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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)TI
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  • Setup your own cloud services, all with FOSS tools and you're fine.

    "Just have tons of time, expertise, and money, you idiot, what's wrong with you?!" is how I read this as someone with two jobs most of the year. I technically have at least the base of the expertise and used to do selfhosting, but there is no way I have the time nor money to keep up with that these days, let alone energy.

  • Losing the ability to use my FELiCA chip is a big one for me. We use it for all kinds of things here in Japan, the most annoying of which being all kinds of things for verifying our identity by reading our My Number (and other) cards. It would also add up to an hour to any of my commutes to account for having to wait to buy tickets, etc.

    1. consider keeping your US phone number until all banking stuff is done since many banks do 2fa and this can be a giant pain after moving. Try to switch to an app if possible. Many providers also disallow known VoIP numbers.
    2. driving license was another one mentioned. Having it not expire before you can transfer it is preferable (assuming the target country allows transfer. Japan didn't until after two years after I got here and my license expired so I had to start from zero despite driving for 15+ years in the US). You may need to get notarized driving records which is also easier before you leave.
    3. go through and change/cancel anything with an address on file -- can be much easier from within the US. I went through the past year's bank records to find anything sneaky that doesn't renew monthly. If you have things that only renew every N years, don't forget to cancel or update those (domain names, for instance).
    4. Make sure all city, municipal, county, state, and federal tax stuff will be OK to do after leaving (sometimes, some prep is needed)
    5. If you have any retirement plans like 401ks, IRAs, etc. see about rolling them over or whatever
    6. maybe do something with social security with regard to your target country if an agreement is in place, particularly if you didn't work long enough to claim it. You can get US SS overseas in the vast majority of countries, but there are also certain provisions where you wouldn't or it would be reduced based on what you have in the target country.
    7. Freeze credit reports at the agencies as others mentioned
  • I was in Houston for hurricane Ike. We had trees down all around making the roads impassible for a few days, so having a few days of food was enough for us to get them cut and moved enough to go anywhere. 3 days is also enough to get food/water distributions or drops set up. It's basically enough to get out of needed or to get by until distribution logistics are in place. If bombings start, your stash could go up in smoke so 3 days or 30 wouldn't really matter as much as a go-bag with more compressed calorie bars or something.

    Ah, and yes to not relying on the grid. Now, I have a battery backup that can run my well pump or keep the fridges going and recharges with solar. We have a cannister gas stove and a charcoal grill. I have a kerosene stove and several litres of fuel around for the colder months as well, but I think some of that is hard for those in small apartments and the like.

  • This has been a thing for centuries at this point, though it seems to be falling out of fashion. You can find it in style guides already just after the turn of the 20th century and the practice certainly dates back further. Some publications online have stopped doing title case in favor of sentence case, but I'm not sure in physical media. Title Case sets the title apart, may be clearer or catchier at a distance (good for newstands and newsies, I guess?) and I find it easier to read in some cases. Some argue it stems from German which capitalizes all nouns, but I doubt that since this is done everywhere in German and not just in titles.

  • Basically, it seems that way since, afaik, no free ID is a available that meets the requirements.

    Even if it were free, getting it would still definitely be harder for the disadvantaged, but I have no idea how the courts might see that in isolation.

  • Any malady that could get through would, in theory, be able to destroy nearly everyone. If the response that would grant immunity to future generations were a mutation with a negative side effect attached, you've just ended humanity (assuming any survived). We've lost plant species to similar.

    This one example ignores a whole host of other problems with the idea.

  • It is a once-per-10-years spend. The renewal fee is the same. I'm not sure about RealID-complient ID prices since that all happened after I left the US.

    Americans having access to healthful food and time to cook when working two jobs is a whole other thing (this disproportionally impacts people of lower income). Also, as I mentioned in another reply, trying to get all of the documents together to do this and the time and transportation to do it (remember: public transit is absolute shit, if even available, in a lot of the US) is a whole other problem.

  • It seems like it's either $130 or $165 (130 + 35) for a first time applicant according to the web. Keep in mind that many US households couldn't bear a sudden $400 expense and this is even worse amongst the working poor.

  • Nope. Especially in poor communities. Not only may someones parents be shitty and getting the documentation alone be hard, but working multiple jobs, not driving, and needing to spend hours (and money) getting to a DMV (and, in some cases, on the ID itself?) isn't an easy task.

  • I was on BBS, Compuserve, and eventually AoL and others. I forget when I first saw it, but it felt later to me. It's possible it just wasn't popular when and where I was around and that meant I didn't see it until much later, but I don't remember it. I remember being confused the first time I saw it, wondering what it might stand for.

  • I am somehow one step removed as XD feels young to me 8-)

    But what is a meme if it doesn't miss GenX. Whatever. (I assume here that the 'I hate my wife' is meant to be a jab at boomer humor, but I may be wrong).

  • I saw it twice that I can remember in person in my ~30 years growing up and living in the US. Can't speak for the last decade as I've only spent a couple weeks in the US in that time to see family.