- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
278 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
278 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 638
|
|
Title: HPR0638: Urban Camping ep 6
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0638/hpr0638.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-08 00:16:25
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
Hi everyone, this is Kwatu and this is how to be an urban camper mini-series.
|
|
This is episode I think six in the series and in this episode we'll be talking about money.
|
|
This is probably going to be a slightly shorter episode because it is kind of self-explanatory
|
|
and also very specific I think to the individual.
|
|
While I might make money one way you might have a completely different skill set and have
|
|
a completely different way of making money.
|
|
And of course I live in one area, you live in another.
|
|
My area might be sort of a hiring phase and they're just hiring everyone they can find.
|
|
Yours might be in a little bit more of a lull and isn't hiring as much.
|
|
So obviously it's just going to be a lot of common sense and just kind of probably doing
|
|
what you're already doing.
|
|
The big difference between money matters while you're urban camping versus money matters
|
|
while you're not is that you're going to find that your cost of living is drastically
|
|
lower when you're urban camping.
|
|
Probably quite possibly you have no context for exactly how low your cost of living will
|
|
be.
|
|
I'm no economist or financial advisor or anything like that.
|
|
I don't know a whole lot about this sort of stuff but I do know that if your cost of
|
|
living is substantially lower than the amount of money that you are making then you are
|
|
necessarily making a profit.
|
|
So in other words you're making $100 a month.
|
|
I'm just using really easy numbers here to get the point across and your cost of living
|
|
is $50 a month than how much of you made that month.
|
|
You've made $50.
|
|
If you're making $100 a month and your apartment costs $50 again I'm using really simplified
|
|
numbers here, monopoly money.
|
|
Your apartment costs $50 and your food costs $25 in your electric bill costs $25.
|
|
How much of you made?
|
|
Well you've just spent $50 plus $25 plus $25 that's $100.
|
|
You made $100 you're now at $0.
|
|
So that's the idea, right?
|
|
That's all very sort of elementary junior high school kind of common sense about finances
|
|
and of course it holds true through life.
|
|
I mean that's the basics of it, right?
|
|
If you make more money than you're spending you're making a profit that's that.
|
|
That profit ostensibly should go into savings or something like that I guess or it might
|
|
go into your artwork or some kind of personal project that you're working on who knows.
|
|
So when you're urban camping your expenses tend to be a food that's your primary expense
|
|
and aside from that it's there's really not a whole lot other than that.
|
|
So whatever you can get food for that's as much as you're spending.
|
|
Now you might have some upfront costs initially like joining a gym for instance if you wanted
|
|
that easy shower access.
|
|
Well and if you're doing the whole living in your vehicle thing there's maintenance for
|
|
the car but presumably you've already had that expense as well so that's not probably
|
|
anything new but it's still an expense.
|
|
So food maybe some some vehicle expenses and then that's about it.
|
|
There's no rent there no bills and everything else you make on top of food and vehicle expenses
|
|
maybe a gym membership that's profit that's money that you've made.
|
|
So if you don't need profit you don't necessarily want or need to save money right now or just
|
|
aren't making that much money to do that then basically your your goal would be to
|
|
simply make food and car expenses for that month and you're good to go.
|
|
So keeping that sort of thing in mind you're going to find that the expenses associated
|
|
with urban camping are low so you only need to make so much money each month and typically
|
|
I have found a part-time job is plenty to get you by during urban camping.
|
|
I've worked at a minimum paying job in a bagel place and was urban camping and it worked
|
|
out really really nicely.
|
|
Didn't even have that much food expense because I kept eating all the food at the bagel
|
|
place so there was really no food cost.
|
|
I did have a little bit of a car expenses and that's it.
|
|
So I mean this was like a minimum wage part-time job and I was fine.
|
|
Now I didn't have any money to spare honestly it was a minimum wage part-time job.
|
|
I didn't make a lot at all so I didn't have a whole lot of money left over but I was
|
|
fine anyway you know I was making the money that I needed to make.
