No.19690
What's a good /cyber/ certified career?
I'm currently trying to find a job in phone repair at a brick and mortar store. What do you guys do or want to do for a job?
No.19693
sysadmin is the only one I can think of off the top of my head.
No.19717
>>19690Get certified in CISSP.
Bear in mind that if you do this inside the USA or UK or other Five Eyes, your name will be on a list forever.
But still - cool career.
No.19721
>>19690Cryptology, Machine Learning, General AI, Pentesting, Reverse Engineering, Unemployment and Quantum Computing. Take your pick and ascend from the depths of your pitiful Neophyte existence.
No.19723
>>19690Hardware hacking and reverse engineering or something to do with biotechnology/biohacking
No.19764
>>19717I downloaded TAILS a while ago so I'm already on a list anyways. But that seems cool though, thank you for telling me about it.
No.19775
>>19721This.
Pentesting in particular is /cyber/ as fuarrk. You get paid by corps to crack their network security.
No.19838
I'm studying public policy analysis. I've been published a couple times, I write mostly about broadband Internet development and economics.
I can't decide if it's dusty shazbot shit or /cyber/.
No.19865
idk about you guys, I've taken the deep dive into hardware.
Once you get deep enough, the net seems like a faraway place, far beyond the GPIO module.
No.19866
>>19865A lot of my peers scorn hardware, preferring to stay in the abstract virtual world of programming code.
No.19867
>>19866it's not for everyone. I'm very bad at programming anything above assembly and C so I stick with it.
No.19868
>>19867I want to learn to program.
No.19872
>>19868cool. Don't learn it here, find a good online tutorial.
No.19873
>>19872Working on it, chummer.
No.19874
>>19838Kinda /cyber/, u shazbot.
No.19888
I'm a corporate drone. I think that's pretty /cyber/. It's dull though, but drinking helps.
No.19894
>>19888Drinking seems to help many corp drones.
No.19906
I work in electronic warfare, hopefully specializing soon
No.19907
>>19906Do you repair computerchairs in NSA?
No.19912
>>19907Military Intelligence, I want to get into mobile electronic warfare but you have to qualify first since it's a front-line position.
No.19914
>>19888I'm a corp drone too, and I kinda like it. It feels quite /cyber/.
> corporate branding everywhere> computers everywhere> expensive equipment lying around> I'e got cyberpunk colors set up on my computer to feel more schwayAnd I don't really drink, when I do, it's to cure my loneliness
No.19935
I kind of want to be a corp drone.
No.20055
>>19914I drink for loneliness also, I have two hands, and that means two drinks. Multitasking is an essential corporate skill.
No.20070
>>19914Worked at a big corp which creates chips for ID systems. Was a pretty cool time because of your greentext reasons. But I wasn't needed anymore so I lost the job. Now I went to school again for computer engineering.
No.20086
>>20070I want to go back for EE myself.
No.20094
Shit anything can be a cyberpunk job, hell I drive sex workers to their clients.
No.20096
No.20099
>>20096Yep, 50 brouzouf a ride in brouzouf chummer. You can make good pay once you get a few girls under you.
No.20114
>tfw everyone says to go into programming
>tfw I don't like programming
>tfw my dad says to go into "computers" since I'm good at fixing hardware
I have no fucking clue what I want to do.
No.20115
>>20094>>20099So out of curiosity is sex trafficking just like in Saints Row 3?
No.20118
>>20114I know your feel, chummer.
>Why not both? No.20129
I'm interning at a PC repair place.
No.20134
>>20114Hardware and software never mix. If you like hardware, do that, or sysadmin at most. Less pay and harder hours, but at least you'll be happy.
No.20138
>>20115Not at all chummer. Fuck I can't even think about how hard it would be to remove jizz stains from my back seat.
No.20151
>>19888>>19914Fellow corpcuck here. The tech is fucking nifty, and the brouzouf ain't bad.
