We found out two days later that Becky didn't blow anyone, no one had herpes, and the entire field hockey team got mononucleosis because they share water bottles.
Mostly nothing. The Unicode Consortium isn't run by the US government. Neither is ANSI nor IEEE. The IETF and ISO are international bodies technically headquartered in Switzerland. FIPS picks standards, it doesn't author them.
Congratulations, you're already living in a world where "smart people [are] working for other smart people."
Wait hang on...
did not blow up, it faded, with its oriental counterpart well-flourishing for 10 centuries after that
How long do you think a century is? Did you mean to say decade? Even then, the US wasn't really a global superpower until the 1940s. There are people still alive that remember the Dust Bowl. If your question is, "what happens to regulatory standards 100 years after the US is gone," I'm not sure what quality of answer you're expecting.
For someone who doesn't want "chud shit," you sure do leave some pretty huge doors open for it. Especially when you don't go into any detail of what these regulatory bodies do. It reminds me of 14 year olds loudly declaring "I don't want any drama..." before "...but I think Becky got mouth herpes from blowing Steve at band camp."
Home Assistant can track device location using the companion app (iOS and Android). It would take a little work to save more than the default amount of information, but it's extremely do-able.
If it weren't for the last season of Game of Thrones, the last 35 minutes of Mass Effect 3 would still be #1 on my list of "fastest ways to rapidly obliterate everything your fans love, retroactively, forever." Somehow the Star Wars Prequels are #3.
We found out two days later that Becky didn't blow anyone, no one had herpes, and the entire field hockey team got mononucleosis because they share water bottles.