On Wed, Nov 12, 2003 at 11:58:41PM -0500, Vikki Roemer wrote: > Yikes. I'm starting to think the FooAdmin part of Foosoft is a bad idea... > :( > Now that you have thoroughly discouraged me from remote sysadmining, how > about if I start small and locally with home users within a certain radius > (50 miles?)?
Sure, you can make a buck or two like that. But not a paycheck. In 1993-1995, I was in my young 20s, and I have a couple of stories: 1. A couple of executives paid $50/hour for me to set up Quicken on their wives's laptops. (They were actually members of the Springs family, of Springs mills [textiles] wealth). I actually did this as part of job. 2. One of my wierdest stories was getting stoned and installing Quicken and setting up online banking at the local district attorney's house. (He was a young guy, and I was helping somebody else out). It was incredbily strange circumstances but absolutely true. 3. I used to help out struggling friends with their 'pooters and in return have their wives would fix a nice pot roast dinner and we'd eat. For a young bachelor, this was killer diller. Or they'd just get me high :-) 4. My brother in law paid me $25/hour to install some Macintosh computers in elementary & kindergarten classrooms, and hook them up to the internet. That was totally wierd, going back to those little desks and water fountains. A girl I knew from high school was the teacher. Wierd! (but fun). 4. I learned long, long ago that you cannot be Santa Claus with family or friends or even small-time clients: as everyone here has said, they will bug the shit out of you and you will eventually stop being friends or will be upset with your clients. Keep your expectations small and you can make some pocket money and have some great life experiences. > > About the credit card machine-- my mom closed her business, but she's kept > the machine. So she says she could transfer it to my business. > > -- > Vikki Roemer Homepage: http://neuromancer.homelinux.com/ > Registered Linux user #280021 http://counter.li.org/ > > Command, n.: > Statement presented by a human and accepted by a computer in > such a manner as to make the human feel as if he is in control. > > PGP fingerprint: 0A3E 0AE4 CCD9 FF31 B4BB C859 2DE1 B1D8 5CE0 1578 > Keyserver: http://pgp.mit.edu/ > > -----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK----- > Version: 3.12 > GAT d-(?) s: a18 C++++(++) UL++++ P+ L+++>++++ E W++ N+ o? > K- w--() O? M? V?(-) PS+(+++) PE(++) Y+ PGP++ t+@ 5 X-() > R*(?) tv-- b+++(++) DI+ D--(?) G e-(*)>+++++ h! r x+ > ------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------ > > > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]