Today I was thinking about the microcontroller boards that I have that I hardly use nowadays. I tried the BBC Micro:Bit, the Tomu, and finally the Adafruit CircuitExpress. All fun to play with, but compared to my Raspberry Pi, I basically used them for like a week each and then promptly forgot about them. I guess that's how consumerist tech has become to me and others, and coupled with the fact that it's so cheap, has made become aware of how ever-present tech is in our lives. I'm glad it has a purpose, but despite the fact that it's useful, it's also a burden. It's a burden to me, because it takes up more space, I can't really sell it or give it away because none of my friends or family are familier with technology that requi- res programming to work, and I still feel somewhat attached to it despite not using it anymore. I probably have some oth- er tech that I feel the same way about. I think that tech should never be a burden, but a way of self-empowerment and community empowerment. If it's not doing that, I dunno then. I was going to make post a rant about the right to repair and how people just throw away perfectly good tech despite the fact that much tech that is thrown away is able to be re-used or recycled. But yeah, whenever I hear about someone throwing away a computer or a phone because it became "slow" or isn't the new thing I just wanna hide in a hole and never come out of it. People still find uses Commodore 64's and Amiga's for goodness sake. Basically what I am saying is that you shouldn't throw away your tech, but if it's become a burden to you, find a kid or someone tech-minded to give it to and let them have at it.