High-quality content is Reddit's weak point. I don't think any subreddit will be good enough. I've always relied on magazine websites for this kind of info.
I honestly think it just would be prudent for the mods to make a rule when you’re posting some thing or commenting to stick to solution based critical thinking, and collaborative ideas for workarounds, and encourage people not to leave pessimistic doomer style comments that are only negative and arguing without making their own point with just assumptions that things will just be bad just because.
I haven't been up-to-date on my science reading for a while, so they're rather basic (and not strictly futurology-focused): Live Science, Scientific American, Futurism.
Edit: I can't find a futurology-tech one I used to read, it might have gotten acquired and rebranded at some point? So I listed Futurism but I don't feel strongly about that one.
I’d like to find a place to discuss future ideas and concepts. Like the iron-air battery, what are the implications and what are the blockers? Recycling plastics, what’s a workable plan to get there? Electrical infrastructure game plan from here to real long term green energy. If there is a place, let me know!
fish-rides-bike t1_j1fdn3i wrote
great question and thank you, yes, im frustrated so much with that clutter too