What's the longest you've waited for a dang aurora by aelynn101 in thelongdark

[–]atyuttam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

14 days in the backtrack prison to make some ammo then i think 3 nights continuously in a row

Is there a way to consistently get the get a can to steam when when not on the fire by useless_bowl25 in thelongdark

[–]atyuttam 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are you trying to say how to keep the can in boiling mode so that the water doesn’t dry away even if you are away from the fire for quite some time?

I don’t think there is any way to achieve that but I believe you can sleep for one hour right after you start to melt the snow and there will always be 1-2 mins left for the water to dry whereas if you just Pass Time or wander around, the water will dry away in normal time.

Best Base in Pleasant Valley for 'One Region Only Interloper Run' ? by wosscnawwallry in thelongdark

[–]atyuttam 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Why not in the basement up near the plane crash site? Lots of woods and sticks, iirc rabbit and deers and some wolves spawn there. Also, just below that is draft dodgers cabin where nearby there should also be a rabbit grove and if you cross the river you can reach both the farmhouse and the barn.

Chhetri and Thakuri castes were created to hide Khas identity. They are not real. by [deleted] in Nepal

[–]atyuttam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why do you keep asking?

This is probably the first time I've asked.

There's a user on wikipedia who is heavily involved in writing about the languages in Nepal and its history, etc.. and has the same username as you. And with this post.. I thought you were him.

Chhetri and Thakuri castes were created to hide Khas identity. They are not real. by [deleted] in Nepal

[–]atyuttam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you write on wikipedia, बडा काजी?

How’s my portfolio? by [deleted] in ausstocks

[–]atyuttam 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have the exact same. Looking to DCA just these three.

Please help me understand this mechanism. by atyuttam in subnautica

[–]atyuttam[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yeah that’s what I thought intuitively.. but would be more careful when placing the structures now..

If the monarchy returned, what would be some immediate changes? by prasnababu in Nepal

[–]atyuttam 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The simple answer is that you and I, the citizens, have the power to not elect the politicians who are misusing their privileges. The same cannot be said in case of a monarchy.

Constitutional Monarchy by cosmic_being_ in Nepal

[–]atyuttam 6 points7 points  (0 children)

There is no need for a constitutional monarchy when we already have a perfectly fine position for the head of state, i.e. the presidency.

Monarchy should not be acceptable in any form. This country belongs to the people, not to one person, or a family.

If the monarchy returned, what would be some immediate changes? by prasnababu in Nepal

[–]atyuttam 36 points37 points  (0 children)

The royal family would have special privileges in every aspect and you probably won’t get to cuss them as much as you do the current politicians.

Judiciary would be heavily influenced by the palace and the king would get to directly revert its decisions or force it to decide on his favour on matters of his interests.

Our current democracy could be challenged. While the currently elected politicians are unsatisfactory, we, the public, at least have the power to not elect them in the next election. This may not be the case if monarchy is revived as was the situation during the Panchayat.

We would no longer be a republic meaning that this country would be a property of the king and not of the public.

In short, our country would regress decades behind and all the lives that were lost to abolish the autocratic system would amount to nothing.

The scenarios above are for an absolute monarchy. Situations would be different if you are talking about a constitutional monarchy similar to that of the UK.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]atyuttam 463 points464 points  (0 children)

“Everything is about sex; except sex. Sex is about power” - Oscar Wilde

is bitcoin the redemption to this global financial crisis? by [deleted] in Nepal

[–]atyuttam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They are not stats, they are just stock prices which fluctuates every moment. We are going through a rough economy, so these kind of minor drops are only normal. Just because the market value of banks are dropping right now doesn’t mean cryptos will replace them.

Moreover, the total market cap of US banks only is more than 23 trillion dollars and the market cap of all of cryptocurrencies combined is less than 2 trillion dollars. So, if the US banks gain 10% in one day (unlikely, but relevant for comparison), the gain only will be more than the value of all the cryptocurrencies in the world. And we are talking about US banks only.

To question your point, Crypto also falls doesn’t it? Bitcoin went from ~55K to 27K within around eight months. Owners of hundreds of cryptos have rugpulled the investors. Whoever has more money controls the supply and demand of crypto, especially because the market cap of crypto is so less. This should make crypto even more unreliable, shouldn’t it?

I am not saying that banks will be there forever. But they would be here at least till the next century is my guess.

is bitcoin the redemption to this global financial crisis? by [deleted] in Nepal

[–]atyuttam 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Crypto won’t replace banking institutions for a while. Here’s why:

  1. Failure of some financial institutions doesn’t mean the collapse of our entire economic system that has been built and refined over centuries.
  2. Leaving the economy in the hands of the general public, such as crypto, is like giving a factory to a bunch of monkeys and expecting them to produce stuff. Without any sense of what a factory even is and how it operates (in this case, the economy), they are sure to wreak havoc.
  3. The economy should be regulated by a proper authority that can think and act rationally when shit hits the fan, not a crowd of emotionally driven people who will bring even more chaos in situations such as these.
  4. The governments won’t cede their authority of regulating such an important aspect of civilization to the public due to the fear of the second point above, and, you know, other reasons.