How realistic are my goals?

There's rarely a need to reinstall. Maybe if you completely hosed the system, but that's almost never the case. Boot failures, crashes during boot, etc. are usually solvable from single user mode. Or fixed with the help of the rescue/shell option of the install media (if you messed up the bootloader for example). If it boots and you can get to single user mode, it's fixable.
 
Maybe think bigger? The world is much larger than the US, you know?
I actually lived on the outskirts of Cebu City with my wife for a number of years. While there wasn't really any great employment oppurtunites over there, my retirement went a lot farther than living in the states. My wife had a fairly large piece of land, we had fruit trees, deep wells, and a lot of fresh seafood. However, most people don't have hot running water in their homes, forget about red meat, and the neighbors are always having huge, but mostly peaceful, parties. Also, living in Southeast Asia is a young man's game, but if you have a problem with controllling your bad habits, then it is not a great place to live, because the temptations are nonstop.
 
There's rarely a need to reinstall. Maybe if you completely hosed the system, but that's almost never the case. Boot failures, crashes during boot, etc. are usually solvable from single user mode. Or fixed with the help of the rescue/shell option of the install media (if you messed up the bootloader for example). If it boots and you can get to single user mode, it's fixable.
At this point I can get into single user mode, I can use ee to modify files, and I also figured out how to bring up the network. The problem is that I'm not entirely certain what I need to do in order to bring Xfce back up again. My plan is to use the below command to install a new driver:

Code:
pkg install x11/nvidia-driver-470

And then I guess I will have to make certain changes to /boot/loader.conf and also to /etc/rc.conf. However, I'm not sure what changes I need to make to these two files, and if I need to modify other files as well? Also, do I need to completely purge out the nvidia driver which is in my system right now, before I install the new one? Any info greatly appreciated.
 
As Crivens said:
The world is much larger than the US, you know?
As a US citizen you have two advantages:
- you are an US citizen. (Almost) all countries are open for you (still yet.)
- you speak english. You can talk to (almost) everybody everywhere.
Where you keep up your training on computers is independent from the location. All you need is a computer (you already have one) and internet, which is available (almost) everywhere.

While it's always highly recommendable to keep on learning, you already know you need to be realistic enough that age >60 is not the perfect age to start a long term career by getting started on an extensive education (college/university.) You may do that by personal interest, sure, but not to get a job, because in IMO it's highly unlikely that anybody employs a then end 60s graduate. Since education ain't not free in the USA you end up spent time and money while not earning money, and even lowered your chances to become employed. Except you do something self-employed. When you don't need a certain degree to get a license (physician, lawyer) it's up to you anyway, what you teach yourself, and if you graduate, or not.
As I experienced it, writing job applications close more doors than they open. 99.9% of applications end up at HR. Those job is not to employ, but to search applications for reasons to not employ somebody. With age >30 not being currently employed, having "gaps" of more than a few weeks in you CV, you have practically not the slightest shade of a chance to pass any HR. Not even get a job interview. And even if you get one, it's already clear (to them) you won't get a job. Those are for statistic or training purposes, only.
You may write an application afterwards, when you already have the job, just for the paper-chase, but not to get one. Writing applications are a complete waste of time. Especially since there are such things as ghost jobs.

You need personal contact to people, best and most of the times the only way to get a job anyway: friends, relatives, ex-coworkers, ex-employers, even remote acquaintances, club members,...sauna, golf, tennis, fishing... buddies, fraternity brothers, whathaveyou. Even asking the bus or taxi driver... - Anything is better than writing applications.
However you manage it, but you need to get into personal contact to anybody who is not HR without HR smells a rat.
Always think of HR as the Gestapo to slam the door into your face before you even touch the door knob.

And, be flexible, and open to new jobs - you already are, as your OP and this thread proves.
Just as another idea for the brainstorming pool: Why not open a Phillipine Restaurant in a big city in Europe?
That does not have to be; just to open for think wider.:cool:
 
I always try to fix things before doing a fresh reinstall. If you always reinstall, then you don't learn anything. Right now my Xfce is broken, but I'm working on a plan to fix it, and I'm pretty certain that I will get it working later this week. Also, I will start using ZFS to make snapshots. However, if storing snapshots in Home isn't a good idea, will I have to create a new partition specifically dedicated to storing snapshots?
Sorry if I didn't express the idea well. I mean: don't store your documents, images, videos, etc. in home.
Additionally, you don't decide "where" snapshots are stored. The zfs system takes care of that.
 
As Crivens said:

As a US citizen you have two advantages:
- you are an US citizen. (Almost) all countries are open for you (still yet.)
- you speak english. You can talk to (almost) everybody everywhere.

Another advantage of US citizenship is that you can obtain a US federal security clearance. That is required for more jobs than one would think, e.g. everything to do with the department of education (do we still have one?).
 
Also, don't go creating "partitions" any more when using ZFS. Create another filesystem to store your data files. Study zfs. It's very fun and well designed.
Once I recover from my most recent do it yourself disaster, I will most definetly put it on my list of things to do. I saved the script you posted earlier, and I will see if I can make it work on my system. Just out of curiousity, when it makes a snapshot, how much space does the snaphot take, and will I be able to restore my system from a snapshot in singleuser mode. I think that I've seen some videos about this, but I skipped over them, because I was more curious about installation and configuration. I will definetly look into it.
 
Another advantage of US citizenship is that you can obtain a US federal security clearance. That is required for more jobs than one would think, e.g. everything to do with the department of education (do we still have one?).
I'm not certain that I would be able to get one of those.
 
Once I recover from my most recent do it yourself disaster, I will most definetly put it on my list of things to do. I saved the script you posted earlier, and I will see if I can make it work on my system. Just out of curiousity, when it makes a snapshot, how much space does the snaphot take, and will I be able to restore my system from a snapshot in singleuser mode. I think that I've seen some videos about this, but I skipped over them, because I was more curious about installation and configuration. I will definetly look into it.
I'm not an expert. Compared to most people in this forum, I don't know sh*t. I'm a goal-oriented kind of guy. I wanted to install and use FreeBSD: I'm using FreeBSD. I learned what I needed to learn for the goal. So, for what I know, snapshots take very little space in today's realm of hundreds of GBs available, and, yes, you will be able to restore your system in single user mode, but I may be wrong or omitting basic caveats because I lack even that basic knowledge. It's best that you study the manual and then open a thread in this forum with your doubts and fears like you did with your rc.conf.
 
Why not open a Phillipine Restaurant in a big city in Europe?
I agree with what you said about the age discrimination, and you're right about the manner in which most HR departments are being run these days. Would owning a restaurant be that much different than manufacturing? Probably a lot of similarities between the two. I don't know about moving to Europe though. I'm probably stuck in the states for the rest of my life, but I do have a sister-in-law in Stuttgart.
 
Owning a restaurant is working all day long. I have no direct experience, but Barcelona is full of restaurants. You have to like to live in your workplace 24/7 basically to be the owner of a small restaurant, I think. I could never do it.
 
May be this will inspire the OP?
 
Owning a restaurant is working all day long. I have no direct experience, but Barcelona is full of restaurants. You have to like to live in your workplace 24/7 basically to be the owner of a small restaurant, I think. I could never do it.

It's not 24/7 in the restaurant. Every very early morning you go to the market to buy ingredients. Every fucking morning. Would drive me nuatz.
 
I owned five Subway shops for 33 years. Opened the fifth one in the state of Missouri. It's always on your mind. For most of that, I had competent staff so I didn't have to be there all the time. Then we caught one stealing and I took over "temporarily". Then my wife before I went insane. We got out before the whole chain really slid downhill.
 
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