Fast forward to 20 years AFTER the mass EMP from solar flares wipe out internet, most chip processors. The Amish and Mennonite salvage crew with the horse drawn wagon comes to the old state capital and major university town- (Madison, wisconsin as example) center of old city core, goes door to door and finds a internet café. a Dozen tables with wires from crumbled server tower, 2 chairs each table holding skeletons staring at blank screens on what was laptop, tablet or little smart phone. Salvage crew gets what is practical- the furniture, some eating utensils and coffee cups. The final disposition of the skeletons is debated- enough room left to take back to compost heap- use as source of bone meal, then use on garden, fields so the internet addicts will amount to a hill of beans? Or leave them to the Ho-Chunk when they come down town on full moon nights to use as 'bone fire' material when the celebrate the end of 'White' power structure, politicians? Maybe something John Carpenter would have made a movie about? RN
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Today's Featured Article - A Belt Pulley? Really Doing Something? - by Chris Pratt. Belt Pulleys! Most of us conjure up a picture of a massive thresher with a wide belt lazily arching to a tractor 35 feet away throwing a cloud of dust, straw and grain, and while nostalgic, not too practical a method of using our tractors. While this may have been the bread and butter of the belt work in the past (since this is what made the money on many farms), the smaller tasks may have been and still can be its real claim to fame. The thresher would bring in the harvest (and income) once a y
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