I just signed up myself but I'm not getting my hopes up about their monetization strategy. The problem with printing your own crypto is getting anyone else to accept it.
As an alternative, I've been uploading to BitChute which is a simple P2P video host with a tube-like UI. I found out about it from the InrangeTV channel after they had trouble with demonetization. They're also uploading to Pornhub, funnily enough.
Please get his stuff mirroring over onto lbry I will personally get you LBC to be able to sync everything please I don't like the idea of your content having to ghost off of the internet.
https://lbry.com/faq/youtube Link to the FAQ on the YouTube Sync tool and https://lbry.com/youtube
/u/CodyDon your stuff is wonderful and regardless of the education or the courting status your content has helped me greatly get through some of the hardest years in my life after having had a few pretty bad years I'm still making it and you're one of the creators that help me get through my day.
Anyways sorry for the lack of proof reading this comment I just wanted to get it sent before the farmers market closes tyvm
Vidme seems to be the best option for Cody at the moment to back up his content. There's been a spike in traffic to alternative social media sites. Whether they be youtube alternatives such as vidme or facebook alternatives such as Minds it seems like a good time to broaden the sites one has accounts on.
> I'm impressed that they managed desalination with it.
The title sucks. Desalination? from the article:
>>In a paper published Aug. 24 in Materials Today, Arnold and his coauthors showed that the resulting material can remove salt and microplastics from seawater with 98% and 99% efficiency, respectively.
They already have handheld desalination pumps. They're crazy expensive and take work to pump, but what else are you going to do in a lifeboat?
>> the material can potentially be produced in large quantities relatively cheaply and without impacting the food supply.
The first thing I can think of when I see "cheap" and "aerogel" in the same article is insulation, not filtering out microplastics from seawater.
If they can bring a Sawyer Squeeze to market that also filters out salt from seawater at a reasonable price point, I'd buy one. (A big issue with the Sawyer Squeeze and related products is that you can never let them freeze. If you suspect they hit the freezing point of water at any time after they've been put in service, you need to throw them away and buy a new one. I imaging aerogel would have the exact same issue.)
For people not out in a Utah desert:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B093ZQHDCD/
Perfect for getting a few gallons of city water from a spout on the outside of many city buildings, with permission of course.
I think bitchute is a good option. He could also upload his videos to The World's Largest Library. Having to pay to watch would be annoying, especially for the patrons, who already donate a substantial amount. In addition, I thought Nebula was for more professional/TV shows and documentaries.
Feel free to reuse this meme format! The font you'll need is Roboto from Google Fonts.
Also, the upper thumbnail and title came from here. I thought it worked well considering Cody did that flat Earth rebuttal on the dry lake bed a while ago.
I traced it in Inkscape. The drawings make heavy use of the "Power stroke" path effect for the non-uniform line widths.
The unoptimized SVG is here if you wanted to open it up in Inkscape and look around. The bottom layer is the original image.
I would like to suggest that you upload or have someone with a good connection and an archive upload your videos to https://d.tube or some other service if you know of something better. Bring as many viewers as you can over and invite every other Youtuber that experiences the same issue.
Videos like yours are the reason I watch YouTube on a daily basis. If those videos are elsewhere, that's where I'm going.
It could be much more than 20km since the first LoRa satellite has been sent to space last week.
They are apparently planning to send more satellites and they'll act as free gateways between isolated IoT sensors and a ground station in the satellite range connected to the internet.
Or alternatively, since Cody can tweet from Chicken Hole Base, setting up a cheap 2G/3G modem could work too.
A space habitat simulation like Chicken Hole Base wouldn't be complete without telemetry and fancy charts. It could be great to follow and see the CO2/temperature/humidity/pressure levels fluctuate during extended tests without the need for him to stay there for weeks. And that would open the door for automatization or at least some kind of remote control.
I designed and made a cheap and reliable open source weather sensor based on an ATTiny85, one BME280 sensor (temperature, humidity and pressure) that sends its data using a NRF24L01 every 10 seconds to a gateway. It runs on 2 AA NiMH batteries for months and could totally be upgraded with a cheap 3V solar panel. I'm still waiting for the batteries to deplete to estimate how much energy it consumes, but I'd love to share my work if you're interested :)
I heard that in Africa, some people would weave baskets and tie them up in trees on the off-chance that a swarming hive would find it and set up shop.
The Salt book has a good chapter on how they used to hunt bee hives. You set up bait and wait for bees to show up, then dust the bees with chalk to get a approximate round trip time and direction. You move the bait station closer and closer to the wild hive and eventually locate the tree. The idea being that you would cut the tree down, smoke the bees and move the hive into your own bee gum.
Used copies run about $6 in the USA, and this book is the product of a sister group of the people who put out the Foxfire series of books.
I think the easiest thing to do is to probably build or buy a bee hive box and order some bees a few months before spring in your part of the world.
Download the Adobe Photoshop Lightroom CC app because you can manually change the exposure time and a lot of other things. Also, free users get 2 GB of data for cloud storage.
We don't need an ad agency. Lots of the decent sized youtubers get money from in-video ads. The biggest ones I keep seeing is NordVPN and audible, but there are others. For instance, this one is a 1 minute ad at the end of a 4 minute educational video: