@Ephera
@lemmy.mlWe often talk about the climate impact based on greenhouse gases, but extracting fuel from the ground and using it in exothermal processes of course also releases energy as heat.
This is mostly¹ in contrast with renewables, which make use of energy that's not long-term contained to begin with, so would end up as heat in our atmosphere anyways.
So, my question is: Does the amount of energy released by non-renewables have any notable impact on our global temperature? Or would it easily radiate into space, if we solved the greenhouse gas problem?
¹) In the case of solar, putting up black surfaces does mean that less sunlight gets reflected, so more heat ultimately gets trapped in our atmosphere. There's probably other such cases, too.
https://tonsky.me/blog/centering/
Somehow we forgot how to center rectangles and must find our way back
Hi, I just read online that you can apparently run apt --fix-broken install
.
I wanted to know, what that really does, but both apt --help
and man apt
only show a high-level summary of the subcommands and flags. The --fix-broken
flag is never mentioned, and presumably many others neither.
Is there some way to access documentation for all subcommands and flags?