Interesting! I’d like to seem some statistics about gas vs. electric appliance use, especially in new construction.
I’m kind of thinking gas ranges may go by the wayside. There will probably always be a “foodie” and restaurant demand for gas burners. But I’m guessing that, for the mass market, electric ranges will completely replace gas ranges. Or maybe I’m wrong. If you’re running a gas line for a fireplace, you can run it to the kitchen, too.
freckafree, I know scads of people, regular non-foodie types, who have moved heaven and earth to make sure that their house had gas stove, at least. There’s less dedication for gas heat for ovens, but gas stoves have two advantages over electric that I think a lot of people love: They don’t need to warm up, and they don’t need to cool down. So the cook has more direct control over the cooking temperature than would be the case with electric. (at least in theory)
Hmm… as for stats… I can’t help you there.
Yeah, what’s with that? Same goes for pubs. Try finding a pub in Sydney with sticky carpet, that beer smell, mixed grills served at the bar, three local beers on tap, a ciggy machine, the horses on a crackly AM radio, a meat tray raffle for the local fishing club, a bloke called Wozza who has the local beer drinking record, a pinball machine, an old bloke rolling his own, etc and you can’t easily these days. But if you want a “lounge” with obscure Italian beer, a wanked up beeeeeestro, faux Irish stuff everywhere, and lots of pretentious wankers in suits, you can’t avoid tripping over the places.
I’ve noticed the same thing- it’s also happening with Surf Clubs and RSLs, too. When the local RSL has boutique beers on tap and serves tapas, there’s something wrong, IMHO.
I used a typewriter today at work. I will probably use a typewriter tomorrow at work. (Tenancy agreements that are a carbon, two-part form. Landlord copy and tenant’s copy below.) Actually, I probably type hundreds each year.
I am a very basic eater. I don’t like food very much, my diet is limited (by choice) and I like it that way. I pretty much eat the same foods I have done since I was a child.
But can you buy these basic foodstuffs in a cafe or restaurant anymore? It’s rapidly diminshing as a menu item, and it sucks. It’s all or nothing, instead of having a wider option of ordinary vs fancy.
I would suggest that it is rather a big deal to many species that rely on permanent Arctic ice, even in summer. Polar bears and seals, for a start. A purely anthropocentric view is so very limited.
That kind of thing will long survive the actual typewriter.
Not unless cubicles and shared office space goes away first.
It’s anecdotal, but when I was looking for a house last year, I saw a lot of gas stoves and cooktops in newly-renovated kitchens (we didn’t look at any new construction). I don’t think they’re going away.
It’s going to get harder and harder for you to not give out your email or cell phone number. Just like my grandparents managed to live without credit cards, but it got harder and harder for them- they couldn’t rent movies, for instance. There’s going to be more and more stuff that seems like it shouldn’t have anything to do with phones or email that you won’t be able to do.
If you’re worried about privacy, why not just create a throwaway email address on hotmail or something (that you check once a month or so) and give that out instead of your primary email address?
Did you try emailng Apple and asking them if you could re-download your files? When my computer and external hard drive were stolen last year, I was able to re-download everything that I had purchased from iTunes free of charge.
I do agree, however, that the “all purchases can only be downloaded once” rule is stupid and needs to go away immediately.
35mm film was among the products that were dropped this week from the basket used by the U.K. government to calculate inflation, along with CD singles.
In my experience, gas is back. I went gas in my new house, even my mom just switched over to gas, all those fancy magazine stoves are gas… most new construction has gas fireplaces, too, so it’s not much more work.