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What does everyone do for living?


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2023 Jan 3, 4:56am   8,514 views  61 comments

by GNL   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

I'm a real estate photographer and small business (SAAS) owner.

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41   socal2   2023 Jan 4, 9:12am  

Eman says

There were moments I reflect back and thought had I accepted the offer to work for the Water District, what would my life be like by now?


You'd be retired with a fat municipal pension and basically free healthcare?

Many of my colleagues/customers in industry that work for the public water sector are a couple years away from retirement where I still have 15+ years to go while being their same age!
42   GNL   2023 Jan 4, 9:13am  

socal2 says

Eman says


There were moments I reflect back and thought had I accepted the offer to work for the Water District, what would my life be like by now?


You'd be retired with a fat municipal pension and basically free healthcare?

Many of my colleagues/customers in industry that work for the public water sector are a couple years away from retirement where I still have 15+ years to go while being their same age!

Theft. No other description for it.
43   NuttBoxer   2023 Jan 4, 9:41am  

RedStar says


I maximize medicare reimbursement for hospitals. I lost several clients for not taking the toxxine but business has been nuts and busier than ever.


That's literally what my current company does.

I do all things SW testing related. Hired for automation, but spend a good chunk of my time at every company attempting to get developers to follow better SCRUM and Agile practices.

SW is all service, and I don't see a future in that, at least not for the next five years. If I ever started over, I'd go into farming. But for now thinking of starting my own business with my wife as health coaches. Will stay in SW until gains traction, but I would love to help people start their journey towards better health, and getting started if often the hardest part.
44   mell   2023 Jan 4, 9:54am  

NuttBoxer says


RedStar says


I maximize medicare reimbursement for hospitals. I lost several clients for not taking the toxxine but business has been nuts and busier than ever.


That's literally what my current company does.

I do all things SW testing related. Hired for automation, but spend a good chunk of my time at every company attempting to get developers to follow better SCRUM and Agile practices.

SW is all service, and I don't see a future in that, at least not for the next five years. If I ever started over, I'd go into farming. But for now thinking of starting my own business with my wife as health coaches. Will stay in SW until gains traction, but I would love to help people start their journey towards better health, and getting started if often the hardest part.


I have seen this or similar thoughts posted frequently now and I somewhat disagree. SW (and hardware) will be one of the strongest fields for many decades, automation and automated processes and improvements will continue, there is still so much out there that needs to be automated. Then there is AI, self-driving cars, healthcare wearables etc. etc. Sure there will be a nice demand for good, healthy and mostly organically farmed food, however don't think you can just do this without being harassed at every step by big govt., esp. the leftoids. If you have a nice local support network with enough clients to buy from you directly you may circumvent some of those hassles, but as soon as you rely on larger grocery chains you will likely be their bitch. I remember when they phased out raw milk from most grocery stores under obummer and his shit legacy, xiden is not any better. I have known many who went into farming and it was brutally hard to make a living. I would love to do the same, but as a side business/hobby on a small scale. I see vocational work to net good money in the future, but it's still hard work, plumber, mechanic, roofing etc. Sure tech will shed, esp. around the social media overload, but it will stay in high demand for decades imo. Whether it's fulfilling for most is a different question.
45   Eman   2023 Jan 4, 1:21pm  

socal2 says

Eman says


There were moments I reflect back and thought had I accepted the offer to work for the Water District, what would my life be like by now?


You'd be retired with a fat municipal pension and basically free healthcare?

Many of my colleagues/customers in industry that work for the public water sector are a couple years away from retirement where I still have 15+ years to go while being their same age!

There were moments I thought about it. I’m glad I didn’t accept that cushy offer. My wife has 3 brothers working for government agencies. Two of them can retire at 50 and one at 55. Great deal with the pensions IMO.
46   latitude38   2023 Jan 4, 11:35pm  

Richwicks - Haha I appreciate the offer .There’s one thing in life that has never been beaten and remains undefeated throughout the ages -Father Time .I think I might be bowing out of the race .You mught get a kick out of all the Sillycone Valley jobs I’ve done at one or another . Memorex probably the first landmark , most of the chip manufactures , I recall when Intel was a small OEM company in Mtn View as Intel grew I worked SC 1 &2 Singer Computer most of the HP bldgs and there quite a few back then Amoex in Redwood City pretty much the vast majority of SillyCone ,early Apple bldgs ,,Lockheed -Motorola -ISS the disc manuf . ,IBM bldg including the bldg that made disc drives he list goes on -Steward Brand of whole earth catalog I think he invented the mouse but his ideas were similar to what your saying information as tools Kevin Kelly ,John Barry Barlow of Eletrontic Frontiers Foundatiin also a songwriter for the Grateful Dead .It was interesting listening to these guys when they got together ……. though they were mikes ahead of my grasp Digital Equipment the small computer in Maynard Mass and Frammington ? It was in a old civil war factory .Atari gave me the prototype for their future games like asteroid and so on my kids were popular .
Ten Ton Bass ,Were you a journeyman installer ? I recently was going to go do a couple remodels in Kissnme Ut the hurricane changes that haha -I use to fly down there to do cruise ships that was $$ when I was going to Tahiti ti do a barefoot ship it was halted …….my wife said you ain’t going there or traveling anymore period .Dang !!
47   NuttBoxer   2023 Jan 8, 8:26pm  

mell says

SW (and hardware) will be one of the strongest fields for many decades, automation and automated processes and improvements will continue, there is still so much out there that needs to be automated. Then there is AI, self-driving cars, healthcare wearables etc. etc.


