First, my car pops the passenger side front tire. Thankfully, no one was hurt. I got it replaced but I need to have my paycheck hurry up and deposit so I can get the other side replaced to balance it out.
Next, after replacing the throttle on an e-scooter, I find that I need to replace the brake as that is electronically wired and keeping the scooter from going (I found frayed wires connecting to the controller board). More money to spend on a scooter I found at the dumpster.
Lastly, after Nobara was practically screaming at me to update it, I go to log in and KDE Plasma crashes after log on. Thankfully, a quick search turned up a solution that got my desktop environment back up and running.
This was just Friday. I dread to know what my weekend will be like, since I'm the on-call technician this weekend.
Sometimes I wonder if you can actually just throw more money at these things and they actually work and break less or if they still don't work and break as much but rich people just buy more stuff to compensate. I don't know which would be worse.
I was thinking of soldering, except I don't have solder. Or a soldering iron. So I tried to splice the wires together, like hot-wiring a car, then put aluminum foil and masking tape to cover the splices because I also don't have electrical tape. It turned out too janky to use. It made the wires too short, plus they are flimsy so the splices came apart easily, so I abandoned that idea. For the cost of the iron, the solder, and the tape, I can order the new part and just be done with it. That's if nothing else breaks on the e-scooter.