I often daydream about how society would be if we were not forced by society to pigeon hole ourselves into a specialized career for maximizing the profits of capitalists, and sell most of our time for it.

The idea of creating an entire identity for you around your “career” and only specializing in one thing would be ridiculous in another universe. Humans have so much natural potential for breadth, but that is just not compatible with capitalism.

This is evident with how most people develop “hobbies” outside of work, like wood working, gardening, electronics, music, etc. This idea of separating “hobbies” and the thing we do most of our lives (work) is ridiculous.

Here’s how my world could be different if I owned my time and dedicated it to the benefit of my own and my community instead of capitalists:

  • more reading, learning and excusing knowledge with others.
  • learn more handy work, like plumbing and wood working. I love customizing my own home!
  • more gardening
  • participate in the transportation system (picking up shifts to drive a bus for example)
  • become a tour guide for my city
  • cook and bake for my neighbors
  • academic research
  • open source software (and non-software) contributions
  • pick up shifts at a café and make coffee, tea and smoothies for people
  • pick up shifts to clean up public spaces, such as parks or my own neighborhood
  • participate in more than one “professions”. I studied one type of engineering but work in a completely different engineering. This already proves I can do both, so why not do both and others?

Humans do not like the same thing over and over every day. It’s unnatural. But somehow we revolve our whole livelihood around if.

  • @9point6@lemmy.world
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    21 year ago

    Man, you’re living a dream over there. As you’d expect, given I’m not running a BnB, your ideas don’t have an immediate application to my life, but damn am I impressed!

    Could you tell me more about the 400mhz radios? I had a quick look at the code and it looks like you’re delegating to a transceiver module or something if I’m reading correctly

    • @chunkystyles@sopuli.xyz
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      21 year ago

      The BnB thing certainly is interesting. I like it, but it’s not what I expected.

      The radios I’m using are these https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09KY28VH8

      I’m fairly sure the driver I’m using is this https://github.com/PaulStoffregen/RadioHead/tree/master It’s been a while since I worked on these.

      So one device has an ultrasonic distance sensor and a radio transmitter. It just takes a reading and transmits is once an hour.

      The other device monitors the doorbell and has the radio receiver on it. Both of those things are sent to the serial output and monitored by Node-RED.

      https://imgur.com/a/SQdc95d

      The transmitter and receiver aren’t terribly far apart. They’re probably like 30 feet or so, but in the basement, with walls in between them. I didn’t do any testing on how far apart they worked, but 433mhz is a pretty sturdy frequency and these have been rock solid. With the driver, they’re actually super easy to use, too.

      • @9point6@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Nice one, thanks for the detailed response! It seems like a pretty straightforward solution for simple ad-hoc connectivity. Definitely one to keep in mind

        Not least of all, who knows, maybe I’ll have a BnB one day!