Solved How realistic are my goals?

I am sorry for your situation, get back to work is easier if you get back on your area.

About system administration if you don't like poking with this stuff I am concerned you won't find enough engagement in pursuing it.

If you are looking for some job inspirations, if you are a good with the tools and you are retired mixing amazon, uber, and perhaps trying to get a license as Handy-Man can give you a way to integrate your pension with the pace that works best for you.
I had a ton of hand tools, but they got "misplaced" by my son when I put them into storage. Also, I have bad knee and a bad shoulder from repetative stress, so manual labor is out of the picture at my age. Oh, I like poking this stuff just fine, its the hardware failures I don't like so well. I admit, that there is virtually zero chance of me working in the tech field, but I think that I will play around with FreeBSD from time to time, in order take my mind off of other things. Well, I've managed to break Xfce twice, but then I got it working again, so I cannot be completely useless. :)
 
One thing a friend of mine mentioned to me is tutoring english lessons to kids in other countries over the internet. Parents in some countries such as china are very keen to teach their kids english, and particularly like being taught by a native english speaker. I haven't tried this myself but it has the advantage of not requiring any physical work, although it might mean working nights if you're teaching people in different timezones. I haven't investgiated it myself, so I don't know much about it, but it might be something you could look into. I have no idea what the earning potential is. Possibly you might need some kind of teaching qualification. Anyway, just a suggestion.
 
One thing a friend of mine mentioned to me is tutoring english lessons to kids in other countries over the internet. Parents in some countries such as china are very keen to teach their kids english, and particularly like being taught by a native english speaker. I haven't tried this myself but it has the advantage of not requiring any physical work, although it might mean working nights if you're teaching people in different timezones. I haven't investgiated it myself, so I don't know much about it, but it might be something you could look into. I have no idea what the earning potential is. Possibly you might need some kind of teaching qualification. Anyway, just a suggestion.
Very very interesting. You wouldn't happen to have the names of any organizations you could send me in a private message?
 
Sorry I don't know much about it, I was told about it years ago. I have read recently that online tutoring is a big thing in england over the last few years as well, not just english language but all kinds of subjects. But I guess for that you have to know school curriculum, exams, etc. Private tutors here can earn quite good money too.
That's probably not the same thing as giving chinese or vietnamese kids practice in speaking english, I would imagine the requirements for actual tutoring would be somewhat higher.
 
This might give you some ideas. I know the demand in china is or was very high, it was a guy I know in shanghai that I used to work with who told me about it. I do remember he said the chinese school teachers aren't all that good because they teach english but with chinese pronounciation and they make all kinds of mistakes... so everyone wants their kid to learn from a native english speaker, especially US english. Of course if you can speak some chinese or other asian language then you have a big advantage too, sadly I don't!

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This is the idea, you do it over the internet and teach the kids how to pronounce words, what things mean, the usual stuff. I think especially working with young kids it's probably not very difficult academically, but you might have to be up at 1 AM when it's afternoon in shenzhen or wherever! I never looked into it seriously because I was too busy working in computing. I don't know what kind of money you can make doing this, it might not be a great deal, unless you put a lot of hours in or something. The nice thing about it is you can do it from home just with a laptop. Anyway, it crossed my mind as something you might be able to look into while you look after your wife etc. I don't have any direct experience of doing this though, that's about as much as I know!
 
Of course if you can speak some chinese or other asian language then you have a big advantage too
Well, I actually have some experience with both Tagolog and Visayan, but I don't think that will be of much use. I took a Mandarin course about twenty five years ago, but I really don't remember much of it at all. I think that I learned how to say "good morning boss" and that was about it. My wife has some friends who live in Mainand China, I will try and pick their brains. Thanks for the idea, I'm a native English speaker, maybe I can talk to the people runinng the program.
 
Lot of my friends that retired from work at Norfolk Shipyard but drove from deep in NC. Good paying jobs worth the drive. NE. N.Carolina considered a poor area.
So when they retired there were not many opportunities to stay busy.
I had a ton of hand tools, but they got "misplaced" by my son when I put them into storage. Also, I have bad knee and a bad shoulder from repetative stress, so manual labor is out of the picture at my age.
Yes this is like shipyard life. You get beat up pretty good working outdoors in all seasons.