|
|
So that would be the first way to make money while you're urban camping and that is to
|
|
work.
|
|
Find a job.
|
|
You can find any kind of job part-time food service, technical, whatever you happen to
|
|
be capable of doing that could be it.
|
|
You'll be amazed just how handy a job is when you're urban camping.
|
|
I find it very helpful because otherwise at least for me it seems like I'm always hanging
|
|
around the same cafe or the same library or whatever you know I end.
|
|
So I very often sort of wear out my welcome pretty quickly in one area.
|
|
I don't tend to migrate too far from a certain kind of radius so the job helps me kind of
|
|
gives me an excuse to be somewhere a lot and I tend to do that a lot.
|
|
I tend to wear out my welcome at my own job a lot like in the bagel place that I would
|
|
work at I would work you know for the six hours or whatever I would work that day.
|
|
I think there's a four hour shift actually but anyway so I'd work in the morning and then
|
|
I'd get off at like 10 or something and 10 a.m. and then I'd like sit down there in the
|
|
eating area and just work at my computer for basically until they close which I think
|
|
if memory serves about 1700 so they really thought I was quite strange they thought it was
|
|
really bizarre.
|
|
Now other jobs have been it's been really sort of it's paid off a lot better than that
|
|
where I'll stay there all day even though I was only employed half time and they would
|
|
think that I was just working really hard and that I really wanted a raise or something
|
|
and so that actually worked in my favor personally I don't really care I just need a place
|
|
to sit and use my computer.
|
|
Jobs are nice for that.
|
|
The other way to get around you know not having a job but still get the whole money thing
|
|
are just random odd jobs you know community boards crags list whatever look around see
|
|
where people need something done and then tell them that you will do it for money.
|
|
It's pretty pretty straightforward really what I used to do when I was doing this kind
|
|
of thing would I would just print up a whole bunch of notices and business cards as well
|
|
both of them and I would go around to all the community boards I could find and just post
|
|
what I could do like you know computer help Mac or PC setup printers help you with internal
|
|
your home network of the term that they everyone seems to know home network six year computer
|
|
you know all that kind of stuff and I would have my email on there or and my my phone number
|
|
and then people could contact me and hire me and it worked out really well actually I got
|
|
a lot of really good jobs that way a lot of some reason setting up printers that was like
|
|
one of the main things I did I don't know why people couldn't for a while it seemed like
|
|
no one could set up their printer and I really learned a lot about cups at that time
|
|
and and just kind of configuring printers mainly on Macs because that was what I really
|
|
pitched myself as but a lot of people would bring me in and have me work on their Mac and then
|
|
they would see that I knew what I was doing and automatically assume that I would know Windows
|
|
even better and so they would have me work on their Windows machine and of course I know who
|
|
what to do on Windows but if you're halfway intelligent then you can just kind of figure it out so
|
|
that that was a really good thing Craigslist I've had less luck with but I think that's because I'm
|
|
just kind of out of the rhythm of those odd jobs I think if if I was really doing that all the time
|
|
I think I could probably find some better things on Craigslist but keep in mind that on Craigslist
|
|
I mean I probably don't need to be telling you guys this but there are different categories for
|
|
the job posting so you have to kind of look in all of them like some will be specific to computers
|
|
some will be more like vague things like repair or something like that you know and but you'll find
|
|
a computer repairs in that you know they're miscategorized job postings I guess is what I'm trying to
|
|
get to which again common sense obviously once you start getting random jobs with one person
|
|
you can typically really really advertise yourself with that person and just just keep telling them
|
|
you know let let your all your friends know about me I do that you know call yourself a
|
|
freelancer that's a term that a lot of people like and just let them know that you're available
|
|
you love doing this sort of thing you know just be friendly basically and really try to get them
|
|
to advertise for you and I have found that they actually typically do especially if you're nice
|
|
and really really friendly and really really helpful if you're doing a odd job kind of thing
|
|
oh I find a lot of times you've got nothing but time so yeah they might only be paying you $50 or