Who am I kidding, the brouzouf is bad. But it's because I'm in my early 20s. Give it a decade and two changes in jobs, and I'll be making well over double what I am now. Corp 1, who I still do temp work for, wants to hire me ASAP, but doesn't have the budget, and they'll offer me close to double what I have now once they do get the dosh. Corp 2 will see me hitting 6 figures 10 years after they hire me, but doesn't think I have enough experience to bring me on yet. But I've got two good connections there (they're a vendor for corp 1, and my closest bro worked for them for a bit), and have interviewed with them once already. Current corp pays like shit, but is a solid 8/10 for learning at.
I might pick up less legitimate work on the side, sometime. Gotta talk to a guy I knew in school, he was always a sketchy fuck, and lives alone with no job. He's got to know what's around.
Meanwhile, it's drinking, vidya, trying to study without drinking or overindulging in vidya, and life in a small corp. Not all that cyb, but it fits me ok, for now.
No.20200
>mfw all these corpdrones
I mean if you shazbots love it, great, but god damn I wouldn't last a week without having a Cobain smoke break.
No.20208
Corpchummers, how do I join a corp? Teach me your ways.
No.20214
Either something with computers or maybe bio/nanotechnology
No.20231
it's very broad, really any occupation that allows you to build something especially out of junk
if you really want to go full cyberpunk, you really can't get more "cyber" and "punk" than an electrician, especially a tel/comms one that maintains the Internet (by that, I mean the physical lines that create the Internet). My father was one in the bay area, and in 30+ years working he helped build many of the corporate campuses there (Oracle, HP, Apple, Google, Youtube) as well as other projects (SFO expansion, BART, the new bay bridge) as well as walking into places that people normally don't know exist (Moffett Field, where the NSA has a huge office, as well as the huge AT&T relays where the NSA puts their taps). Not as flashy as a more "tech" oriented career though.
No.20246
>>20200I love living inside, and eating food, and I'm too chickenshit to rock the boat.
>>20208Don't do it bro, it's bleak. My company got brought by an American company, and their contempt for us lowly drones is palpable. Life is a little more corporate dystopia every day.
No.20282
>>20246Company stuff aside, a career in the field of nanotech research is still pretty cyberpunk
No.20454
>>19717>CISSPayyyy lmao
If you want to go the cert route at least get OSCP.
No.20456
I work for an energy company. It's a 3rd party for gas & steam turbine repair, refurbish, parts, etc. It's pretty /cyber/. Lot's of parts, computers, ridiculous spending going on. And here I am, with my headphones in, listening to metal while all these fucking drones around me run about catering to the needs of every power plant owner.
This remind me - my job, essentially, I'm re-writing all of their literature (case studies, white papers, etc.) and it's all really good information about turbines. Is there any safe way, to basically send myself these documents without the company knowing (would be good to have if shit hits the fan and someone needs to build a turbine for electricity). Problem is, can't use personal e-mail at work, can't read/write cd or flashdrive. They take this shit srsly.
No.20484
>>20456>metalThat better be industrial metal you shazbot.
If you steal those plans though, that would be pretty cyberpunk.
Corporate espionage is probably the most cyberpunk job in the world.
Try to sell the plans to a Russian or Chinee firm.
No.20518
>>20484We have blacklisted China, Best Korea, Russia and all of the Middle East except Israel. I need to know how to get them though. New policies just went through.
No.20527
>>20456Does security full body frisk you when you enter/ leave?
Are you constantly monitored?
Can you only work in a clean room after changing and again being frisked?
If no to all 3 then just use a smart phone or a more discreet camera to take pictures of the documents.
Very dull tho.
No.20528
I'm gonna study medicine.
I was thinking Oncology so that I could research nanobots. Alternatively, I could find a field where I could work with bionic implants and augmentations should the tech come soon.
No.20538
>>20527Frisk. Cameras. Surrounded by people.
