@bilbo_pingouin Yeah. It's more a question of the speed of change. Jobs have been being automated for a long time now. So far, the economy has always managed to adjust.
@bilbo_pingouin that's for now, who knows, we may have compostable dishes and flatware in the future. and who knows where plastic recycling may be soon
@DoritoStyle yep. and when the technology of self-driving cars is perfected, we're going to see a major shift in all sorts of usage. Hopefully, rail and jet services will adapt as well
I live in an old building, they and I Quote "Were not allowed to put gas connections in apppartments for cooking purposes". They didnt bother placeing them in since 1944 so.
@RaoulMensink Not sure where you are, but in the US it's pretty common for apartments not to have gas connections. That's why they make electric stoves.
@RichardU that was fun - seem to be a few like that, but getting the scammer to realise they had lost not only that laptop, but also the entire domain, as it was running as the controller was priceless.
According to here (and other discussions on meta), we are trying to cut down on repetitive answers. I don't have enough reputation to cast delete votes. Today I flagged this one with the following note: "Once you remove the rant from the answer it boils down to "hire interns", which was already...
Seems like parts of this site encourage liberal flagging but that hasn't really been in-line with Mod practices for quite some time.
My take away is that Mods would much rather you use down-votes & comments for "technical" issues instead of Mod flags (only truly heinous things get delted anyway)
BUT I don't think that is addressed well for new users; the guidelines seem to encourage flagging as benign and a good way to help out. The result is that new users get flag-locked before they learn the rules of the road.
Maybe something new for the meta, or has this already been given thought?