|
|
$75 or something but if you I tend to try not to think of it so much as long getting $50 and
|
|
I only spend an hour I did really good I just think of it as $50 for that month and if it takes me
|
|
two hours and and for one of those hours I'm simply talking about you know talking to this person
|
|
about how beautiful their little poodle is okay then that's an investment and yeah it's time spent
|
|
and I'm only getting $50 for that two hours I just don't think of it that way I think of it more
|
|
of a a monthly kind of thing like that's $50 that I don't have to make for the rest of the month
|
|
now that's $50 I've got in my pocket so job well done and that and that kind of thing typically
|
|
gets the person on your side they they start to really like you and I've literally had
|
|
those few people who will just it's almost like they start to invent invent problems or they're
|
|
not really inventing problems but they're little problems that normally they wouldn't
|
|
ever think of paying anyone to fix because it's just a little thing it's just they can't launch
|
|
um safari anymore which doesn't really matter because now they're using firefox so they don't
|
|
really care but hey there's that really nice guy caught two and he's such a pleasure to talk to
|
|
and he really seems to like my poodle and he knows his coffee really well and maybe I'll go
|
|
ahead and pay him you know $25 to come over here for an hour to to fix safari and it like takes you
|
|
three minutes to ditch the preference files and relaunch safari and you're done you spend the
|
|
rest of the time drinking coffee and talking about the dog show coming up and then you're out
|
|
you know it's just it's silly but hey it really really works and I guess once again it's a
|
|
form sort of of social engineering if you can think of it that way I mean it's really I guess
|
|
just good business practice or something okay so that's random jobs promoting yourself I hate
|
|
promoting myself I can't do it I'm horrible at it so I just prove myself as vaguely capable of
|
|
computer-y kinds of things and they tend to sell me a lot better than I can sell myself if you're
|
|
great at advertising yourself hey go for it but yeah I find that business cards and a little
|
|
posters you know just eight and a half by eleven size posters with just the important stuff you know
|
|
because you got to assume that these people are going to be walking by on their way to the subway
|
|
or the way to work or whatever they don't have time to read a whole paragraph just put the key
|
|
words on there and and make it easy for them to grab your number or your email okay that was
|
|
probably too much on that subject but it is that's a great way to make money really don't sell
|
|
yourself short as an independent contract try guess you can go out there you can make money if
|
|
you have computer skills believe me there's so many people out there who just have no idea what
|
|
they're doing I've had a lot less I guess I guess this is a more complex subject than I thought so
|
|
I had a lot less success with the like the web did not that I'm actually anyway a web developer but
|
|
like web you know creating websites or editing editing videos for for quote unquote normal people
|
|
those kinds of project-based jobs I seem to have a lot less luck with they work you can work on
|
|
the project and you you will get paid I have found that the pain the sheer pain and and this
|
|
pleasure of dealing with with really the people who become clients right these people with a
|
|
project that they need done in a certain way and you're supposed to guess how it needs to get done
|
|
and then you have to go change it when they hate it and it really does become one of those things
|
|
that takes up all your time all month long you're only getting 300 dollars for it 200 dollars
|
|
for some stupid like that and yet they want everything they want you to do everything for them
|
|
they want it perfect they want it exactly as they're describing even though their ideas are
|
|
horrible I mean you've seen all the jokes online about this kind of thing well they're all true
|
|
and they're not funny when you're trying to make you look on Craigslist and there's like five jobs
|
|
that pay 50 dollars each and then you're you're stop doing this one job that is completely unpleasant
|
|
it's taking eight hours a day of your time because you just keep going back and forth with this
|
|
client it's horrible so I tend to avoid those unless it's for some kind of business that they
|
|
need like a video edited or sometimes if it's a person who needs to be almost have a class like
|
|
Final Cut Pro lessons or something like that that that tends to work out a lot better that
|
|
almost goes back to that sort of random computer help more than it does I think the whole project based
|
|
model so be very very careful with project random projects that you find on Craigslist and stuff