Here is the kicker…I'm the only one who handles these documents…
No.20542
>>20538http://www.amazon.com/Chain-Mini-Camcorder-Video-Camera/dp/B00849KQOOsomething like this might work. not that specific one tho since it looks likes they're paying for good reviews. amazon is so fucking lazy getting rid of those bot accounts
anyway if your company has tight internal controls then they'll probably log who looks at what files when.
so if any docs leak and they get word it wouldn't be too much work for a review to turn up some good suspects.
No.20554
>>20528Best of luck to you.
I have 3 (three) friend who went to Georgia Tech (it's a really, really, like fucking really good school) all for Biomechanical Engineering.
Guess how many either have jobs in their fields or got accepted to a higher program?
Count it, ZER0.
That's a hard field man. You MUST stay on top of it or else you're throwing 300k+ away.
No.20558
Going for an MSW. Social work/policy isn't the most cyber field out there, but helping to make the world less dystopic has gotta count for something.
No.20567
>Career path - Social Media Marketing Associate
I feel like running/helping businesses get online and create adverts is pretty cyber.
>previous job - used bookstore employee
Not very cyber, but got a lot of great cyber reads.
>tfw when I could see the city growing and over taking the store, running us out of business.
No.20588
>>20538Do you use glasses?
Maybe use a camera inside a pair of glasses?
No.20595
>>20567I do this now m8. Steer clear for 4 reasons:
1. It's dominated by females
2. Long hours
3. Shit pay
4. Literally no ladder to climb, you're stuck there
No.20599
Currently studying software engineering.
Programming is pretty cyber I believe and I also like hacking code all night while listegning to industrial/ambient music.
Is that cyberpunk?
No.20638
No.20640
>>20567Funny, I'd consider preservation of important knowledge a few tiers more cyber than 'facebook aficionado'.
No.20715
>>20208Small business is gud, even though it's generally run by idiots.
Get connections, clean up, present yourself as savvy (but not neckbeardy or autistic), apply. Send lots of applications and resumes, expect few responses. Interview, don't drop your spaghetti. Pray for a good manager, mine is fucking awesome. Try to move up every few years. Train heavily, in and out of work. Get a home lab going, learn with that. Move to a new job every 3-5 years, climbing the ladder. You won't get payraises anywhere near as much as you'll get going from one job or another, because you'll almost never be offered a job that pays less than your last one. don't try forcing software solutions that the corp doesn't want or need (e.g. pushing for GNU/Linux in a Windows shop); but likewise, don't sit around silently when people try to make absurdly retarded decisions. Revel in the stupidity of your userbase. If they're users, google "BOFH", read all of the stories, and emulate that living deity. If you deal with clients, weep silently and drink every night. Stay loyal to the current corp for no longer than they stay loyal to you. Earn brouzouf. Slowly become jaded. Retire at the average age.
Alternately, once you're settled in, steal the shit out of their data and sell it quietly for maximum brouzoufs. Don't do it in a way that can be traced to you at all, though, because you could end up blacklisted from the industry. Walk that fine line very, very carefully.
No.21294
All of you shazbots have cool jobs, how do I into programming and working on vidya so I can cultivate some new cyber games for all of you?
No.21419
Well, I started out studying EE but dropped out without participating in a single exam because of depression and social anxiety problems.
Now, I'm in full remission having changed majors and university, studying chemistry. It's tough but I'm passing everything.
The problem is that I'm having second thoughts.
My current university has a pretty cool institute for computational neuroscience and neuroinformatics.
I'm thinking about switching to CSE/CS…
/blog
No.21437
I'm an engineer for Nissan.
>tfw I love the work, but I know I'm working for a tier 2 ziabatsu.
No.21447
No.24764
>>19690
crimes and cybercrimes
No.24766
So /cyber/, I have a question about career bullshit that I posted on /tech/ which I'll just copypaste here:
"So how do I into network security, /tech/? Specifically with a focus on pentesting.
