Well I got COVID last week and it's still wearing off. My best friend and roomie of seven years moved out last week as well, so I'm living alone for the first time ever βΊοΈ/πͺ
On the bright side I have cut my marijuana intake in half, drank one coke instead of 3-5 per day, and managed to eat three meals, for the past half week.
After a purge I'm left with YNAB, Microsoft 365, GitHub Copilot, and a YouTube membership to City Planner Plays (s/o).
I'm particularly annoyed with MS365 because of how intertwined with Windows it has become, making it harder to get rid of the subscription... and it is kinda nice to reinstall Windows, login, and everything is just .. there. Just as it was 20 minutes ago.
Couple weeks ago I did a cleanse and found my subscriptions had ballooned to nearly $150/mo. They should not be able to charge on auto pay when they switch the terms and raise the prices.
If you're in the US I'm assuming you'd be considered an independent contractor, in which case they would provide an agreement and you can negotiate from there if needed. It should specify what happens if they're unhappy with the result, like requesting revisions. But as long as you fulfill the terms of the agreement in good faith, I don't think you need to stress about it.
Not even remotely a lawyer and only have a little experience writing IC agreements for a small nonprofit.
My roomie wants to try living alone and our lease ends in a couple months. I'm really tired of paying my landlord's mortgage so I'm considering buying a decent looking prefab for 120k. I'm 28 and haven't even bought a car much less a house. But I can't stand renting and burning another 70k. It's ridiculous.
My problem is I've never yet really seen a project through, or contributed to FOSS to experience that, though I really want to. I feel like I'd get overwhelmed, and can't possibly contribute anything of value, and would just get in the way. I know it's not true, there are endless projects of varying complexity, and I could certainly learn an existing codebase if I found the confidence to try.
I used Google but this seems a much more reliable guide, thanks :)