Your outlook is based on the current system lasting, it can't. And completely ignores the primary purpose of the computer age, information, being co-opted by every government in the world in an attempt to realize 1984. The system is fatally flawed, beyond repair, and falling down around our ears. Adapt or die.
48   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Jan 9, 6:52am  

Eman says


At this point, I don’t see myself ever going back to engineering. I’ll work and be a real estate investor until the day I die. There were moments I reflect back and thought had I accepted the offer to work for the Water District, what would my life be like by now?


@Eman is there a target cap you recommend to not go below on rentals? im looking to invest into few here, but cap is pretty low around 4. im in ID as you know. these seem to sell every year too, noone holds them.

or just look for total fixers, sweat equity fix em up to get better cap?
49   REpro   2023 Jan 9, 4:39pm  

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says

Eman says



At this point, I don’t see myself ever going back to engineering. I’ll work and be a real estate investor until the day I die. There were moments I reflect back and thought had I accepted the offer to work for the Water District, what would my life be like by now?


Eman is there a target cap you recommend to not go below on rentals? im looking to invest into few here, but cap is pretty low around 4. im in ID as you know. these seem to sell every year too, noone holds them.

or just look for total fixers, sweat equity fix em up to get better cap?


One of indicators for buy and hold says don't buy when your CAP is lower than your mortgage rate. You be eaten alive by bank.
50   Eman   2023 Jan 9, 7:33pm  

REpro says

FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says


Eman says




At this point, I don’t see myself ever going back to engineering. I’ll work and be a real estate investor until the day I die. There were moments I reflect back and thought had I accepted the offer to work for the Water District, what would my life be like by now?


Eman is there a target cap you recommend to not go below on rentals? im looking to invest into few here, but cap is pretty low around 4. im in ID as you know. these seem to sell every year too, noone holds them.

or just look for total fixers, sweat equity fix em up to get better cap?



One of indicators for buy and hold says don't buy when your CAP is lower than your mortgage rate. You be eaten alive by bank.

True. That’s called negative leverage. At a minimum, need 20% buffer, but 30-40% would be more ideal. This means if borrow rate is at 5%, you need the asset to have 6-8% cap rate.
51   WookieMan   2023 Jan 10, 2:32am  

komputodo says

I see coding, IT, engineering, programmers, office stuff....does anybody work with their hands anymore?

I kind of work with my hands. It's categorized as labor. Thing is I don't "need" the job and it's seasonal. We're a small school district but have 3 schools with about 30 acres of land a piece. I mow the lawns and it's flexible so I take care of the kids and house when not working. I get the winters off, we don't have to hire anyone to deal with the kids and I'm paying into the retirement system here.

You could categorize it as semi-retired. In season I deal with no humans outside of shop talk with the bus barn. Gets me out of the house and covers our current mortgage for the year. I get winters off. After 15 years in RE managing a brokerage for a child boss I'm done with service industries and having a "boss" that cares. Grass is cut and trimmed you don't have a boss at that point.

Wife works in road building sales without getting into details as it would dox me. She's known nationally... which is annoying. I'm a fucking spoiled human basically is what I'm getting at because of her work. I get to jam out to my favorite bands, make the schools look like a country club, get a tan, don't have to deal with people, and the commute is 1-8 minutes to the schools.

I did originally build the website for the wife's company. It's not an industry that needs a flashy website, but what they had was pure shit. Either way a $1M company is worth $30-40M now and I've helped a lot with that. Been a crazy ride.
52   1337irr   2023 Jan 10, 3:09am  

komputodo says

I see coding, IT, engineering, programmers, office stuff....does anybody work with their hands anymore?

I tried working with my hands for pay. I fell off a ladder painting and the other time the foreman of the framing company fired me because I couldn't handle the Texas heat with hauling lumber to the carpenters. I think construction isn't my forte.

I have cooked for pay...that was fun.

Back in IT.
53   WookieMan   2023 Jan 10, 3:18am  

1337irr says

I fell off a ladder painting and the other time the foreman of the framing company fired me because I couldn't handle the Texas heat with hauling lumber to the carpenters.