|
|
those in at least in my experience have been horrible horrible things if you if you find
|
|
differently please go for it good for you me myself I tend to avoid them okay so that's random
|
|
jobs that was getting a job the other way to do it of course is using your skills as you see fit
|
|
so by by this I mean I have friends who play musical instruments quite well they'll stand out
|
|
on the street and play music and they will get donations from passers by and they do really
|
|
really well and that's one of those things that I mean that's great if you do that not only are
|
|
you practicing your instrument but you are getting money for it and yeah you're spending probably
|
|
a good part of the day doing it but I mean you're only getting better so don't forget that you
|
|
probably have some kind of skill and I don't know what that is I mean maybe you sing maybe you play
|
|
an instrument maybe you're a really really fantastic mime I don't know but don't sell yourself short
|
|
on your skills I'm kind of assuming that if you're listening to show you're a computer person
|
|
and that you have computer skills but keep in mind that you might have either yes you have computer
|
|
skills but you also have other skills or maybe you're not a computer geek maybe you don't really
|
|
know that much about computers but hey you probably know something and a lot of times you can use
|
|
that somehow I can't really think of all the possible ways of course but of that you can if you
|
|
really think about what you can do and how it might be I guess the term would be marketable
|
|
however it pains me to say such a word sounds so official so businessy um okay so the last
|
|
way to make money that I know of is to beg or spange um spanging is the hipster term for begging for
|
|
spare change spange if you go out onto the street and ask for money you ostensibly will actually
|
|
make money and this tends to work for people fairly well because the human you know the average
|
|
human on the street wants to help another person not everyone but the average one does they want
|
|
to help you they want to make you feel good because it makes them feel good to make you feel good
|
|
this works very much to your advantage if you simply stand out on the street and ask
|
|
passers by for money I have found in my very limited experience doing this that making up elaborate
|
|
stories as to why you want need the money is quite unnecessary you simply say do you have any spare
|
|
change or you know do you have a dollar whatever and and people are either going to give it to you
|
|
or they're not honestly whether you need money or not this is a great activity to do you should
|
|
just go do this one afternoon like take your lunch hour or or when you get off from from class one
|
|
day just go out onto the busy foot traffic street in your city and start asking for for money
|
|
it's astonishing what happens it really is this is in terms of like the whole social engineering
|
|
or or at least the the studying of of people this is a fantastic activity it's just really
|
|
interesting to see people's reactions see what they how they respond to the question whether
|
|
they give you money or not whether they stop and talk or not it's just really really interesting
|
|
and there are all kinds of variations on this you know you can go out and wear a green t-shirt
|
|
or something and say that you're with with green piece or some charity like that and get money
|
|
uh from from people on on completely false pretenses uh you can you can go out and and tell people
|
|
that that you're raising money for your school it's just fascinating to see how people respond
|
|
to what you're saying now the downside to all of these things is that um while it's really an
|
|
interesting social experiment i think it is typically not uh technically legal i think i know
|
|
that people are shoot away when they're doing this quite often by the police i have found that the
|
|
police tend to bother the people who don't look totally crazy a lot more than they bother
|
|
uh the people who do look crazy so while you might see like that old uh war veterans supposedly
|
|
who's sitting on the side of the street um asking for money and he'll do that every day and he'll
|
|
never get bothered and then one block up you'll see some person who looks like they might just
|
|
be kind of doing it because they're they just want some extra money that day or like they're
|
|
passing through town and trying to get some more money to for their next stop something like that
|
|
they'll get they'll get bothered bothered by the police they'll get i literally see people get
|
|
ticketed for um i don't i panhandling i think it's a term yeah panhandling um that they literally
|
|
got a ticket for it so it it's really strange and it seems very nebulous in terms of what's
|
|
