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Sustainability? No thank you.
  • That's not what I meant, I meant if all organic life that produces oxygen disappeared.

    Photosynthesis is generally so slow at it's job that the current oxygen levels were only built up over hundreds of millions of years. Furthermore, Rubisco, a key enzyme in photosynthesis, surprisingly, is slow and not very good at distinguishing oxygen from carbon dioxide, because it evolved before there was much oxygen on Earth. Therefore a lot of oxygen was produced at the beginning, most of the oxygen we have today in fact, and then not very much thereafter.

    Additionally, the Earth's oxygen levels stay stable due to the release of oxygen trapped in minerals. Over those hundreds of millions of years, they absorbed it. This absorption and release has kept levels stable for well beyond our existence.

    At least that's what I got from the PBS video. If you don't agree, go argue with them, I'm no expert. I'm just forwarding what I learned.

  • Sustainability? No thank you.
  • I just thought it was an interesting video that challenges what I previously understood about one specific thing 😅 I'm not advocating against the environment, neither is the video, that'd be terrible for many reasons. It's just that the video is from PBS and seems pretty evidence based in why photosynthesis is quite terrible at converting CO2 to oxygen due to the shortcomings of the enzyme Rubisco and how we could improve that. Nothing more than that. Give it a watch, it's not some anti-environment conspiracy video

  • Sustainability? No thank you.
  • I love nature, but interestingly apparently photosynthesis doesn't actually contribute all that much oxygen and Earth's levels would stay stable for millions of years if all organic matter disappeared. We'd have many, many other problems, but not that one specifically:

    https://youtu.be/DZ_T4zMBx6E

  • Librarians in UK increasingly asked to remove books, as influence of US pressure groups spreads
  • Just as they say they do not want Sharia law in the UK, we should not support the spread of other extremist religious laws

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • In the first place? We kinda did to begin with, you would phone the operator and say the name of who you wanted to phone.

    Introducing phone numbers simplified this, given the operator would have to know or lookup their name, and allowed for the future introduction of automated systems. Such systems were analogue and DNS was far more advanced than them. I guess the telephone becomes so widely used and integrated under that system that it still uses a similar interface today, albeit with a cluster of different modernised interconnected backends

  • UK could avoid US tariffs that the ‘atrocity’ EU is facing because Starmer has been ‘nice’, Trump suggests
  • The UK and US have pretty balanced trading, both reprting surpluses. Isn't that the real reason? Tariffs would be really stupid here

  • Justices take up case on right to sue over mistaken SWAT raid.
  • Do Americans really have a right to bear arms? It's technically legal, but if police can murder you and get away with it when they catch you with a gun, that sounds like the consequences are a possible defacto death sentence.

    They only sometimes murder you for it. But there's plenty laws where I'm from that are only sometimes enforced when the police catch you, and not by death.

  • There are solo many things wrong in this weird conversation...
  • So the original tweet logically suggests that human men and woman are different species and that human babies are produce, a sellable raw material, perhaps edible.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • The 19020s 😲 You from the future?

  • Hard time to be non-binary Spanish person
  • Or just "Latin". A word Latin Americans actually use. Really don't need the X.

  • Trump names Denver fossil fuel executive Chris Wright as energy secretary
  • Man's fast tracking "create the most corrupt government possible".

  • Democrat moves to clarify the 22nd Amendment after Trump refers to running for third term
  • Ah, but what if he simply gets rid of democratic elections, then he needn't worry about the issue of being elected more than twice

  • Will the .io domain cease to exist? | Tuta
  • Really not looking forward to the idea of github.io links all becoming dead. So many repos with documentation at a github.io URL, with those links spread all across plaintext files and Stack Overflow and forums

  • In ref to parents bringing their kids to Hazbin Hotel panels
  • If it's an issue, then the organisers shouldn't let kids in, otherwise it's at the parent's discretion, not yours

  • Oracle, it’s time to free JavaScript
  • Yeah, sure, just as easily as people switched from saying "Twitter" to saying "X"

  • Russia submarines and naval ships cross into buffer zone off Alaska, U.S. Coast Guard says
  • To avoid sea ice, they entered an area they are legally allowed to enter... okay

  • PRAISE THE SUN
  • The bedrooms were often in the centre, in windowless rooms.

    https://youtu.be/jyljmHkv2oU?si=wdtY73SJhQyrWjF8

  • PRAISE THE SUN
  • In Roman insulae, they often slept in windowless rooms. Many of them also woke before sunrise. They were generally woken by slaves, roosters and the increasing noise from people outside.

  • The UK section of my local supermarket is taking the piss
  • In British supermarkets, they often don't even put the beans on shelves. Instead they have stacked palettes of them, because they need to restock so often it'd be inefficient to have to unpack and shelve them.

  • guy guy @lemmy.world
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