If you're not already familiar with Low-tech Magazine [1], here's a mini-review that might help pique your interest. Low-tech Magazine is a collection of articles analyzing various sorts of technologies, past and present, relative to the pursuit of a sustainable society. The magazine (a website, actually) attempts to dispell the myth that newer, more complex technology is always an improvement; and to argue that older, simpler technology is often more energy efficient, less resource wasteful, and generally has less negative side-effects. The articles each review a different technology from this perspective. Articles are categorized into three topics: (1) clever and effective technologies from the past that may be mostly forgotten now, (2) negative consequences of many modern "high-tech" technologies, and (3) simple, efficient technologies that may be adopted today. Many of the low-tech solutions covered include sometimes novel applications of the usual power suspects: solar, wind, and hydro; and they cover interesting mechanisms for both applying and storing power. The magazine, led by Kris de Decker, has been online since 2007 and has published around 12 articles each year -- so there is a lot of backlog to browse if you haven't already started reading. Each article has insightful analysis backed by well researched history. It's hard not to come away inspired to try something out or at least to come away having learned something very interesting. And there are a number of topics that will be of specific interest to the pubnix community; e.g. how to build a low-tech internet [2]. I like to think of text-based computing as a small analogy to the topics covered by Low-tech Magazine. There is no end to posts in gopherspace about preferences for internet interactions using plaintext alone; and conversely, posts about the disdain for the eye candy wasteland of the WWW. I doubt de Decker would cover this topic in the magazine, but I think it's an apt, yet small, analogy. de Decker's quest with Low-tech Magazine is also something that I imagine aligns with the sensibilities of many people in pubnix-space. Many modern technologies are shoved down the planet's throat, in pursuit of maximizing corporate profits, while utterly ignoring their negative consequences on societies or on the environment. de Decker aims to raise awareness of this problem and to give life to ideas that should be considered as sustainable alternatives. If you look at the link below [1], you'll also find one interesting way in which Low-tech Magazine is a champion of low-power computing. The website is solar-powered, running off a Olimex A20 single-board computer, with the power coming from a photo-voltaic system on de Decker's porch. You can see server power stats on the website, including a webpage background that doubles as a battery charge meter. Yes, the website does go offline occasionally, when Barcelona gets hit by extended cloudy weather. If you like this website, and you have other similar non-commercial www sites to recommend, please post about them. Or even just send me an email: [username]@rawtext.club, where username=cmccabe. -- [1] https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/ [2] https://solar.lowtechmagazine.com/2015/10/how-to-build-a-low-tech-internet.html