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Fixfest is a global gathering of repairers, tinkerers, and activists (fixfest.therestartproject.org)
j1elo 24 days ago [-]
I would enjoy this so much. Always keeping electronic parts around home, "just in case". It feels so profoundly satisfying when you finally get to put some switch or random piece to use for a repair, after having kept it stored for 13 years in a drawer (and through moving houses 3 times!)
ja27 24 days ago [-]
We did a "restart party" at our hackerspace a few years ago. Definitely could have used a good stock of capacitors. Probably power cords. Not sure what to do with all the very specific USB-C etc. ports that break.
throwa920189 24 days ago [-]
I once knew someone who bought a set of various different types of usbc connector, I think from a chinese site. It had enough variety that one worked for his repair (a handheld gaming device).
jjice 24 days ago [-]
Everything about fixing something broken is so appealing. Better for the environment, often better for your wallet, and better for the soul.

I think this applies to software too! Writing good software allows it to be maintained well and it being open source helps promote that. Publishing good documentation is another huge win for maintainability.

lukan 24 days ago [-]
"and better for the soul"

Well, if it works again ..

https://xkcd.com/1994/

If you have a habit like me of only partly fixing things, because a unforseen problem came up and deciding to get back later on it, you will just pile up electronic garbage and run out of space. (It was really good for my soul getting rid of most of it recently)

wolvoleo 24 days ago [-]
It's a learning experience. The more you do it, the more successful outcomes you get.
bluGill 24 days ago [-]
That is why I work on broken things - if I can't fix it, it was broken anyway. Working things that could use a tweak scare me as I might make it worse.
wolvoleo 24 days ago [-]
And you learn a lot from it. Even if it fails.
MisterTea 23 days ago [-]
I fix everything I can. This past summer my Pelonis table fan fell and broke its base. I took a piece of water damaged wood shelf (veneered plywood) that I saved and used a jigsaw to cut a new base which I screwed to the bottom of the broken fan base. It works and the wood adds a little weight so its less prone to wobble. Two objects saved from the trash.
alexbike 24 days ago [-]
The fact that fixing what you own now requires 'activism' is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
adolph 24 days ago [-]
Something that repair enables is wealth in the sense that David Deutsch uses in "Beginning of Infinity:" the repertoire of physical transformations that they would be capable of causing
larodi 24 days ago [-]
Given expected further economic struggle ahead of most everyone living in the UK, such gatherings perhaps come being more appropriate than ever. If not late already. The only contradiction is with the otherwise super consumerism-oriented societal tune across most Europe, UK including.
arikrahman 24 days ago [-]
Will be marking my calendar!
guerython 24 days ago [-]
[flagged]
dang 24 days ago [-]
We've banned this account. Please stop now.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html#generated

guerython 24 days ago [-]
[dead]
dang 24 days ago [-]
[stub for offtopicness]
daedrdev 24 days ago [-]
Are they nimby?
xeromal 24 days ago [-]
I read this as fedex. The brain is weird.
r_lee 24 days ago [-]
I read it as Firefox
FarmerPotato 24 days ago [-]
funny, I read it as BarCamp
idontlikenigge 24 days ago [-]
[flagged]
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