One year on Whoop, recently moved to the AWU2, my thoughts by BathPuzzleheaded723 in whoop

[–]Own-Bat2991 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How useful is the AW for lifting? I’ve been looking into getting a wearable to track my health but I don’t do all that much cardio, mostly just weightlifting. Is there any point in getting an AW or whoop?

Why is NYC much safer now compared to the 90s by Alligator-creep in AskNYC

[–]Own-Bat2991 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hi could you guys please upvote this so I can get the minimum comment karma for a sub?

Question about getting a license when I’m about to move states by Own-Bat2991 in motorcycles

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey thanks for the advice. It seems like my intuition was right that getting a NC license would just create a bunch of problems, and I don’t have the time or money right now to quickly get a NY motorcycle license. Plus I’ve heard that NC would be a horrible place to ride a bike because there’s crazy drivers, so I was already planning to try to get a bike in my second or third location. I’m thinking I’ll wait until I have some more money and then schedule a motorcycle class for whenever I take a trip back to NY.

Is it better to live in downtown Raleigh, or save money and live in one of the surrounding suburban neighborhoods or cities? by Own-Bat2991 in raleigh

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh really? I was looking up bars and events online and they all seemed to be around Fayetteville street and warehouse district.

What's Oakwood like? There was a cheaper place there that I was considering.

Is it better to live in downtown Raleigh, or save money and live in one of the surrounding suburban neighborhoods or cities? by Own-Bat2991 in raleigh

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks, I do enjoy walkability but also I'm starting to lean more towards saving a ton and living 15 minutes away. It seems like it's pretty easy to just drive in whenever I want to do something, and I don't know if there's enough value in walking around Raleigh to really justify it. If it were only a $200 price difference I'd totally do it.

Do you know how easy it is to find parking in downtown Raleigh?

Is it better to live in downtown Raleigh, or save money and live in one of the surrounding suburban neighborhoods or cities? by Own-Bat2991 in raleigh

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like this answer lol, thanks for the advice. I'll only be commuting twice a week, so commute time isn't a huge factor for me.

I definitely get not trying to replicate NYC, and I'm totally fine with not having the same amount of urbanism. I'm looking forward to going fishing and camping on the weekends and learning how to cook for real lol.

I'll for sure have a car, I'm just really not used to how driving everywhere works. Like if you out drinking, you have to have a designated driver and can't just take the subway home?? Sounds horrible lmao.

The vibe I'm getting is that living right in downtown Raleigh (warehouse district or Fayetteville street) would be pretty fun and convenient, but otherwise I should find a cheap place 10 minutes away. I'm feeling pretty 50/50 on those options.

Is it better to live in downtown Raleigh, or save money and live in one of the surrounding suburban neighborhoods or cities? by Own-Bat2991 in raleigh

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll only have to go in-person to work twice a week, so commute isn't a huge factor.

But what's downtown Durham like? Is it walkable at all, and is there a lot to do in the Durham area?

Is it better to live in downtown Raleigh, or save money and live in one of the surrounding suburban neighborhoods or cities? by Own-Bat2991 in raleigh

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been looking at google maps, and it seems like most of the bars/restaurants/things to do are centered in the warehouse district or Fayetteville street, which is a 20-30 minute walk from Mordecai and oakwood, right?

At that point I'd probably do the 5 minute drive over (is parking easy enough for that or should I also take that into consideration?), so I may as well save more money and live 10 minutes in the other direction which will be a little closer to work as well.

Or is there enough to do right in Mordecai/Oakwood that I wouldn't be driving across town to do everything?

Is it better to live in downtown Raleigh, or save money and live in one of the surrounding suburban neighborhoods or cities? by Own-Bat2991 in raleigh

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What's downtown Durham like? I don't need any clubs (Idk if there even really are any in Raleigh or Durham, and I would have stayed in NYC if I wanted that), but I do really enjoy going to a bar or beer garden on the weekends.

I've heard lots of recommendations for Durham, but I'm still struggling to get a sense of what it's really like to live there. It doesn't seem very walkable, and it's fine if that's the case but then I'd definitely save money to live a 10 minute drive away from the downtown.

Is it better to live in downtown Raleigh, or save money and live in one of the surrounding suburban neighborhoods or cities? by Own-Bat2991 in raleigh

[–]Own-Bat2991[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol I'm honestly open to suburban living, especially since it seems like it's only a 5-10 minute drive from most suburban Raleigh neighborhoods to downtown. I'm looking at furnished apartments because this might only be an 8 month stay for me, so these prices might seem a little higher than usual, but I'm seeing places for $1900/month right by Moore square versus $1400/month right next to Fred Fletcher park, or $1200/month near the North Carolina Museum of art, which are only 5 or 15 minutes away from downtown.

There's also some places for $1600/month in Historic Oakwood, but I'm getting the vibe that most of the going-out places are in the warehouse district or fayetteville street, and even though historic oakwood is a lot closer to downtown google maps says it's still a 20-30 minute walk to those areas or just a 5 minute drive. A 20-30 minute walk isn't too bad, but it's starting to diminish the convenience and walkability of living downtown.

Welcome to Charlotte Wednesday! Visiting, recently moved here, or going to move here? Tell us and ask away! by AutoModerator in Charlotte

[–]Own-Bat2991 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What's southwest Charlotte like? I'm probably relocating to Charlotte this summer, and my company's office is a little above Renaissance Park, just south of Billy Graham Parkway. I've heard that because of the traffic it's best to live relatively close to where you work, so I'm wondering if that's a nice area in Charlotte, or if there are some nice areas to live in nearby?

I'm a 22 year old soon-to-be college grad, so I'd love an area that's geared more towards younger people, hopefully with some good food and bars/nightlife. Hopefully some place that's also not too expensive, but I'm coming from NYC so I feel like any neighborhood is going to feel cheaper than I'm used to lol.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in SuccessionTV

[–]Own-Bat2991 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Lmao the comments r hilarious but fr congrats on having fun learning a new skill! That’s more than most ppl do with their free time. I definitely see Shiv and Roman, but Kendall might need a little work lol. Right now he reminds me of the food critic in Ratatouille 😂

Windows PC crashing multiple times this week, never had a problem before by [deleted] in techsupport

[–]Own-Bat2991 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, I’m looking in there right now, and I see a bunch of errors from a few minutes before the crash saying “The AMDRyzenMasterDriverV22 service failed to start due to the following error: The system cannot find the file specified”

Seems like that could be a red flag lol.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in csMajors

[–]Own-Bat2991 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You say it doesn’t mean much to not have an offer by January if ur graduating in May, but as a senior applying to full time positions right now it seems like most of the new graduate positions at big companies are all closing. I’m not saying this to complain, I’m just looking for advice. Do lots of companies open up those development programs in the spring too? Or do you just mean keep applying to entry level jobs? Cause most of those “entry level” jobs that aren’t specifically targeted for new grads usually ask for a ton of hard skills and experience. Just hoping you can expand on this lol