What my retired friends did to stay active:

Parts store driver-
Hotrod Builder-
Bitcoin Mogul-
 
Hotrod Builder
Hotrod Builder! I like the sound of that one, it sounds even better than being a bikini inspector. Not sure if my wife will like me spending money on cars again, but who knows. You're right about one thing, there are not many oppurtunites in this area, and I don't really want to work at Home Depot. Well, I used to have an online account with Charles Schwab years ago, maybe I will that again, and maybe also look at teaching English.
 
This might give you some ideas. I know the demand in china is or was very high, it was a guy I know in shanghai that I used to work with who told me about it. I do remember he said the chinese school teachers aren't all that good because they teach english but with chinese pronounciation and they make all kinds of mistakes... so everyone wants their kid to learn from a native english speaker, especially US english. Of course if you can speak some chinese or other asian language then you have a big advantage too, sadly I don't!

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This is the idea, you do it over the internet and teach the kids how to pronounce words, what things mean, the usual stuff. I think especially working with young kids it's probably not very difficult academically, but you might have to be up at 1 AM when it's afternoon in shenzhen or wherever! I never looked into it seriously because I was too busy working in computing. I don't know what kind of money you can make doing this, it might not be a great deal, unless you put a lot of hours in or something. The nice thing about it is you can do it from home just with a laptop. Anyway, it crossed my mind as something you might be able to look into while you look after your wife etc. I don't have any direct experience of doing this though, that's about as much as I know!
A friend of my wife recommended VipKid. She said that a lot of the other once are fake, but VipKid is supposed to be reliable. However, I looked at the requirements on their website, and they are pretty stiff. Still, it doesn't hurt sending them a message. After all, how many people with a four year degree are going to want be up late at night, teaching kids over the Internet. They cannot be getting that many candidates who meet those requirements.
 
Interesting, and perhaps more practical than trying to attend college at this point. Other than just tinkering with Linux and FreeBSD on my own, how could an average stay at home person, such as myself gain enough knowledge to impress an employer? Seems like an interesting path.
Might be recursive, but having a wiki to show my knowledge also lets me expand that knowledge :D

I started my wiki to hold config notes, but mainly to show-off how I hosted a public game server to prove its security (it being useful for employment like a portfolio was kind-of a afterthought). I started with one OS and a few pairing configs 10 years ago, and now have 400+ pages for 10 Linux distros, FreeBSD 14.1-16.0, Windows, and server configs and dozens of game notes across all those OSs. My knowledge base expands while still showing it off :p
 
I very much agree with Espionage724. Many times, when I can't figure something out, I create a page on it, and explaining it the imagined reader helps me figure out what I need to do.
 
I'm know in my mid-sixties, retired, my wife has stage three cancer, and things aren't looking so great for her right now.

Based upon the above circumstances, I decided to duck into our spare bedroom on weekends, and to experiment with FreeBSD in order to take my mind off of other things (better than drinking and smoking I guess). Now that I've been sitting here, installing packages, for a few days I know realize that my pension and my Social Security aren't going to be enough, and I probably should think about going back to work.

Now, I don't really have a background in computers, I mainly worked in manufacturing before I retired, but I'm wondering if I could become some sort of junior systems administrator? From the information I've found online, it looks like I would have to obtain a bachelor's degree, and that might take an entire four years, which might be an impossibility at this stage in my life.

Well, any information is welcome. Looks like the weekend is over, and now it is time for me to go back to arguing with my wife's insurance company.
Boy, are you getting a lot of replies -- many good thoughts. Here's one that's off the wall. I'm about your age, I am not a real techie where software and computers go, but I enjoy exploring OS's, searching for maximum useability along with maximum practical security. A current effort has been to bring down the cost of my laptops while exploring open source systems. A techie named Leah Rowe has designed and moderates an open-source boot system called Libreboot. She offers to install it on refurbished Lenovo Thinkpads along with FreeBSD as an operating system -- for me GhostBSD. I got a great laptop with a great system at an irresistible price, and now it lets me learn about FreeBSD. I've learned enough that I now do it myself when I find a cheap laptop. As it turns out, with the current shortage of memory chips, new laptops are getting incredibly expensive, making refurbished attractive. If you are looking to earn some money, you might learn enough to locate good quality, refurbished laptops and install FreeBSD or other open-source operating systems on them for a fee - or at least start with yourself as a guinea pig.
 
Sounds, yes. But as far as we can see, this seems legit. Sadly I have no HW to try libreboot on. Or, which I would be willing to sacrifice in the attempt.
Also, that libreboot is legit is obvious. But this doesn't make encouraging another person to take a path that perhaps ends up spending money in the non-free part of the libreboot business (minifree.org) not a sales pitch. Anyhow, I've pointed it out, and that was my main concern.
 
