SE Automation: A Standard Electric Supply Co.

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The Survivalists Online May 2026

Marcus chuckled, a dry sound that got lost in the wind. "I do. I also remember being called a fascist by a guy in Belgium because I suggested we use gravel filtration instead of sand. He was wrong, by the way. The gravel is holding up much better against the silt." "He ever make it out here?"

"Just thinking about how much of this was just lines of code and heated arguments in a chat box not too long ago," Elena replied, gesturing to the village. "Remember that eighty-page thread on the optimal pitch for the rain-catchment roofs?" The Survivalists online

The concept had started simple enough. In a world increasingly fractured by climate instability, economic collapse, and a general sense of impending doom, a small group of experts had started an online repository of radical self-reliance. They didn’t preach doomsday prep in the traditional sense; there were no bunkers or hoarding of canned beans. Instead, they taught adaptability. They shared blueprints for low-tech water filtration, open-source agricultural techniques, and medical protocols that could be performed with minimal equipment. Marcus chuckled, a dry sound that got lost in the wind

The village was a masterclass in hybrid engineering. Solar arrays, pieced together from salvaged panels and maintained by a crew of former tech workers, lined the highest ridge. Below them, a series of terraced gardens utilized a complex permaculture design that had been debated and perfected online for months before a single shovel hit the dirt. The houses were earth-sheltered, blending into the landscape to protect against the frequent tropical storms. "Thinking about the old world?" He was wrong, by the way

They stood in silence for a long moment, the wind tugging at their clothes. It was the central conflict of their existence: the pull between local necessity and global responsibility. In the beginning, they had dreamed of thousands of nodes like theirs, all connected, sharing resources and knowledge. But the world was breaking apart too fast, and the connections were snapping.

To the rest of the world, they were an internet phenomenon—a fringe movement born in the dark corners of survival forums and encrypted chat rooms. To Elena, they were the only family she had left.

We could explore the outcome of the , or shift the focus to one of the other nodes they are trying to communicate with.