As of right now, the most I can say about my knowledge of computer shit is that I know my way around Linux, use Slackware regularly, and have a black belt in GoogleStartPage-fu. I'm going to be starting a degree in computer science next fall, and will be learning my first language this summer (it will probably be Python, and then I'm going to move on to Java pretty quickly). I know that networking and TCP/IP are both very important areas to know for NetSec, along with knowing how individual computers in general work and being familiar with different OS's, and I know that in general to work in NetSec you need to be familiar with pretty much everything that has to do with computers and how they communicate with each other, but obviously no one person can know everything about this.
So aside from wondering what stuff I'm missing here as things I need to know, I'm wondering how much I need to know in each of these areas. Resources would also be greatly appreciated. I have a shitload of links from /hax/, but they're all pretty much useless to me until I have more foundational knowledge about how shit works before I start learning about how to crack these things.
Another question that just came to mind: Are there any pentesting programs or exercises that would be useful for a noob like myself to play around with as I'm getting that foundational knowledge, or is it just going to be a waste of time for me to focus on security at all until I know more about non-security areas?"
Other anons have suggested to look into the military for this sort of thing. Aside from the experience I'd get if there were some sort of "cyber warfare" position available to someone like me, the advantage of starting off in some kind of military job would be also getting the schway tacti/k/ool military training that would be useful to me. And being ex-military is pretty /cyber/.
Downside is being in the military would also probably suck, especially basic training given that I'm not in great shape right now. But is this even a good path to go down for trying to get into NetSec, or are there other ways to get into what seems to be a pretty difficult field to get into?
As far as being /cyber/ is concerned, though: I'd say being an ex-military pentester who is paid to hax the megacorps is one of the most cyberpunk jobs you could have right now. And with military experience and training, I could also possibly be a PI or a bounty hunter or some shit like that.
No.24767
>>24766
Holy shit I did not intend to write that much.
>tl;dr How the fuck does someone who is a regular Linux user and with a decent level of above-average computer skills but no programming skills yet, who is also going to be starting a CS degree soon, into NetSec? Would the US military be a good potential route for getting into NetSec?
No.24800
>>24766
Here's a good collection of beginner infosec links.
https://www.reddit.com/r/netsec/wiki/start
Here's some general advice:
> Are there any pentesting programs or exercises that would be useful for a noob like myself to play around with as I'm getting that foundational knowledge, or is it just going to be a waste of time for me to focus on security at all until I know more about non-security areas?"
There's a lot of exploit exercises and the like you can do, that aren't too hard to find. Although you will want a strong base in OS fundamentals, network, web applications etc, you can learn about these at the same time you learn more offensive applications of the concepts.
Doing a CS degree isn't a bad use of your time, especially if you're not dead set on offsec. You may find during the course of the degree that you actually prefer some other aspect of IT.
If you are sure about security, a common route to a pen testing position is from a network engineer/sysadmin/developer role.
One of the best things you can do CV wise is to demonstrate an interest in security. Whatever form this takes depends on your specific circumstances, but it may be going to meetups, releasing CVEs, having a security blog etc. In pentesting there's always a lot of wannabes applying, and you need to stand out and show that you're dedicated and a true security enthusiast.
As for the military, I have no particular experience there. Not US based.
And yes, learn to program. There are people in security that can't, but they are handicapped by it. Learn C and Python (or similar) at least. Java if you are a masochist.
No.24802
>>24767
>considering to join the military
unless you do it with the sole intention of pulling a manning/snowden i suggest you kill yourself instead.
No.24825
>>24800
Thanks chummer, this is great advice. I've also already got a shitload of links from /hax/ for security-related resources and shit, but this is all a lot of really useful organized shit that I've been looking for even if it is from leddit.