acceptable and what's not acceptable so you need to kind of watch out for that and and like i like
|
|
i said i i don't actually do this for money i i i do it for fun sometimes just to see the reactions
|
|
and stuff like that but i've i've never felt the need to to go do it for for actual money more
|
|
often i would play an instrument or something like that um that that tends to have the same result
|
|
and that seems to be less of a target by the police i think because as long as you look vaguely
|
|
presentable i think maybe it's the general consensus that street musicians kind of add to the charm
|
|
of the area rather than detract from them that's about it that's that's the way that i know to make money
|
|
it would be a good idea one of the things that that really helped me um well every time that i was
|
|
i was urban camping but i i think i really kind of perfected it this most recent time is coming up
|
|
with a just a daily budget because if you come up with one day's budget and you can be very very
|
|
precise when you're urban camping it's really fantastic like one thing that i have a problem with
|
|
when i am living in an apartment or something i never seem to get a grip on what the expenses
|
|
are going to be you know you see the apartment and it's advertised for five hundred and fifty
|
|
dollars a month and you're like okay well that's pretty cool so you go into the apartment five hundred
|
|
and fifty and it says all the utilities are paid except electrics that's cool you get into the
|
|
apartment turns out there's really nothing in the apartment but electrics stuff well there's water
|
|
but but there's no gas anyway there's the stove is electric the heat is electric you know and
|
|
you're like oh that's why they're not going to pay my electric and so of course heat and and
|
|
stove and things like that and lights how do you like you can't really gauge how much money they're
|
|
going to cost you and maybe you could maybe i could like literally time every day how long a light
|
|
is on and then like look at the end of the month and see what the the overall cost is or something
|
|
but anyway my my point is that when i'm urban camping it's a very very set amount of money every
|
|
single day there's money for breakfast and lunch and possibly dinner for coffee and there's
|
|
that well there's there's the initial cost of a gym membership but that was only once and so
|
|
that was done there might be money for gas and that's like thirty dollars a month because i don't
|
|
really drive that much so yeah i mean it's just like what are your expenses and then you can kind
|
|
of play around and start seeing especially if you're a creature of habit you can start seeing how
|
|
much money you typically spend on for instance breakfast and that might be two or three dollars
|
|
for a bagel and a coffee and then you can see how much you're going to spend for lunch and that
|
|
might be a little bit more like seven dollars and you can see how much if you're going to spend
|
|
anything for dinner and that might be another seven dollars and so you start to build up a pretty
|
|
clear and very very consistent budget so if you do that and you say okay this is how much
|
|
i spend in a day and i know that there are 30 days in the in the typical month so this is how
|
|
much i need to make every month in order for me to be completely happy and uh comfortable and
|
|
you'll find that when you're urban camping that's not that hard to do so i don't know try that out
|
|
for a month um if you are going to do the whole urban camping thing and and track your expenses
|
|
or not even track them just like we'll track them for like two days and figure that that's
|
|
probably going to be your consistent expenditures uh for pretty much every day and you'll find that
|
|
it's really really simple to get a grasp of of what exactly you do all day in terms of monetary
|
|
requirements and take it from there start start figuring out what you need to do for work based
|
|
on on that pretty straightforward um enjoy making a little tiny bit of money while urban camping
|
|
or a lot and then you can save a lot of money or you can put it towards your personal project like
|
|
building your secret super computer or making a movie or an album or you know whatever it is people
|
|
do with their extra money um thanks for listening to this episode the next episode we are going to be
|
|
talking about what on earth you do during those daylight hours as an urban camper like what do you do
|
|
to fill up your your day you've got all this time now you're working a little bit and and then what
|
|
so we'll talk about that next episode
|
|
to
|
|
Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio sponsored in part by Carro.net, as
|
|
your head on over to caro.net for all your hosting news.
|
|
Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio sponsored by Carro.net for all your hosting news.
|