Is the door locking mechanism something you can change? If so you could change it to one that doesn’t lock when it’s closed, only when a key is used.
How do you keep getting locked out? Would it not be easier to remember your keys when you go outside?
Make sure the car is in neutral and handbrake is on before starting. It’s not strictly necessary but you should make this a habit for safety.
Buckle up. Make yourself aware of your surroundings.
Insert and turn key / press button. Newer cars require clutch and/or brake to be pressed to start, check the car manual if unsure.
Key shouldn’t need to be turned for long - if its kept turned when the engine starts you’ll hear a horrible grinding noise. Avoid this.
The car should now be started. Take your foot off clutch/brake, nothing will happen (as long as you ate in neutral with handbrake on).
To start moving, press the clutch, put the gear stick in 1st, start smoothly lifting your foot off the clutch. You’re looking for the bite point of the clutch - when you start to feel the car want to move. This takes practice and you will stall the car many times before its natural. Once you’ve found the bite point, its time to release the hand brake*, and start gently pressing the accelerator as you lift your foot the rest of the way off the clutch.
It takes a while for this to be smooth.
*you could release the hand brake before this and use the brake pedal instead.
When you want to change gears, take your foot off the accelerator, press the clutch, move the gear stick to the right gear, release the clutch smoothly, press the accelerator
Don’t have much personal experience with BX but they’re probably fine. But once you have backups of anything you care about the worst that can happen is you need to restore those backups. If its running a service you can’t do without then maybe a backup pi?
I have RPis running on SD cards for years with no issues so realistically you probably won’t have any either but better to be prepared than not. And it also means that if you mess something up you can restore it to when it worked.
I’ve a number of 1GB + 2GB models. Admittedly none in the last 3 years but some are 8+ years going strong. I know of some others with no issues but maybe I’ve been lucky
Do you want reliable, or do you want cheap? You must choose 1 from that list.
If you’re not planning on putting anything critical on it and you’re doing backups, and you don’t mind being without its use for however long it would take you to replace it if it dies, pick anything.
I’ve never had an SSD die on me Yet but I don’t buy cheap brands though I don’t buy top of the range and I usually buy at a good deal. Crucial MX has been reasonably priced in the past.
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Get thicker skin. You’ve no problem criticizing windows, so have some humility and realise Linux is not perfect. And it’s a joke. Learn to laugh at yourself
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