I'm actually currently working in IT to a limited extent while I'm in university, so I have at least a small amount of familiarity with it and am already in the position of getting experience in the field. So far, from what I know about it and from what I've heard about it, it seems that working in security would be what I'd enjoy the most considering that a lot of IT otherwise is customer service bullshit. I just wanna haxx megacorps.
But I am currently working on Python, which I'll be able to focus more on after finals are over this quarter, and after the summer I'm supposed to be taking Java at university. At some point after these, I'd want to learn C and possibly some lower-level languages as well like assembly. I can't say yet because I'm still too much of a noob, but I think if I wanted to do something other than security it'd probably be something programming related. But from what I hear, making any brouzouf as a programmer is pretty difficult without being a code monkey.
>>24802
Nigger it's not like I want to be in the fucking military. I just want the training and shit. It's more like infiltration.
No.24830
>>24767
>military
You won't find any netsec there.
Do the opposite, try to secure a dynamic Tor hidden service webserver. Work down from there.
The biggest concern is knowing what tools to work with and how to configure them. Building from source is always better, etc.
If you wanna hack into networks, you gotta be able to create such a network. Identify websites and other services through their headers or other metadata, then go through the source code and search the web for any bugs and vulnerabilities. Stuff like that.
Taking a course for this kind of stuff is kind of stupid because the information is everchanging, when you get done with your outdate course, everything will differ. The only thing you can research is how IP's and the internet works, but i bet you know all that basic shit already.
A fair warning though; you will go absolutely buttmad over why certain tools don't work the way they should. Security is very specific, but some services just love to advertise themselves to the open world via your server, making you more vulnerable.
I might be missing your point, but good luck.
No.24853
I know how to program decently in C/C++ and some Python.
However, I have no clue how to begin pentesting/hacking. Seems ridiculous to me.
I just don't know how you actually make the step from having an IP and an open port to being in control of the system.
>fuckin' magic
No.24854
Genetics: cyberpunk or straight up science-fiction?
It's probably gonna be my job in a year or two so I'm not sure I'd be impartial in my analysis
Fallback: I'm gonna be spending 4 months doing hardcore bioinformatics analysis on fish gene codes, don't tell me that shit isn't /cyber/.
No.24858
No.24859
>>24853
Well I don't understand drek about code, but I'd like to.
Also it would be interesting to know how hacking or whatever it is works.
No.24862
>>19717
My name its probably in a few lists already
No.24872
No.25263
>>20599
Its my way of life too
Sit back and enjoy the code
No.25267
>>24864
He has the right attitude though.
No.25271
No.28509
Is there a list of /cyber/ certifications?
No.28510
The best cyberpunk job is no job.
No.28522
>>28510
Maybe, but you need brouzouf to live.
So you gotta have some job or source of income.
No.28530
I'm a security engineer and work on a security product for a small start up. We deal with threats every day and we're building some crazy tech to detect potential threats. I'd call it /cyber/ certified.
No.28855
>>19907
holy shit my sides are in orbit chummer
No.28856
I am welder/brazer, fire and metal are my only friends
No.30896
No.30906
I'm gonna be a porno director one day.
No.30925
I work for the Navy as a "communicator". Really, I sit around being a welfare queen while waiting to get a security clearance that doesn't actually give me access to anything. I'm not even allowed to touch printers.
I'm guessing I'm not /cyber/ certified, but I don't care.
I don't know what I want to do. I just wanna pay my rent and live my life. I'm decent with a computer, but so is every 20-something these days. Security is neat, but I'm more interested in the physical side, but that seems to basically be "post guards and don't write your passwords on your monitor in sharpie." I considered doing some kind of tech startup, but every market seems saturated and doing anything even remotely neat requires more capital, in terms of both raw brouzouf and machinery/materiel than I have access to.
No.30929
I just finished construction and everything on a laboratory for the creation of e-juice for vapes. Don't have a website up and probably wouldn't shill it here anyways. Wholesale nigga.
