SavinaRoja

joined 1 year ago
[–] SavinaRoja@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

Worked for popplers.

[–] SavinaRoja@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I need to try to get back into ONI. It should be something I would really enjoy. But I got hung up on some details.

Actually, I know it's a defect in my mindset in approaching that game. I shouldn't expect certain things like conservation of mass and energy... I also took a while to realize that solubility and diffusion just don't exist in the game. I don't want to care so much about this but I struggle.

I loved Tekkit/FTB back in the day! Lots of good times setting up factories and controlling swarms of turtles.

[–] SavinaRoja@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

Valuation is usually based on potential revenue, not actual revenue

How similar this is to how capitalists look at natural "resources". "This website[wetland] sure is great. Lots of people[animals] are loving it. And it's a vital part of the development[water] cycle... But it's just not making me any money!"

[–] SavinaRoja@beehaw.org 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This is fascinating. Perhaps the plant protein as meat substitute is getting too much focus? Maybe that's just the part that is seen as potentially the most profitable. I wonder if that's shortsighted compared to using the whole plant as a potential food source.

I was familiar with duckweed's use in aquaculture systems, but not with the fact that duckweed is actively consumed and quite edible: Nutritional value of duckweeds (Lemnaceae) as human food

The application of selective pressure to work on making domesticated forms is cool. The rapid generational cycle of just a couple days has got to make that nicer to work with. We have better abilities today than in past centuries to leverage artificial aquaculture. Though again, I think I that we should not overlook consuming the whole plant, it's definitely interesting considering how it could be fractionated into different components. If processed to extract specific protein content, I could imagine that the rest of the slurry byproduct could still have uses in human nutrition, fish feed, fertilizers, and more. Growing duckweed also captures carbon from the air.