Might be worth buying a physical copy of The Knowledge too (I just have).
And if anyone’s looking for a big project...
If we take catastrophic risks seriously and want humanity to recover from a devastating shock as far and fast as possible, producing such a guide before it’s too late might be one of the higher-impact projects someone could take on.
Another easy thing you can do, which I did several years ago, is download Kiwix onto your phone, which allows you to save offline versions of references such as Wikipedia, WikiHow, and way, way more. Then also buy a solar-powered or hand-crank USB charger (often built into disaster radios such as this one which I purchased).
For extra credit, store this data on an old phone you no longer use, and keep that and the disaster radio in a Faraday bag.
Huh, maybe not.
Might be worth buying a physical copy of The Knowledge too (I just have).
And if anyone’s looking for a big project...
Another easy thing you can do, which I did several years ago, is download Kiwix onto your phone, which allows you to save offline versions of references such as Wikipedia, WikiHow, and way, way more. Then also buy a solar-powered or hand-crank USB charger (often built into disaster radios such as this one which I purchased).
For extra credit, store this data on an old phone you no longer use, and keep that and the disaster radio in a Faraday bag.
All done :-) (already had a solar/crank charger+radio). Thank you!