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Cake day: July 1st, 2023

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  • I’m not going to touch immigration, work permits etc, because it varies greatly - I’m assuming you figure it out. For skilled workers with work experience there usually is a fairly painless way to get all you need.

    Continuing to work:

    • your employer has to have presence in the country you are moving to, or
    • they have to handle your employment through an intermediary, like deel.com, or
    • you have to transition to independent contractor (potentially legally dicey if you are a contractor in name only)
    • if your company doesn’t support fully async work don’t move more than 8 time zones away - that way you’ll still be able to join some meetings

    Moving is the simplest part:

    • Lightweight & cheap option: pack a backpack/suitcase like you were going on long vacation. Buy plane tickets. Rent Airbnb at the location for a week and use that week to rent a place to live. This option is similar in cost to moving to a different city within a country with extra costs being $2000-3000 for travel and initial week at destination.
    • Everything and kitchen sink is not much more expensive: 10k gets everything you own professionally packed, stuffed in a 20 feet shipping container, shipped across the ocean, moved through customs, delivered to your new address and unloaded (but not unpacked from boxes). 20 feet container is enough to take everything in a large, packed 2 bedroom condo including furniture.

    At destination you will need:

    • work permit / work visa
    • local equivalent of social security / tax number / sometimes both - file a form, sometimes pay a small fee
    • a business (if you are going independent contractor route)
    • bank account

    Vast majority of the info you need will often be available on the embassy website of your destination country.

    Source: over the 20 years of my career I moved across the ocean twice with my family and worked from a total of 4 countries.








  • tty5@lemmy.worldtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldServer for a boat
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    3 months ago

    There are a lot of atom or mobile i3/i5 powered mini PCs that actually are powered with a 12v brick, in fact most of the industrial ones are. Small form factor, passive cooling, can play media for you and usually comes with 4x 1/2.5gbit Ethernet, so it can double as a router/switch. Usually 10-15w power draw.

    Go to AliExpress and simply search for minipc and make sure it has a SATA connector for your hard drive.



  • It is an issue in Poland. Close to 30% of the population is at Sunday mass and even if priests were perfectly neutral (and they very much aren’t) simply people deciding “I’m already out, I might as well vote” does make an impact on the outcome. Every time liberals and socialists score an election win is after electorate mobilization that counters that.

    BTW I agree that voting should happen on a statutory holiday, but it shouldn’t be one associated with a majority religion.






  • tty5@lemmy.worldtoLinux@lemmy.mlRaspberry Pi Smart TV?
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    5 months ago

    4k 120Hz HDR is what current gen consoles can output right now and what is becoming common even on mid-range TVs (quality of HDR aside). I’d expect you’d want most of that experience or future-proof solution that would allow that when you get a new TV.


  • tty5@lemmy.worldtoLinux@lemmy.mlRaspberry Pi Smart TV?
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    5 months ago
    • No SBC that I know of can handle 4k 120Hz HDR output, so getting the most of moonlight is not possible.
    • Low latency decode requires some work to get running
    • AV1 encode/decode has even more latency, do you will be running higher bitrate h264, which in turn means wired network connection is recommended.
    • Streaming services limit 4k and/or HDR access on a lot of content to locked devices. E.g. Netflix only guarantees 720p sdr when watching in a browser - how much more you get depends on the deal with the copyright holder.

    Tl;dr; a long, active fiber HDMI cable + USB over IP might be cheaper, better and easier. That’s what I ended up buying despite the cable length being 60m (200ft).