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2 days agoI think it might largely depends on your 1. Career/job/ or even hobby requirements 2. Where you live (government agencies requiring paper documents, signatures, etc)
I like to start projects…finishing them is another story.
My major projects I would like you to check out (open source): Chinese Language
‣ Learning App: https://greenants.github.io/HSK-3.0-Study-Game/
‣ An Abstract Board Game: https://github.com/GreenAnts/Amalgam_Webgame
I am always looking for contributors to help out.!
◉ Community Forum: https://unfinishedprojects.flarum.cloud/
◉ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/UnfinishedProjects
Thanks for reading my profile :D


I think it might largely depends on your 1. Career/job/ or even hobby requirements 2. Where you live (government agencies requiring paper documents, signatures, etc)
I understand why you’re getting downvoted, but at the same time - I completely understand the sentiment. In a perfect world, you’re right, we should be able to reuse what we have and our society is utterly obsessed with consumerism. But being realistic and practical - that’s not going to happen for many reasons, at least not in our lifetime.
But I think that creating something that will last, is repairable, and open source is a step in the right direction and is better than the current alternatives. I’m not saying we shouldn’t continue to advocate and push for the ideals of what you are saying - but we shouldn’t push away progress in the right direction as we fight for those ideals. It doesn’t have to be “one or the other” it can be a multipronged approach that advocates for the ideal scenario while accepting small incremental progress as well.
I’m not saying this specific product is or is not the solution (it might be a terrible product or the people behind the product might have terrible intentions, idk. . . But the idea of products build to last, be repairable, and open for improvement, etc etc is a good step forward in my mind. Ehh, my 2 cents.