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How to Build a Solar-Powered Website

How to Build a Solar-Powered Website

FromOutside/In


How to Build a Solar-Powered Website

FromOutside/In

ratings:
Length:
35 minutes
Released:
Apr 7, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Like most modern publications, Low-tech Magazine has a website. But when you scroll through theirs, you’ll notice an icon in the corner: the weather forecast in Barcelona.That’s because Kris Decker, the creator of Low-tech Magazine, powers the site off a solar panel on his balcony. When the weather gets bad, the website just… goes offline.In a way, the solar-powered website is an experiment: an attempt to peel back the curtain and to reveal the infrastructure behind it, and to raise questions about our relationship with technology. Should everything on the internet be accessible, all the time? Could progress mean choosing to live with less?Featuring Kris De Decker. ELECTRIC VEHICLE SURVEYWe’re working on a series about electric vehicles, and we’re looking to hear from you. Would you consider going electric? What do you think about the EV transition?  Help inform our reporting by filling out this survey. It’ll only take a couple minutes, and it really helps us produce the show. Thanks so much! SUPPORTOutside/In is made possible with listener support. Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In. Subscribe to our (free) newsletter.Follow Outside/In on Instagram or Twitter, or join our private discussion group on Facebook LINKSLow-tech Magazine has published instructions on how to build a low tech or solar-powered site. Solar Protocol, a solar-powered platform designed with the idea that “it’s always sunny somewhere!”HTTP Archive tracks the history of web performance.Re: that time it rained inside the data center.This website lets you measure the emissions of any website (including this one).Photographer Trevor Paglen’s images of undersea Internet cables (reportedly wiretapped by the NSA), and a video of sharks nipping at them.Another example of the natural world interfering with computers, from the cutting room floor: the world’s first computer bug was a literal bug.When Senator Ted Stevens described the internet as a “series of tubes,” many have opined that he actually wasn’t wrong. CREDITSHost: Nate HegyiProducer: Justine ParadisEditor: Taylor QuimbyAdditional editing: Nate Hegyi, Jessica Hunt, and Felix Poon Executive Producer: Rebecca LavoieSpecial thanks to Melanie Risch.Music: Pandaraps, Damma Beatz, Dusty Decks, Harry Edvino, Sarah the Illstrumentalist (sic), and Blue Dot Sessions.The “Internet is a Series of Tubes” remix was created by superfunky59 on Youtube.
Released:
Apr 7, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

A show about the natural world and how we use it. We explore science, energy, environmentalism, and reflections on how we think about and depict nature, and always leave time for plenty of goofing off. Outside/In is a production of New Hampshire Public Radio. Learn more at outsideinradio.org