tomatolung
@tomatolung@sopuli.xyz
- Comment on Under the most ideal circumstances, how 'clean' is drinkable tap water by the time it reaches our taps? 1 week ago:
niwater.com/…/2024-ni-water-drinking-water-qualit… Is the report vs those standard.
This is a comparable report from NYC. nyc.gov/…/2025-drinking-water-supply-quality-repo…
- Comment on Under the most ideal circumstances, how 'clean' is drinkable tap water by the time it reaches our taps? 1 week ago:
'Tis a great question and one very worth digging into. First off, I suggest getting The Big Thirst from the library. It’s a great book describing the challenge of water for several cities across the world and the processes used to make your water safe.
Second, I’d also suggest checking out some YouTube videos like this Animagraffs video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsVfshmK0Ak. As The Big Thirst and others describe, there are a plethora of engineering techniques now to purify water on a citywide scale, and it is very much up to local utilities to decide how they do it.
Third, someone has already pointed out that there are water quality standards in N. Ireland. As others have noted, it needs to be “safe,” not “sterile.” Indeed, you actually do want some minerals in your water—otherwise it can be detrimental to your health. Drinking straight distilled water continuously, for example, is problematic because “pure” water will actually leach the minerals it encounters.
Fourth, the purity of water is ultimately about how much money is invested in purifying it. Chip companies and scientific endeavors need higher levels of water purity for some of their processes. This can be achieved through the engineering processes mentioned above, producing incredibly pure water—which is actually dangerous to drink.
Lastly, the purification of water from your swamp is a function of how much money the city is willing to spend, but it is feasible to take nearly any water and make it safe to drink with enough investment in infrastructure. As part of this, the pipes that deliver water to your house are crucial: they must remain full and pressurized (pushing clean water out, not allowing contamination in). I mention this because it’s important to understand that the infrastructure around water delivery is nearly as important as the treatment itself. (Similarly true for wastewater.)
- Comment on Why are dogs? 2 months ago:
- Comment on Every fucking video... 11 months ago:
Seal, YTDLnis, Newpipe, Tubular, freetube, etc… So many alternative options.
- Comment on AND THEY DIDN'T STOP EATING 1 year ago:
Sounds like a good bot.
- Submitted 1 year ago to technology@beehaw.org | 18 comments
- Comment on Well THAT fucking sucks! 🤬 1 year ago:
On LineageOS build with no Google Service, download using Tubular/NewPipe/Seal/etc. Play on VLC. Makes for a better privacy experience.
Lots of trouble to build, but worth it. The lack of spam and other spooky things is telling.
- Comment on Know thy enemy 1 year ago:
Anyone know how much of the oil transported is actually used for plastic, percentage wise?
- Comment on Bank of America will (stop|continue to) Accept $1 bills 1 year ago:
The BEP can still accept them, but I’m curious if BofA is actually doing this and if it’ll stand up. More FAQ’s can be read here
- Comment on Google now requires JavaScript 1 year ago:
The comments I come to Lemmy for!