Properly learn to code and spend much of that time developing open source software.
Immediately move out to the woods to start a wildlife sanctuary.
That said, while I'm a huge proponent of UBI, I definitely don't think it could ever work this way (though I get that this was just a fun thought experiment).
In actuality I see the outcome of a UBI as working class people having a little more time and energy to properly invest in themselves, either through education, self care, etc. Studies have shown that largely people continue to work (or better yet, start their own small business), albeit not necessarily at the backbreaking and emotionally-draining pace they currently do.
Good call. For what it's worth, when I store a desktop in my car it's typically because it's old and I haven't gotten around to stripping it for parts or dropping it off at the recycler.
I hate myself for buying my last two Paradox DLC at full price. I even enjoyed them, I just hate what it says about that company's control over my dopamine.
Don't let them pressure you! My wife often nags me about my cable drawer, but my tendency to hoard old tech has saved the day more than once.
We once drove halfway across Canada to a wedding, which was at a campground outside of Montreal. As they were setting up for the reception someone in the wedding party asked if I knew where they could get a particular video adapter. I was like, "Oh, I've got one in my bag." I hadn't brought that adapter across two provinces for any real reason, but it sure came in handy.
Another time we were visiting a friend about an hour away. He mentioned needing a power cable for a desktop computer. I was like, "Oh, I've got a whole desktop in the trunk of my car. You want the whole thing or just the power cable?"
Yup! The only remaining Windows system I personally use is my work laptop. I feel like its lack of customizability holds back my workflow but I've kept Windows on it so I don't get rusty for when I need to support my users. At this point I think I'll just spin up a decommissioned box for Windows testing and finally throw Linux onto my work system.
You're so right that we're all beta-testers now. If I recall correctly, MS and Google both laid off a ton of their QA people like 10 years ago and now the customers are functionally QA. Our M365 tenant just dealt with over two straight weeks of email issues. According to the actual MS advisory, this was due to a code update pushed to production to "increase reliability." No shit!
God these people are such fucking crybabies. It's not even an especially significant tax hike.
Edited to add:
“Foundations, high-net worth folks that are holding the capital into companies — that’s going to be gone.”
That's a lie, but if it were true - good riddance. We'd get a lot more done as a country without those ghouls playing the working class against each other. Let them all move away - it's not like regular Canadians won't start businesses to take their place.
Also, when I say it's not an especially significant tax hike: Capital gains are currently taxed as if you made 50% of the profit you actually made, and now that's going up to 66%. It's not a tax rate of 66%, it literally means "When we tax you, we'll pretend you only made 2/3rds of the profit you actually did." Regular people, already get taxed on 100% of their employment income (albeit generally in a lower tax bracket).
You absolutely made the right call. Fallout is apparently at its best when Bethesda isn't fully calling the shots. Apart from the original isometric games, that's (in my opinion) the gem of the series.
Okay, I guess I've gotta play the crow here ... Is Arch really such a bad choice for a beginner these days? Obviously building it the "proper" way would be a bad idea, but there are tons of Arch-based distros with GUI-installers. I currently run Garuda on both my personal devices and the install process really couldn't have been easier, and almost everything worked out of the box. The stuff that needed tweaking was all minor and mostly related to this being my first foray into KDE in over a decade. Let's face it - that's a pretty high bar even on Windows systems these days.
Granted, the rolling release aspect means inevitably you're gonna get a borked update that you have to revert, so that's a stumbling point for a complete newbie. It's not like that doesn't sometimes happen on other distros though - or even Windows. On the other hand, the AUR means little or no manually compiling stuff. Plus, the best wiki in the community (even if you don't use Arch). And gaming (at least on AMD) is rock solid.
Hell, I have a fifteen-year-old intern at my work (through his school). He'd had almost no exposure to Linux when he started with us, so as a learning project I had him set up Arch with Hyprland from the console. The little bugger did find the install script, but even then he had to learn a bunch of stuff and still had a running system in about an afternoon.
ANYWAY, I'm not saying that Arch should necessarily be the first distro for most beginners, just that it's not as daunting as most people make it out to be.
Setting up a computer for Grandma? Mint.
Already something of a power-user in Windows? Depending on your use case, Arch is worth consideration.
Ooooh yeah. I didn't even consider that, but it looks like it comes from 4chan so there's a good chance you're right about the dog whistle.