Okay, let's add a warning. Don't store your data in home, create a separate file system to store your data (e.g., I use ZROOT/data). This way, you can snapshop your home and you will not run out of space and, at the same time, you will be able to rollback the local config of many apps, which, contrary to popular belief, some times gives you a lot of grief if you cannot do.

What do you think of my below attempt to create a backup script. It seems to work, but it takes a very long time to finish.

Code:
#!/bin/sh
# USING RSYNC TO BACKUP AND RESTORE SYSTEM DIRECTORIES

# +++ Copy settings and home directory to USB: +++

mkdir -p /diskbkp/backup

# Prepare a list of installed packages with below command:
pkg prime-list > /media/da0p1/backup/package_list.txt

mkdir -p /diskbkp/backup/boot
mkdir -p /diskbkp/backup/usr/local
mkdir -p /diskbkp/backup/home
mkdir -p /diskbkp/backup/etc
mkdir -p /diskbkp/backup/var/cache/pkg

# COPY SYSTEM DIRECTORIES

rsync -avhpo --progress /boot/loader.conf /diskbkp/backup/boot
rsync -avhpo --progress /usr/local/etc /diskbkp/backup/usr/local
rsync -avhpo --progress /home /diskbkp/backup/
rsync -avhpo --progress /etc /diskbkp/backup/
rsync -avhpo --progress /var/cache/pkg /diskbkp/backup/var/cache
echo "Script finished."
 
Other than just tinkering with Linux and FreeBSD on my own, how could an average stay at home person, such as myself gain enough knowledge to impress an employer?

I didn't notice anyone else mentioning it, but doing software QA under contract might be an option for you.

Errare humanum est and nobody errares more than software engineers and programmers because everyone works to the project rather than the clock and Mistakes Happen.

There are 2 basic types of QA (Quality Assurance): Black Box and White (or Clear, depending on who you're speaking with) Box.

Black Box involves putting yourself in the place of the ultimate user of the software, who may or may not be the actual purchaser. You sit there at the computer, with the current state of the incomplete software on a CD or DVD with a scratch copy of the incomplete user manual fresh off the laser printer. Your job is to see how hard it would be for new users of that software, if they had to accept it in its current state, to install and use it to do what they bought it for.

It could be documentation for a laser printer, where your only task is to install the driver software and then shove various documents into the print queue to see whether they come out looking like the master you put in.

It could be a new operating system (probably not, tho) and you have to see whether you can get it installed and bring it up so that it looks like it might some day work.

It could be an application or utility package, such as a graphics editor, or a desktop publishing editor, or a postscript charting editor, or any number of other things. They all have specific features, and your job is to exercise as many of them as the current incomplete software can offer you.

The best way to do BBQA is to exercise the software from the "center" (the features and settings that supposedly will be most used) to the "edges" (the features and settings that you probably won't see until you have to work around the clock to get the bugs out so that the finished product can ship). The development engineers generally don't spend much time out on the edges, but customers will sure as bananas give the company stick in the trade press when they find the unswatted bugs.

BBQAers don't have to look at the code, that's something White/Clear boxers do. BBQAers report the problems users would encounter. Did the install not work? Did the system crash the moment you tried to draw a circle with the graphics editor, or did it draw the circle in the wrong place? Report what you did, and what happened next if it was unexpected. Go thru the whole incomplete user guide, over and over again making as many changes as you can (circles touching, overlapping, filling, ...) looking for missing pixels that aren't a monitor or video-card problem. Et cetera. And do it for every internal state-and-stage release. Again and again til the product ships. And then when it's undergoing maintenance

A lot of people who contract to do BBQA don't really care about doing a good job. I discovered that when I was doing contract QA after I got the push along with all my middle-manager-over-40 colleagues. Whether they're just lazy and willing to short-change their co-workers or what, I don't know.

I used to lecture the QA engineers and contractors that the fate of the company and their own jobs depended on doing it right. And to make the point more clearly, I spent most of my non-tech time and had my project leaders spend most of theirs doing BBQA after the Alpha point was passed. Young engineers think it's just donkey work (any donkey can do it) but that just shows their inexperience. Those who didn't get the memo stayed at the bottom of the pile til they wised up, or left.

So you can make good money if you can show that you are conscientious and have a feel for where the bugs are.
 
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