..or will we be too busy fighting eachother for the last scraps of food & working as subsistence farmers.
One argument I was given was that computers/gadgets advance precisely BY getting more energy efficient.
e.g. newest OLED displays (which work by emitting light per pixel) work more efficiently than LCD's (which work by blocking light) which were in turn more efficient than CRT's
and of course silicon process improves making smaller transistors..
Can we still produce microprocessors (range of fancy chemicals involved ? how energy intensive is their manufacture/R&D.. how many supporting industries.. )
will we simply have to stockpile existing devices? How long will they last? Aren't they are designed for a continual replacement cycle..
should I stockpile laptops /monitors /hard drives etc..
in a stockpiling scenario, what will fare better - laptops or desktops
I think I read hard-drive replacement & energy burn rate in datacentres is going to be the biggest problem..
What are the safest longterm digital information stores ?
Can the internet function off say wind+solar?
or will we be sending data-sticks around on carrier pigeons..
The most depressing predictions I've read are that (asside from possible 90% population crash) Peak Oil is simply the end of the industrial age, and that NO modern technology will be viable with all that pre-stored energy to burn.
I can live without a car. But losing computers..
Someone claimed that without long range trade, there'd be less need to spend energy on long-range communication.
My counter would be that shared global knowledge would still contribute valuable economies of scale.
"Information satisfies human needs for less energy" is an argument some anti-malthusian gave me, citing how - for example - between attending an orchestral performance & an I-pod playing back digital recordings, modern *information* tech had vastly increased our quality of life - due to the information refinement/abundance than the energy being burned to achieve it..





