Well, that was fast, lol.
Thanks!
Well, that was fast, lol.
Thanks!
We need @SorteKanin@feddit.dk to dive in and tell us how these numbers work!
Adding on to this: the repair shop I take my car to is too far from my house for me to walk or bike back, so I just walk the shops in town while they work on my car (unless they tell me ahead of time it might take more than one day to diagnose+repair, in which case I ask a friend to drive me back home after dropping off the car).
It’s less that they “assume you can leave”, but rather that it isn’t really their problem. They need an uncertain amount of time to work on your car, depending on the issue being repaired, and you can leave if you want to during that window.
If there’s nowhere for you to walk/bike to nearby, you just gotta sit and wait, which I’ve done on a handful of occasions. Just sitting in the lobby and reading some outdated magazines for an hour or two. It’s boring, but what can you do?
I really enjoyed watching this series a while back by Ben Eater:
“Building an 8-bit Breadboard Computer”
It explains a lot of the steps in the rocks-to-computer pipeline in detail. It assumes decent familiarity with electronics fundamentals, though. So maybe not the best starting point.
A $1 backscratcher from a local pharmacy. Makes scratching my own back effortless. 10/10 investment. And way more affordable than the full-time backscratching assistant I was paying all those years.
I’m not a fan of going to the gym, either. Though I understand why others prefer it.
I’ve always liked having a home gym. I inherited a bunch of equipment from my parents when I was about 22, but had to sell it all when I moved into a much smaller living space when I was 25. I was only able recently, at 33, to invest in a new set of equipment and it’s been nice to get to do proper weightlifting at home again.
“Sons of Texas” reminded me of this tune I enjoyed a while back from Maylene and the Sons of Disaster:
“Step Up (I’m On It)”