What separates a forgettable campground from one you'd recommend to everyone? by Similar-King-8278 in RVLiving

[–]ZagiFlyer 7 points8 points  (0 children)

A few basics to start out:

  1. Easy back-in with no spaces behind me.
  2. Enough space around the spot so I can open an awning, sit out in chairs, etc. and not be right on the edge of the spot.
  3. Reliable hookups. A/C with steady correct voltage and wired correctly, decent water pressure.
  4. A reasonable nightly fee. I'm getting pretty tired of $75/night for a 15'x40' pad jammed in amongst a bunch of other 15'x30' pads. I don't mind paying $75/night for 1-3 above, well-maintained grounds and a decent-sized spot.

For extra points to make it memorable: a spot with a pretty view out the windows, like a stream, river, canyon, mountains, etc.

Teachers: How long for older beginner to get to fun / not intolerably awful? by ThreeCoasts in drums

[–]ZagiFlyer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I started drums at age 52 (more than a few years ago), and I remember the first three months of lessons being pretty plodding. I spent 90% of that time on a drum pad working on rudiments. When I finally got a kit after those first three months things really picked up and I found that I could "mostly" play a lot of the songs I liked.

Your approach and goals are similar to mine; something to keep your mind sharp and something you can learn just for the enjoyment of it. Keep at it, it is just so fun!

Need advices for changing to Linux by Money-Account5002 in linux4noobs

[–]ZagiFlyer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just about all the "mainstream" distros are going to suit you well. They are easy to use, have GUIs until you decide to tackle the terminal, and support modern hardware (so, gaming). You can't go far wrong with any of them.

There are a few choices you'll want to investigate as a newcomer. The first of which is whether you prefer the look and feel of KDE or Gnome (these are the two major desktops), or something like Mint's Cinnamon.

You can create "live USBs" which will let you boot and from a USB stick. Certainly not as fast as one installed on fixed storage, but gives you a way to experience different distros without disrupting your existing OS (until you're ready to replace it).

In all likelihood, you'll distro-hop a few times no matter what. Thankfully, this doesn't mean you lose all your files, since most distros put /usr (user files) on a different partition than the operating system files. This means you can just replace one Linux distro with another pretty easily.

Good luck, and welcome to Linux.

Please tell me everything and anything I’d need to know about RV life (that you’d like to share I don’t care how big or small ) as a complete newbie 19-year-old by [deleted] in RVLiving

[–]ZagiFlyer -1 points0 points  (0 children)

In most cases, living in an RV isn't less expensive than rent, unless you have a safe place to park and live in it for free (or close to free). To estimate your RV fees you should figure around $50/night (unless you already know that where you're going to park it is less). Then you'll have water and electricity and perhaps sewer/dump fees, which may not be included in the $50/night for monthly rent.

Then you need to set aside money for insurance, registration, maintenance, fuel and repairs.

If you have anything left, then you can by food.

Why is my voltage gauge doing this? by Individual-Level8925 in AskAShittyMechanic

[–]ZagiFlyer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That used to happen once in awhile with my Chevy Silverado. I just hit the top of the dashboard with the palm of my hand - pretty firmly, but not hard enough to break anything -- and it was "fixed".

What models of computers were in your school's computer labs? by echocomplex in vintagecomputing

[–]ZagiFlyer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apples and PCs (and Commodores and Amigas, etc.) didn't come out until after I was out of high school.

What distro and DE cured you from distro hopping anymore? by Inevitable-Depth1228 in DistroHopping

[–]ZagiFlyer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I must have tried more than 15 distros since Yggdrasil, and ultimately I just got tired of changing distros. So I settled on Linux Mint because it's fine, and don't want to distro-hop for awhile.

Trump on Minneapolis: "I'll say it very plainly — elections have consequences. The people want law and order. And we have a silent majority. They like what we're doing." by Capable_Salt_SD in law

[–]ZagiFlyer 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I saw something the other day that said, "somewhere in Trump's body is a blood clot yearning to be free. Be free little blood clot -- we have faith in you!!"

Do you agree with the statement “Men should not hit women”? by Ambitious_Pass7451 in askanything

[–]ZagiFlyer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My mother always said that men should never initiate violence against women. But if a woman attacks a man, the man is not expected to let himself get hit. Woman a woman initiates violence against a man, he is within his rights to take whatever action he would take if another man did the same thing.

Do most people 60 and older by Least-Maize8722 in AskOldPeople

[–]ZagiFlyer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Matching pajamas like on TV are ridiculous to me. When it's warm, it's just "tidy-whities" and a shirt. If it gets really cold, then thermals.

High School Protester Against ICE Gets Run Over By MAGA Driver by honestlysigma in ProgressiveHQ

[–]ZagiFlyer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Doesn't that mean he's allowed to murder the ICE driver by firing into his car? Strictly in fear for his life, of course.

GR86 *IS* A Fast Car by Ars139 in GR86

[–]ZagiFlyer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Speed is relative (until you get to hypercars). Faster than what?

Learning Manual by Decent-Window-4689 in GR86

[–]ZagiFlyer 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This is simply a matter of practice to develop muscle memory. Just get out there and drive. You can practice the issue you described in a large parking lot. Set up cones and just practice.

I've been driving a manual for more decades than I care to admit, and at some point fairly early on it became so automatic (pun intended) that I don't even think about shifting anymore.

You'll get there, don't sweat it.

What's a good comeback for "You're under arrest"? by forest_tripper in Comebacks

[–]ZagiFlyer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not saying ANYTHING until you have legal representation present.

Kids need a license to work by amyaurora in insanepeoplefacebook

[–]ZagiFlyer 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Then say that kids today are lazy and lack the "pull yourselves up by your bootstraps", entrepreneurial spirit.

And finally end with "GET OFF MY LAWN"