[–] the-dude 8y ago ↗ Barista seems to be popular. [–] jason_slack 8y ago ↗ + 1 I spent a year as a barista. [–] muzani 8y ago ↗ Me and some friends have started cafes. Don't go that far.It's surprisingly common for hackers because we tend to work consulting, which is more emotionally scarring than prostitution.
[–] jason_slack 8y ago ↗ + 1 I spent a year as a barista. [–] muzani 8y ago ↗ Me and some friends have started cafes. Don't go that far.It's surprisingly common for hackers because we tend to work consulting, which is more emotionally scarring than prostitution.
[–] muzani 8y ago ↗ Me and some friends have started cafes. Don't go that far.It's surprisingly common for hackers because we tend to work consulting, which is more emotionally scarring than prostitution.
[–] terminalcommand 8y ago ↗ I think anything goes really, I am on my way of becoming a lawyer.Seperating hacking from your real life may be beneficial in terms of work life balance.Although I must admit it is sad not to be able to work on your talents in your day job.
[–] b_emery 8y ago ↗ Scientist, Medical Doctor, Auto Mechanic, Appliance Repairman. All require a similar cognitive toolkit: Curiosity, creativity, desire for deep knowledge about how a system functions, ability to design experiments to troubleshoot, etc.
[–] axonic 8y ago ↗ Go guerrilla. Hack things better for your city, or a charity who is obviously inept. Roads lead to doors. [–] aliirz 8y ago ↗ +1 this is what I am considering to do as well.
[–] richardknop 8y ago ↗ Dark net has some lucrative opportunities for best hackers. Note: I do not endorse or recommend it.
10 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 57.0 ms ] threadIt's surprisingly common for hackers because we tend to work consulting, which is more emotionally scarring than prostitution.
Seperating hacking from your real life may be beneficial in terms of work life balance.
Although I must admit it is sad not to be able to work on your talents in your day job.