I suspect abandoned alt accounts are a huge reason for the long, slow decline in user numbers. These graphs should be titled "active accounts," not "active users."
Up through Lemmy version 0.18.5, "active" meant posting or commenting within a specified timeframe (past month, past year, etc.). Starting with version 0.19.0 voting also counts as being active.
"Resistor" usually implies a device with a fixed resistance value. A rheostat is a device with variable resistance. The two terms are not synonymous.
As for condenser and capacitor, Wikipedia has an interesting tidbit:
Early capacitors were known as condensers, a term that is still occasionally used today, particularly in high power applications, such as automotive systems. The term was first used for this purpose by Alessandro Volta in 1782, with reference to the device's ability to store a higher density of electric charge than was possible with an isolated conductor. The term became deprecated because of the ambiguous meaning of steam condenser, with capacitor becoming the recommended term in the UK from 1926, while the change occurred considerably later in the United States.
There are certainly lots of film adaptations. I can think of two off the top of my head: Ten Things I Hate About You is a retelling of The Taming of the Shrew, and Disney's The Lion King is straight Hamlet.
I'm surprised that I can't easily find novelizations on Google. They must exist. If not, then that seems like a great opportunity.
The buyer pays the taxes and shipping on top of the item's price. eBay is pretty good at estimating the shipping costs. As the other commentor said, eBay's fees are about 10% and are paid by the seller.
I still use Craigslist, but only for items I just want gone. Like, "This thing is free and sitting out on the curb. First one here gets it." I've given up on actually buying or selling there. Too many flaky people who don't know how to communicate or fail to show up at the agreed time and place.
eBay is my long-standing go-to for buying/selling used things that have actual value. I've been screwed twice in 20 years. Both times it was a seller who took my money and never shipped my item. When I sell things, the buyers have always been great.
I avoid Facebook Marketplace, though I hear it's the popular spot now.
There’s a phrase that goes “good fences make good neighbours” and I hate the phrase.
I agree. Also, it's trivia time! That phrase came into common usage from Mending Wall by Robert Frost. A character in the poem keeps repeating it while repairing his stone fence. The narrator clearly disagrees, and wonders why people are driven to create fences that are unnecessary or counterproductive. People who use "good fences make good neighbors" as a truism need to read the poem.
It’s ultimately under the umbrella of ideologies that support and prop up capitalism.
I think that's a good summary.
"Classical liberalism" is basically what modern libertarians want: a laissez-faire capitalist economy, a secular representative government with very limited powers, prioritizing individual freedom over collective well-being, etc.
In my part of the world "liberalism" is now commonly used to refer to a different set of priorities: creating economic safety nets, regulating business, promoting universal healthcare, unions, gender equality, racial equality, etc. Though capitalism and a secular representative government are still part of the mix.
The biggest questions are where and why. You have a huge country to explore, but what makes any one town stand out as a desirable destination? Within any region or state you can find great places and crummy places, often right next to each other, so you really need to think about what you are looking for and what you want to avoid. Consider taking a long weekend to visit and explore a prospective area before you commit to it.
I suspect abandoned alt accounts are a huge reason for the long, slow decline in user numbers. These graphs should be titled "active accounts," not "active users."