Ugh, that's so much work, though. I found that the OG Ball-ber (trimmer for your balls) had guide combs that were perfect for my body hair and trimming my whole body only took 10 minutes.
When I broke it I upgraded to the Pro, and unfortunately the guide comb sucks (it's a shitty dial one that's facing the wrong way).
One thing to keep in mind is that while you might be able to securely run 10 with enough work, software companies are going to eventually drop support for it too. So if you want to play new games, it's a ticking clock on when that won't be an option.
It would probably be worth it to get something like Bazzite set up for your gaming needs sooner rather than later.
If you have android, check out AMDroid. You have a bunch of options for required actions to stop the alarm, including scanning a QR code or NFC chip, solving math, typing in random characters, etc. or any combination there of. There's also options that will increase the difficulty of the math and character challenges each time you stop the alarm.
It also has the option of a post alarm awake confirmation, which is similar to a snooze button, but you don't get the chance to confirm you're awake until a specified amount of time has passed from when you stopped the alarm.
If you're going to go to college, go to a community college for your basics. Same classes, often smaller class sizes, and much less money. Just make sure the credits will transfer first.
I live in an area with lots of pollen and high humidity and I just rinse the house off every so often. A pressure washer absolutely isn't a requirement.
No, it's nothing like renting because you're financially responsible for literally everything. Need a new roof? Better be prepared to shell out $20k minimum. Need a new HVAC system? Yeah, it's not much cheaper.
You don't necessarily build as much equity in a home as people seem to think. With the costs of maintenance, insurance, property taxes, etc. it's entirely possible to lose money with a house.
Sure, if you're only looking at the purchase price vs selling price it looks nice, but there's tons of costs that only serve to keep the selling price from dropping.
I mean, that's one of the downsides to home ownership. If it's not yard work, there's always some sort of maintenance that needs doing.
You can either put it off until it becomes an emergency, pay someone out the ass to do it, or you can find some way to force yourself to do it.
I say this as I'm taking a break from climbing in my attic to replace the AC condensate pump line that I've been putting off for 3 months, so I don't have to keep dumping 5 gallon buckets of water out twice a day. The quote to have a pro do it was $750
So does an outage, but I get that the C-suite can only think one quarter at a time