Planet Fitness is your friend.
Don't treat places like your backyard. Thats why everyone stopped allowing overnight parking.
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Planet Fitness is your friend.
Don't treat places like your backyard. Thats why everyone stopped allowing overnight parking.
Iβve been living in a motor home for five years. Itβs pretty good for me, I work from home and have spent a good long time at dozens of national parks and other awesome places.
Also boring places. Moving all the time and fixing broken things can be stressful and staying in nice places can be expensive. But overall itβs been way better for me than sitting in a house and staring at the walls.
Hardest thing for me has been finding actual remote work. Look on any job board these days and everyone's claiming "remote*" when they're nothing of the sort.
Maybe you should claim things are true, knowing they are false, when you apply.
I'm not opposed to that, but if they expect me to be at a physical location at any point, I'm SOL.
I move around every 4 months in the US. I stay in long-term Airbnbs (min 1 month stay). I work remote; so, the issue I mostly deal with is my working setup. No standing desk, comfortable chair, multi-monitor setup (using portable external monitor), etc.
Otherwise, the surroundings of the place I stay at is always a gamble. You never know if its a loud or safe neighborhood just by looking at the posting or street view on google maps. Sometimes there could be construction going on next door.
Eating around and exploring the country is the best part.
Terrible as I only find joy in a few things and the van life makes almost all of them impossible. I guess that's the difference between choosing the van life, and the van life choosing you.
What is life worth if you cannot do what is most important to you?
Absolutely nothing. Less then nothing. Negative Nothing (sweet band name)
I move every 2 weeks in an RV. So I roughly wake up in 26 different places over the year.
Internet is rough. But has gotten better over the years since I started.
I could imagine that socially it might be difficult for some.
But largely my routine is similar to if I were in a house/apartment:
Weekdays: work, cook/eat, walk/hike/explore, games, sleep. Weekends: groceries, cook/eat, chores/maintenance, relocate if needed, walk/hike/explore, games, sleep.
Oh - I usually remind people theyβre giving up a dishwasher and laundry machines unless theyβre going pretty big on their RV purchase.
Recently Iβve been parking during the summer and flying to different countries. Itβs more or less the same - solid internet is a challenge and you get to work on a potential language barrier.
StarLink has been a game changer for me. Expensive as frick but so worth not having to find cell towers or monitor data caps anymore.
Verizon wouldnβt sell anything larger than a 15gb plan - glad those days of juggling SIM cards are past.
But yeah - Starlink has helped a lot. I still have 3 big cell prover SIM cards and modems/router for redundancy.
If I ever go that route, you bet I'm getting a dishwasher put in at the very least. I know my limits, haha.
They're available on the bigger rigs. It's just worth noting that space on any RV/trailer is a tradeoff, and appliances tend to be limited for space and weight.
Yup. I'd probably be tearing out couches to make space for a drawer-type machine or two. The washer-dryer can open to outdoors if needed, and I've pretty much figured out how to make that work on one model I've looked at.
Countertop dishwashers are a thing. I found one that fits on the tiny counter I have, and do my chopping and slicing on the kitchen table instead.
Yeah, but it's different in an RV. With a countertop unit, you'd have to either secure it for travel, losing limited counter space in the process, or find somewhere to stow it, and storage in a camper is already at a premium. There's also the fact that any form of dishwasher operates on 120vac, meaning you can only use it when you're on shore power or running a genny (whereas a refrigerator can auto switch between propane and 120v). Again, not saying it can't be done, but there are logistical concerns that mean dishwashers and other large appliances are the first to be forgone.
Batteries have gotten pretty good too, and you can definitely get inverters.
Mine just stays on the counter. At the spot itβs in, if I had an accident and it tried to go flying, the wall of the retracted slide room would block it. But in 3 years of driving with it, it hasnβt flown off.
Ah gotcha, didn't realize you weren't talking about an apartment. Power to you for finding a solution!
How do you deal with permanent addresses? I know like some jobs want you to have a permanent address and bank accounts want you to have a permanent address.
There are mailbox services, you get a permanent address, they can email you your mail.
