Sure thing! Hopefully that can help with ideas I got started by doing little short trips in the US. Maybe you can change things up with some weekend road trips or something
RagingHungryPanda
- How do you live day to day, spend the hours, get food, hygiene, etc?
I work office hours at US central time, so things don't really change a whole lot there. I wake up, do breakfast if it's offered, hop on the morning meeting, and optionally find a cafe to work at.
Many places offer breakfast and lots of hostels have kitchens and refrigerators, so I'll take one of those eco bags that I got for $0.50 in latin america and buy a few things for a meal, or I'll eat out, which I do too much.
Hygiene is fine. Every place has showers and toilets - just wear flip flops or shower shoes in shared showers.
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I'm currently in the US. My company's policy of work abroad changed, so I'll be back here for a while.
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problems
I've learned to be more flexible. Sometimes places have flakey internet, but I have my phone as a hotspot. Your plans won't always work out and its fine, there will be another way to make it happen. There's another bus, plane, lodging around. It'll be fine.
- What is a DN?
Your moving long term and have a digitally oriented job.
- money
I kept my job and I saved a ton of money in latin america. To give you an idea, the cost of my not out of the ordinary apartment plus utilities in Austin, TX came out to about $68 per day. My housing costs in latin america ranged from $10-$40 per day. It's hard to spend there in a day what I was doing just for rent. And that's eating out 2-3 times per day.
So I have way more money now.
- Best/worst
Best part is the adventure and seeing the world. Worst might be that connections are fleeting and you need to be ok with the finality of things. I think this is good overall, but what I do is I'll travel for a while and then settle for a month or more at a CoLive arrangement. Those have the benefits of hostels in the social aspect, but you often have your own room, sometimes a dorm, and people stay for minimum amounts of time, which is often a month.
The conveniences of home can be missed a bit, but then I can rent a private room or a hotel if I want. Also, sometimes I want my me time, but then I retreat too much, so the social aspects of hostels can pull me out of that.
- Transportation
Buses in Latin America are great. I flew sometimes, but I have local transit passes for most places that I went to. Going between cities, I often took the bus.
- Sustainable
I've been doing it for a year and a half and don't see myself stopping. I know people that have been doing it for 7+ years. It's whatever fits you. You don't have to fit a mold. You can try it for short term and go back, you can do it on and off, whatever. It's your life. Live it. haha
I sold all of my possessions and have been traveling as a digital nomad for a year and a half. It was the best thing I've ever done.
I showed redline to my family who would absolutely hate anime and they asked me for more like it. Unfortunately, there isn't.
It was a huge pita to get it running, but I have it.
One thing about the WA bridge is that element won't let me give display names or look up the contact number, so the people in chatting with don't have names, just "their number (WA)"
Happy birthday!
For backups, I have two drives that are striped and do nightly backups to idrive. I was able to find a containerized version of the console app and I have it run on a schedule from 3-7am.
I use NPM to redirect a domain name to the server with https.
I'm currently using write.as. It's a pretty bare-bones setup when in single user mode and doesn't give the kind of list view you might expect for readers - it loads everything onto a single page. I'm considering maybe using Ghost, which is another big name in the federated blogging space. Write.as doesn't come with comments by default, but I was able to add cactus-comments, but it was a huge PITA because it requires a matrix server.
I do, however, like the minimalist UI aspect of it. You can take a look at mine here. I was also able to get around the list thing by using pinned posts, which stay at the top, so I made an about, a directory, and subscribe pages.
Write.as will post to mastodon under an account that it creates and I have myself on mastodon as a verified owner of the blog site.
I don't really know what town or how good the public transit is, but interns don't really make anything. Advocating for a transit allowance or something that could cover public transit and could be used to help with parking could be good. If they live in town, going over biking or transit options with them could also be good, and maybe also "park and ride" options as well. But yeah, $18 daily when you're an intern isn't easy.
is the baby federating?
I leave them all behind