Story
Would you go totally off the gridPreview
History
2016-02-16 19:02
There are innumerable stories of programmers in Silicon Valley earning 6 figure salaries, yet homeless as they still can't pay local rents. Rent/mortgage is the biggest expense most of us have, and off grid homes can drop that to a pittance. How long could you live on a year of your salary if housing was nearly free? You might find a few short term contract gigs provide you with enough money to sustain your lifestyle. Of course that's not true for a decent number of people, who waste every dollar they earn, on frivolous luxuries.
Living off the grid USED TO be hard, but PV solar panels and cheap turbines have made it far more practical. The same goes for cellular or satellite internet access, digital OTA or satellite TV, improved and inexpensive water pumps, etc, etc.
Living off the grid USED TO be hard, but PV solar panels and cheap turbines have made it far more practical. The same goes for cellular or satellite internet access, digital OTA or satellite TV, improved and inexpensive water pumps, etc, etc.
2016-02-16 19:05
There are innumerable stories of programmers in Silicon Valley earning 6 figure salaries, yet homeless as they still can't pay local rents. Rent/mortgage is the biggest expense most of us have, and off grid homes can drop that to a pittance. How long could you live on a year of your salary if housing was nearly free? You might find a few short term contract gigs provide you with enough money to sustain your lifestyle. Of course that's not true for a decent number of people, who just waste every extra dollar they earn, on frivolous luxuries.
Living off the grid USED TO be hard, but PV solar panels and cheap turbines, along with energy-efficient appliances (e.g. LED TVs, heat-pumps, phones/tablets, etc.) have made it far more practical these days. The same goes for cellular or satellite internet access, digital OTA or satellite TV, improved and inexpensive water pumps, low flow toilets & clothes washers, etc, etc.
Living off the grid USED TO be hard, but PV solar panels and cheap turbines, along with energy-efficient appliances (e.g. LED TVs, heat-pumps, phones/tablets, etc.) have made it far more practical these days. The same goes for cellular or satellite internet access, digital OTA or satellite TV, improved and inexpensive water pumps, low flow toilets & clothes washers, etc, etc.
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