Banks are more sticky, they don't just want a permanent address, they want your place of residence. If you're always on the move, you can have an intended place of residence... They may not accept the commercial mailbox service addresses, and in that case most people use a friend or a relative as their official banking location, but use the mailbox service for all of the mail. I live here, but I get mail there. That works for most people
Okay, that's good to know. Until we can ditch the entire banking system for crypto wallets on our phone, that bank account issue is going to be a bit of a noose around people's necks.
As long as it's one of the actually efficient cryptos.
Monero ftw
Ripple is also nice, if you want to go the non-anonymous route.
I do not understand why you would want a money that can be traced by anybody with a web browser that just seems a bit ridiculous to me.
Probably for the same reason people put other sensitive stuff in mystery software: if it's not physically visible the threat doesn't seem real to them. Obviously, that's dumb, but you did directly ask.
There's a lot of overhead involved in making it untraceable like that, and it's not clear how much of it can be achieved using postquantum algorithms. Ripple is also nice in that it doesn't bother with a blockchain at all.
Ripple does actually use the blockchain. It's called the Ripple ledger. Its symbol is XRP and you can buy it
Yeah, I know how Ripple works. The ledger is not blockchain-based.
Okay, then in that case you know more about it than I do because I've been under the impression for a very long time that it was blockchain-based.
Edit: https://xrpl.org/
Yeah. A blockchain is a chain - new stuff is built on top of old, and it grows forever. Ripple's ledger is all relatively up to date information IIRC. It doesn't actually need the chain, because as long as a critical number of nodes agree on a single order of transactions, they can agree that only the first spend of a set is valid if it would otherwise lead to double-spending (which is the main challenge of a distributed currency).
How that agreement is reached in an asynchronous network with possible malicious nodes is the real trick, and at that point I do start getting fuzzy on the details. Byzantine fault tolerance is hard. I think I'm actually going to read the whitepaper (again?), now that I'm thinking about it.
Edit: It's still not. I guess "blockchain" has just become just a marketing term at this point. The current crypto market is dumb even if crypto isn't.
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Glad I could share something interesting!
out of interest, whats the deal with banks needing to know where you sleep at night?
is it a serfdom thing?
or is it only in the case of eg. that being the place you hold a mortgage with them on?
The Patriot act required banks to know their customers, explicitly knowing their place of residence. For people who have a non-standard place of residence, digital nomads, homeless people, etc it becomes difficult
fascinating, thanks.
no doubt ushered in under some notion of "protecting" us from well funded groups, yet mysteriously didn't include a minimum threshold so poor folks with $4.25 in their account are still included in these broad sweeping laws.
My residence is registered at my parents house. Iβm fortunate for that β not sure what Iβll do when they pass.
The companies I work for are typically smaller - my bosses and teams usually know Iβm a bit of a vagrant. When I get acquired by larger companies Iβm a little more tight lipped and vigilant with VPN use.
I'd consider getting a really cheap, small chunk of rural land and boondocking there sometimes (so nobody can claim it's not actually a residence of yours).
Yup - I am keeping an eye out for something like this. Not super urgently looking though.
That's a good point. Wouldn't it have to have a mailbox though? Or is that something that the post office just does if you buy a piece of property without one already there?
The latter, I think. At least in rural towns in my jurisdiction, if you can prove you're a resident, you get assigned a box. There's definitely communal boxes in the middle of nowhere for people, although I'm not sure which office you go to to get set up.
I spent about 4 years traveling the world working remotely, as a digital nomad you might say. Before the name was popular
Put things I didn't want to throw away into long-term storage. Had a laptop. Flew from place to place. The most important thing was securing a good internet connection in a place. If I couldn't get a good connection move on to another place, or back to a known good place.
Libraries, coffee shops, hotels, co-working spaces, all viable options for internet requirements.
Mail digitized through a mailbox service, and emailed to me.
Google voice for an international phone number that just needed internet connection
The day to day living was pretty cool. You could stay in a place as long as you want, you could leave as quick as you want. Finding people was fun. Sometimes you weren't sure about where you would be, could you book the hotel for more time? If you couldn't you had to find the next place. So you always had a plan of where you are, and where you want to go next.
This is the way
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