Thinking about opening up a few other companies and operating out of the same place but making viral shit like a "male tears" ejuice to shill on tumblr and make a killing and then go do straight white male stuff with the brouzouf.
No.30960
>>30929
Wanna partner up someday? I'm not so interested in vapejuice, but wanted to get a start-up going for disposable size vapes that are properly refillable.
I can't be the only one who sees those big boxes and cigar-sized contraptions and thinks "what a fucking shazbot nerd kill urself my man" but likes the sleek looks of pic related
No.30964
>>30960
Going to give you free "consumer feedback" chummer, I smoke fags and I really hate the guts out of your apple looking e-cig, those big boxes are worse of course, but if you're going in that way of industry, try to make something cyber that we haven't seen yet I would rather bank my brouzuf on that.
No.30981
>>30960
Sure man, I'm around here. If you want to get ahold of me in the future my company name is elux llc
Mention this thread and have a prototype
and I'm interested
No.30998
Professional NEET.
It can be both the least and the most cyberpunk job of them all.
No.31010
i've been wanting to start up my smalltime tactical gear and clothing thing for a while now, i'm kind of bothered how every contemporary gear manufacturer does the exact same pretentious operator thing, and i think i would bring something new to the table, regardless of whether it's actually good or not.
at the very least, i could do some DIY crude crap i have in mind and sell it under a fake label, just to see if there's interest in this kind of thing locally, at least for the airsoft and paintball crowd.
r8 my stupid ass idea.
No.31020
I'm a software tester for a fucking censorship/web filtering company. Aint so bad
No.31022
>>30960
except that the clouds are shit so you've already pushed away more than half the market, which happens to be the half that spends the most on vapes by far
No.31024
>>31010
I'll buy if it isn't too retarded looking or too expensive. Don't be a kike.
No.31033
>>31010
"yeah same"/10
I think there's a real market in satisfying cowadoody kid fantasies. Of course, millimetre scanners and heartbeat sensors are unfeasable, but futuristic airgun designs for normal hunters/enthusiasts/paranoid HD scenario mongers are an untapped market and it's not like red dots are so complex that you can't spare a little bit of design time on looking cool for paintballers.
No.31070
Completely unrelated.
What's the best streaming service i could use if i want to stream a movie to a friend of mine?
No.31109
>>31024
This, I have racking up quite a bit of brouzouf recently for a SHTF scenario. If you make something practical enough, I'll buy it.
No.31145
>>19721
Genetic engineering, Synthetic biology,
biohacking and the like.
No.31344
I'm studying computer science in college. I fucked up my first two years though because I didn't know I wanted to do computer science, so I'm at a local community college. I'm going to go into web development and move to the west coast in the hopes of becoming nomadic.
Anyway my job in school is as the uscan at a grocery store overnight. I'm totally alone so I bring my laptop and books and program/study all night. Plus I oversee 6 robots and that's sorta cool. I think it's pretty /cyb/ anyway.
No.32070
>>20151
What do you do? Just wondering.
No.32215
I had a job interview at a small company that makes radio frequency tracking (UWB related) chips/boards for megacorps like GE, BMW and drokk.
No.32284
>>32215
>tracking
u r the enemy
No.32290
>>19690
>get paid to repair phones
>plant keylogging and spyware on the devices before you give them back
>get bank accounts, social media accounts, corporate secrets. get paid to do it
Cyber as FUCK
No.32308
>>32284
Nah, it's not for people, it's for tools, access control 'n shit.
(BMW has torque wrenches that cost around 20K euros, plus every car has their different Nm ratings for the bolts)
No.38781
I'm aiming at investigation journalism.
Find out and reveal politicians and megacorps dirty secrets, especially the latter. Gotta know about securing my own hardware, communicating secretly, infiltrate and almost spying. Passes the cyber test right ?
I'm just sad that considering how network securities are often terrible, there are so much possibilities of fun and getting infos this way but it's unreachable because I'm close to clueless about software and programming. So here I am, trying to understand and use the tools that others made
No.38796
>>20454
I've heard OSCP is meant to be fucking brutal.
