microfibre filters seems at odds.

    • PuddingFeeling@lemmy.caOP
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      9 months ago

      It looked different from the formatting I did on my notes.

      eSIM reduces plastic and shipping use.

      Using older computers has to be weighed against the newly developed efficiencies in the latest cpus/gpus. Windows 11 is dropping computers that are like 4 years old. That is way too soon for perfectly good computers.

      Synthetic cloths are used a lot currently so using microfibre filters is a stop gap measure until we have biodegradable cloths.

      • appel@whiskers.bim.boats
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        9 months ago

        Using windows is also massively wasteful, it spends probably more than half of the processor usage on analytics and tracking stuff. Linux or other free kernels are much better in terms of power usage, on old and new hardware

        • PuddingFeeling@lemmy.caOP
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          9 months ago

          I notice my resource usage dropped to half after switching.

          The Linux kernel was supporting hardware that was 30 years old.

          • Dojan@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            That’s a pretty stunning figure. Wonder how large a portion of that is private individuals vs. companies.

            I changed my SIM for the first time in a decade earlier this year. Do people change SIMs more frequently than that?

            • CameronDev@programming.dev
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              9 months ago

              18,000,000 kg / 7,000,000,000 = 0.0025 kg per person on earth. 2.5g per person. Its not a big number at all.

              Granted, not everyone has a phone or sim, so the number may be 2-4x higher, but we are talking about such a tiny amount of waste that its a rounding error in the scheme of things.

          • CameronDev@programming.dev
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            9 months ago

            See, to me, those numbers just dont seem that bad in the scheme of things, annual medical waste in Victoria, Australia, is 3x that (Vic is a state of 7-8M people, we are pretty small). I bet the single use plastic shopping bags tossed annually dwarfs this by many orders of magnitude.

            https://www.health.vic.gov.au/planning-infrastructure/waste

            Many phones dont support eSIM yet, so an individual switching means throwing away an otherwise fine phone, and that doesnt seem worth it to save on 1 credit card sized peice of plastic.