Fuck ladders. I can handle heights, but all it takes is a foot cramp and you're on the ground. One of our agents back in the day was working on his primary home and fell 2 stories off a ladder. Was in the hospital for two weeks and ended up with permanent scarring on his face. Xmas lights on the gutter freak me out every year if I'm being honest.
54   B.A.C.A.H.   2023 Jan 10, 10:06am  

Nothing. Retired.

Some Snarkey Bay Area Hipster may "Gotcha!" me for sharing my status when I wrote on a different thread that we charge my plug in hybrid EV at the workplace

If you say so, homie, - whatever. I am retired but not everyone in my household is retired.
55   gabbar   2023 Jan 10, 10:45am  

mell says

I have seen this or similar thoughts posted frequently now and I somewhat disagree. SW (and hardware) will be one of the strongest fields for many decades, automation and automated processes and improvements will continue, there is still so much out there that needs to be automated. Then there is AI, self-driving cars, healthcare wearables etc. etc. Sure there will be a nice demand for good, healthy and mostly organically farmed food, however don't think you can just do this without being harassed at every step by big govt., esp. the leftoids. If you have a nice local support network with enough clients to buy from you directly you may circumvent some of those hassles, but as soon as you rely on larger grocery chains you will likely be their bitch. I remember when they phased out raw milk from most grocery stores under obummer and his shit legacy, xiden is not any better. I have known many who went into farming and it was brutally hard to make a living. I would love to do the same, but...

What would be your advice to a freshman in Computer Science at Ohio State University?
56   mell   2023 Jan 10, 10:59am  

gabbar says


mell says


I have seen this or similar thoughts posted frequently now and I somewhat disagree. SW (and hardware) will be one of the strongest fields for many decades, automation and automated processes and improvements will continue, there is still so much out there that needs to be automated. Then there is AI, self-driving cars, healthcare wearables etc. etc. Sure there will be a nice demand for good, healthy and mostly organically farmed food, however don't think you can just do this without being harassed at every step by big govt., esp. the leftoids. If you have a nice local support network with enough clients to buy from you directly you may circumvent some of those hassles, but as soon as you rely on larger grocery chains you will likely be their bitch. I remember when they phased out raw milk from most grocery stores under obummer and his shit legacy, xiden is not any better. I have known man...

If you want to work in SW engineering, always do hobby work at home and at least one side gig if possible, with different technologies. The most important aspect is breadth, don't specialize unless it's something you know will be in high demand for many years to come. The landscape is shifting so fast these days that you have to be at least somewhat familiar with everything. Probably - unless you go into an academical career - 80% of the work experience useful to get you hired comes from outside the university.
57   zzyzzx   2023 Jan 10, 11:14am  

WookieMan says

Xmas lights on the gutter freak me out every year if I'm being honest.


I would recommend not installing lights and using a ground based Christmas light projector if you feel the need to decorate.

I also do my own roof repairs, but I have a roof access panel (2nd floor) and a flat roof.
58   mell   2023 Jan 10, 11:24am  

1337irr says

komputodo says


I see coding, IT, engineering, programmers, office stuff....does anybody work with their hands anymore?

I tried working with my hands for pay. I fell off a ladder painting and the other time the foreman of the framing company fired me because I couldn't handle the Texas heat with hauling lumber to the carpenters. I think construction isn't my forte.

I have cooked for pay...that was fun.

Back in IT.

lol same. I did an internship at a restoration/painting co. which also does some construction many years ago. After using an electric grinder for 2 days making my body reverberate, toppling over freshly painted blinds, and other fun stuff, I decided after the 2 weeks were over that vocational work may not be in my skill set. I can do crude work, heavy lifting and stuff, but when it comes to house stuff where you need skilled hands I just do the bare minimum, rest is done by contractor. I prefer manual tools over electric ones, e.g. drills (though I occasionally use them), and I assemble all the furniture we buy. I don't touch electrical wiring although theoretically I should know how to do it. I used to assemble computers occasionally back then, but I feel much better suited for software than hardware. Over the years though I have at least increased my vocational skills to be able to do small work here and there in the house when necessary ;)
59   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Jan 10, 6:47pm  

komputodo says

I see coding, IT, engineering, programmers, office stuff....does anybody work with their hands anymore?


I am definitely not working with my feet. Noone pays for footjobs anymore behind Wendys
60   GNL   2023 Jan 10, 7:12pm  

I think the incentives in America are all wrong. The most money goes to those who put others out of work or even those who peddle debt. It just feels wrong but, I guess...Welcome to the Jungle.
61   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2023 Jan 10, 7:22pm  

GNL says

I think the incentives in America are all wrong. The most money goes to those who put others out of work or even those who peddle debt. It just feels wrong but, I guess...Welcome to the Jungle.


de industrialization made a lot of that. cheap labor overseas coveted by greed, we sold our businesses to China. that is flaw in the system where the golden calf is worshipped.

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