An average car emits 650g of COβ per km driven. An average person travels 25km to get to work each day. Commuting by car emits an average of 32.5kg of COβ daily. (Based on data from the US.)
An adult tree absorbs up to 21.8kg of COβ per year. It would take one tree 1.5 years to absorb what one person can emit in a single day.
In the US alone, over 6 million more cars are registered annually. Each year we destroy 18.7 million acres of forest worldwide, killing roughly 1.1 billion trees.
Didn't quite get it to what I was imagining, but that's just how arting goes π Plus, it's almost 4am and I've got a headache from bending over these two, so this little illustration is as done as it's ever gonna get...
@eilidhbranch I think there are some tablets can run postmarketOS and certainly Lineage OS supports a few tablets. I'm not sure about UBPorts' Ubuntu Touch though, you'd gave to check that out.
@kelbot I'm on Moto G4 Play, it's pretty good but you'd probably want more RAM. 1GB is only just enough, you'd be better off with more. But for a Β£90 phone it's very good. I'm using Lineage OS and I haven't had any issues beyond a drop in battery life (I think that's an issue with Android 7 though as other phones also suffer) and the NFC doesn't work.
@kiri Simplicity is generally better. In the time it took my boss to set up a pressurised air powered device with a grinding head, I'd used a file on all the bits that needed it. And the grinder didn't work as well anyway π
@squinter I used to use Tusky, then swapped over to Mastalab. Tusky is more polished, responsive and smooth, but Mastalab had more features. I decided the extra features were worth it but equally I was very happy with Tusky. Both are for Android however, so if you're on an iPhone someone else will have to help you choose.
@fred I'm not sure how that compares to other image encodings, but that would certainly be interesting... some sort of header defining it as an image, a load of binary, and something to close it off...
@fred Interesting... I've heard people say that as it reduces file size, it's a useful technique for sites that operate on poor internet speeds / for people browsing with slow internet.