

thank you, that’s very helpful to know. I sent him a message
I like to travel, learn and tell stories.
Travel podcast here
New episodes Wednesdays and Saturdays.
Q&A community: https://crazypeople.online/c/bitofarambler
Any travel questions are welcome, they don’t have to be podcast-related
FAQ
how much does it cost to travel long-term?
The cost of living in most countries is around $500 USD a month for transportation, rent, utilities and food altogether; teaching English pays $2000 USD a month with zero qualifications or experience.
every month I taught English, I had a few exrra months of my cost of living.
I taught English for about 7 years.
as long as you’re making more than 500 USD a month remotely in any job, you can travel long-term.
if you want to backpack, CoL shoots down to $200 a month real quick.
thank you, that’s very helpful to know. I sent him a message
thanks, I did check that out when the developer posted it and it’s definitely my backup if I can’t figure out how to sync my feed.
very cool that they built and shared that.
I’ve been able to automate most social media posts, so I’m assuming there is a way to do it with lemmy and I’m just not technically minded enough to know how yet.
I was literally in the middle of thinking about community groups when I came across your post, I think a lot of people would use this feature.
i find this very satisfying: gently disagreeing with them via a short single positive message like “gay people do deserve respect”, then letting them throw a very lengthy, time-invested tantrum before gently and completely disagreeing with their comment with another short sentence, over and over until they get tired.
i find that both very funny and I’m putting out positive messages that negate their bigotry without too much time or effort.
that’s just if you have the time and inclination to engage, you aren’t morally obligated to subject yourself to abusive behavior.
if it’s real bad, they’re probably violating a rule, and reporting them will get them banned
hated that work culture so i left as soon as the opportunity presented itself.
went to teach ESL. half the hours for better pay
i travel constantly, and every time I’m flying in a plane i am re-amazed.
i think about how easy and quick it is to fly anywhere in the world and I’m sitting in a bit metal tube floating in the air.
it’s bananas.
I make my own DIY huaraches like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1FrEgeP9jI
extremely comfortable, you can make it with any old slipper lying around and some paracord, lasts for 6 months to a year, depending on the quality of the sandal base.
adjust it to exactly your size that fits perfectly and then you can sew the knots so that all the dimensions stay the same.
takes me maybe 5 minutes to make each pair, and then 5 minutes for the sewing of the knots so I never have to readjust them, costs nearly nothing.
“…that molten glass was involved…”
yeaj, the process you actually go through is even more impressive than the already incredibly difficult fantasia-sequence molten glass process I imagined, haha!
creating a 40 piece picture frame or 60 piece or whatever it is, jeez, that is very cool, and to get it so smooth.
the podcast is called “bit of a rambler”, it’s everywhere podcasts are, main page here: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/bit-of-a-rambler--6571124
the first two episodes are out and new eps will be coming out every Wednesday for a long time to come, travel stories and information.
those paints came out great, very vibrant colors, and the car polish you added is such a smart idea, they’ll probably look that way forever.
the nail polish in UV lamp are another good idea, what’s on hand is the way to go, I ended up using strips of old pool noodles lying around as sound insulation for the office I record the podcast in just the other day.
I’ll be on the lookout for whatever you post here next. or I’ll remember you from Lemmy when your YT shorts blow up!
“…she is a true inspiration.”
wow, what a stellar gift, and something that you can throw your appreciation for her into.
do you have a finished picture of the “we can do it” piece you can share?
haha, i remember soldering headphone wires for the first time and ending up with a crazy lumpy Boulder of solder and burnt wires by the end.
to which, of course, I shrugged and rolled electrical tape around and accepted.
Whoa! That is a legitimately fascinating video, thanks again for sharing. “We Can Do It” is such a great image too.
Youtube shorts might net you a little extra revenue if you have a bunch of these clips, btw, if you aren’t way ahead of me, haha, i just learned about shorts.
How long did it take you to develop such a steady hand for the solder?
So there’s no glue and the metal doesn’t fuse into the glass, but the overhang of the solder once it’s cooled acts as a picture frame for each shard and then a complete frame for the whole piece? That’s amazing.
And you definitely did great work on the smooth part of the soldering, all of those front-facing lines look very even and smooth.
Ha, easy to bump projects, i got all excited about these t-shirt designs but after four designs i started up a podcast and got super distracted throwing myself into the episodes. It’s great to feel that inspiration though when you like a project so much you can be reasonably assured it’ll develop into something you’re proud of.
Well, I’m excited to see the new piece, thanks for sharing all this information with me, I would have no idea how something like this worked otherwise.
Are there special glass paints to use for the colors?
oh wow and it’s a time-lapse, you legend!
that definitely gives me a better idea of how the process goes, thanks a lot for sharing, that was very cool to see.
so that’s the copper foil at the end and then do you use a blow torch or something to melt all the pieces together?
that must be so much fun for you also, do you have a lot of projects going on at the same time or do you tend to focus on one at a time?
Ha, that’s awesome, thanks for explaining. Yea, I’ll definitely check out the video when it goes up, sounds like a nail-biting, rewarding process.
Very cool, it came out great.
I coincidentally looked up glass cutting recently and found videos of people cutting window panes by scoring a line and then smacking the scored section off. Is that what you do for cutting glass curves also? Your work looks too technically precise for the smacking method I saw.
wow, that’s very cool. so you have to cut each piece of glass for each finger bone like that?
yes, because it is fun, and we don’t have to make it different just to be different.
Thank you, it was hide read posts.
Haha, OH MY GOSH thank you I’ve been trying to figure it out for…way too long.
thank you so much.
I appreciate it, he got back to my dm too and I’ve already added my RSS feed via his bot. if this works you definitely are owed a case of beer!
I had no clue where to start so I am amazed that someone has set up a simple feed infrastructure for know-nothings.