No.38801
>>38781
Lol your gonna get carbombed or suffer a mysterious heart attack.
Seriously though, learn to program, it's always the start to learning cybersecurity.
No.38808
>>32290
>Laptop tech support
>Most of my work was just doing backups and cloning a new OS
>Created my own little botnet
Other than this that job was fucking shit though, glad I got out before I got caught or just died of boredom.
No.40436
>>38796
I spoke to the Director of INFOSEC at my company the other day; he has CISSP but not OSCP. I can confirm: it is brutal as fuark.
No.40614
>>32290
>>32290
>Want to be cyber punk
>Being such a piece of shit poser that you don't understand your violating -privacy-(you know, that thing we have to fight mega corps over).
>fucking bitch
No.40617
>>40614
Maybe they're just cyber without the punk.
No.40624
>>40614
Sorry, was "punk" about some faggot's shitty ideology, or an aggressive, vague, anti-establishment mentality?
No.40752
I'm a produce guy in a city.
No.40757
>>32290
Well maybe it's not anti-MegaCorp, but it sure is low-life. Fits in the description for me.
>>40624
It's hardly vague when the enemy clearly are the megacorps.
No.40770
>>40752
Same here, work with food to feed the masses.
No.40771
>>40752
Thats pretty /cyber/ to think about. Living in a city where theres no nature for miles around, and you're importing it/ selling it for a profit.
No.40786
So, I had to leave college because of money, but I learned programming online and from SICP, and I've done a decent amount of sysadmin stuff on my own equipment.I've even done some screwing around with AI (Weka is useful). How the hell am I supposed to get hired for any of that?
What do I put on my resume?
No.40788
>>24802
Neither of those people started with the intention you mean though. They both joined up because they were patriotic and believed in what they thought America was doing, and then they found out what it's actually doing and had to tell somebody.
No.40789
>>31010
I REALLY like M65 jackets. I've got a few of them that I wear and some others in storage. All genuine. The repros are Chinese crap, nothing like the real deal.
I've wondered how feasible it'd be to buy an old heavy duty sewing machine, source the right materials, treatings, buttons, and zippers, and make a batch of jackets made to the right standards (I've been looking online for the production standards used). Obviously, I'd choose a /cyber/ color. I have enough camo. OD would be cool though, it's harder to find genuine in good condition.
Even better would be to improve upon the design, I've often thought about modifying one of my jackets but I don't want to risk ruining it. I'd love to have some interior pockets.
I think if that were possible, it'd be possible to produce other sorts of "tactical gear" and clothing. I like the idea, it's just that it'd hard as fuck to start a small company for this kind of thing. A shrimp in a sea of whales that have been around for decades.
Maybe I'll just find some old tires and make Vietcong rubber sandals. That's more on my skill level.
Anyone else interested in this kind of shit? I've got no sewing experience but making durable clothing has been an idea that comes back to me from time to time, I want to know if I could actually make that happen with some people or if I'm talking out of my ass.
No.40836
No.40840
I work a part time job that barely pays for rent.
Otherwise I get brouzouf through stealing, generally focused upon pick-pocketing. Take the hard brouzouf and pictures of their credit card. Then I simply get their info online and buy stuff with it. If some of the people live nearby, I'll figure out how their daily schedule is and order a package for myself and pick it up while they are gone.
Anyone else here a societal parasite?
No.40851
>>20554
How did they like GT? I'm hoping to do Comp Sci there.
No.40853
>>40789
I got one of the Austrian surplus m65 styled parkas.
Wearing it in 0 celcius nights with a hooded jacket under it is toasty as fuck.
No.40869
>>40853
See, you understand how awesome this type of jacket is. I wear an LL Bean "Katahdin Iron Works" zipper hoodie underneath and it's just about the coziest thing I own.