Also a place like Mogadishu probably doesn't have steady access to ChatGPT, so that's a plus.
On the downside, the wifi for working remote is probably terrible.![]()
Is it that one right off I-35 that you see between the bridges on your right when you head southbound, just north of UT and downtown?
Also a place like Mogadishu probably doesn't have steady access to ChatGPT, so that's a plus.
On the downside, the wifi for working remote is probably terrible.![]()
Congratulations on going outside, OP. We knew you could do it.
rofl
just saying, I'm not a doctor or anything but...if someone told me that (out of all places they could move to) they want to move to Dallas, TX. Not counting the millions of people who relocate just because they got a good job offer or financial reasons, but someone REALLY wanted to move to Big D purely for quality of life purposes....i'd diagnose them as clinically re ed, and recommend the viability of suicide
the viability of moving to NW Montana near Glacier National Park is honestly questionable tbh
so remote, low internet speed, minimal amenities, too brutal of winters, too close to ELE potential volcanoes etc
OP visits DFW for a weekend and goes to the "nice" areas of Addis
n and Deep Ellum, becomes expert on entire DMA.
Kalispell? Whitefish? It’s not THAT remote. It’s not DFW, but they have enough amenities to cater to all the tourists.
And which volcanoes are you referring to? Like, Yellowstone?
Think I'd rather be incinerated immediately by the Yellowstone Supervolcano in Montana than drown in my own blood in my lungs from breathing in volcanic glass stuck in traffic in Texas trying to escape to Mexico tbh
Yeah Yellowstone and then you also have the ones in WA state and eastern Oregon I believe.
There's probably a library, Starbucks and McDonald's, but good luck even getting consistent 4G cell phone reception.
Most likely wouldn't be an extinction level event in Texas:
True, the there would be some residual tertiary ash, but it would be gone within days or sooner if it rains. Wouldn't be enough parts per million to be severely dangerous east of the secondary zone if you're not actively trying to breathe it in or something and weather the worst couple days or so.
No. C’mon, the Cascades are several hundred miles away. When St. Helens blew, they got a bunch of ash, nothing more.
There's probably a library, Starbucks and McDonald's, but good luck even getting consistent 4G cell phone reception.[/QUOTE]Having spent some time there, I can vouch for that being false in the towns themselves. In rural areas where the mountains block reception, yes it’s true.
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