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kevsan

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Posts posted by kevsan

  1. On 1/19/2018 at 17:43, Phoebe18 said:

    Do you live down towards Frankston area? Just trying to work out total commute time if a) driving and b) you end up getting slow to Mordialloc then switching to fast train. Also what would be the daily return cost on train? Thanks in advance 

    We live in Langwarrin, which is just behind Seaford/Frankston. Its 10 minute drive to the station, i park at Seaford, loads of spaces before 7:30am and then get the express (usually the 7:03) which gets me into Flinders street just before 8. I wouldnt bother getting the slow and then switching as the express runs from frankston every 10 minutes, the slow train takes about 1:10 and goes via the loop, so if you want to get off at Parliament or melbourne central its easier.

    Its $8.60 return each day regardless, or you can get a month pass which works our at about $5 a day depending on what you buy.

    Driving can be 45mins to an hour on a good day, 2 hours on a bad. Its largely down to luck generally.

     

     

  2. 1 hour ago, Eva Winterburn said:

    The Frankston line has express trains and normal trains, you can get on at Cheltenham or Southland, express you will have to stand, slow train you can sit most days...

    Yep - express fills up by the time you get to Chelsea/aspendale, but if you get on before then you'll def get a seat.

    Coming back, depending on time and blind luck it can be like the circle line on a bad day, standing pretty much to Cheltenham. If its hot/rammed, i get the slow train, either all the way through to frankston or to mordialloc or Carrum and jump back on an express when it gets there, adds 10-15 mins to the travel time, but is a more pleasant experience.

  3. Hi

    Depends on your budget and requirements.

    Frankston / Mount Eliza/ Mornington are great for kids and good for the beach etc.

     

    Frankston is significantly cheaper than other places above, is about 55 mins on the express train into flinders street (which run every 10 minutes or so )

    Mount Eliza / Mornington mean a 20 minute drive to the station, on top of the train commute. I live in Langwarrin with 1 wife, 2 kids and a dog and we love it, v. green and great spaces. - I drive to seaford station (10 mins) then 50 mins into the city.

    Would have loved to live slightly closer to the beach, but couldnt make the finances stack up, and its only an 11 minute drive to the beach at frankston/seaford anyway.

    If i drive, i can get into the city in about 45 minutes, but that is largely dependent on traffic etc and then it can be expensive for parking.

    There are great schools locally including state and private. We send our kids to a church school which goes from Kinder to year 12 which is very popular

    • Like 1
  4. no they all sell at different rates. What you will need to do is go to each site and put in the initial details to get their kwh rates and supply charge. When i was looking at changing i plugged this into a spreadsheet and included what i was currently paying so that you can compare like for like and see if your bill changes or not. Its a pain, but worth it to work out in black and white

  5. its on the up, and is getting a lot of investment. the state government is relocating some departments there, the TAC is already there and WorkSafe Victoria is currently relocating, to complete by the end of this year. A number of people have chosen not to relocate so there will be vacancies available across their workforce. they are based in new offices on Malop street, right in the centre near westfield shopping centre.

    Those people that commute via Vline seem to have more trouble/complaints than those using Metro trains (which are the melbourne & suburbs network), but if commuting is not required, it could be an option.

  6. 22 hours ago, DukeNinja said:

    Unfortunately our MoveCube wasn't as cheap as we expected. We paid GBP890 in the UK, and just over AUD900 in Australia for the journey.

    Screenshot_20171212-105342_01.jpg

    Screenshot_20171212-105535_01.jpg

    Wow, really? Very strange - i would go back to them and query that.

     

    It was all very clear for us, fixed price on both sides for door to door. - 890 and 325. The only caveat would be any fees for additional cleaning / disposal if customs made a fuss.

  7. Who told you movecube fees were so high? They are a fixed price AU$325 - you can see for yourself if you quote on the website. Whats the total price for the PSS move? plus if you are sharing you may get delayed while its filled with other peoples stuff

    Our large movecube was  £890 plus AU$325 all in door to door from Warwickshire to Melbourne SE suburbs

  8. 1 hour ago, Jondar said:

    Hello everyone,

     

    I'm a young analyst programmer (5 years of experience) who's planning on moving to Melbourne at the end of this year. I'm in a bit of a niche market, since I'm currently working in the AS400 / IBM i domain.

    I'm actively looking for a job on multiple job sites, and applying to jobs both in my field and just low level analyst jobs. But I'm not seeing a lot of feedback. Is it normal for agents not to respond when you're still abroad?

     

    I must admit that going through this forum is not improving my confidence. We have enough savings for a prolonged job search / vacation, but that's not something I particularly enjoy. 

    As a silly side-question: is there any specific Australian IT lingo I should be aware of? 

     

    Thanks in advance,

    Agents will ignore you until you are onshore as they generally need people to fill immediate gaps.

    Its best to target companies directly, either look up someone in your area in those roles on linkedin or hr directly. As mentioned, banks are a reasonable bet. ANZ and NAB are spending big on IT projects at the moment, so you may have luck there.

    IBM have a large office in southbank, you could see if you could get something there in the short term, or even try some of the UNI's - RMIT are spending as well at the moment.

    • Thanks 1
  9. we rented in seaford, and now own in Langwarrin.

    All the areas are good, never had any trouble. Anecdotally Frankston North has a bit of a reputation but most parts are fine.

    realestate.com.au will give you an idea of prices - the further north/closer to the CBD and the closer to the beach the more you will pay.

    Take the photos with a pinch / bucket of salt. Until you view in person you wont know if that house is right for you.

  10. 36 minutes ago, Nemesis said:

    Its actually easier for your body tdeal with than a 2 day stopover in oz.If you get straight back on the plane then your body has not had time to adjust to its new time zone, its still living on the old one.

    good to know, although hopefully i never have to test it!

    • Like 1
  11. On 10/30/2017 at 11:52, snifter said:

    We used a large Movecube. We are a family of 3 and I chose to be really ruthless and de cluttered in the months leading up to our move. I also had a very definite list of what furniture I wanted to take, sell, recycle and dump.

    And sit down with the kids in the run up to Christmas and get them to have a big sort out. Anything they’ve not used or don’t really want, sell or donate to charity shops.

    Agree with all snifter said. We were the same and used the large movecube. It was perfect for us.

    Bear in mind you will be without whatever is in there for around 3 months. Either 3 months before you go, or 3 months after you arrive or a bit of both which is what we did (approx 6 weeks each side) so you will need to budget for some stuff  - TV, fridge etc and end up with 2 etc.

    Agree you need to be ruthless and adopt a it goes in the cube or the suitcase or it doesnt come attitude, but at the crunch we had space left and should have been more prepared for adding more stuff.

    Having been here a while now i really regret not bringing more of my power/hand tools / garden stuff etc. Its a pain that they will need more attention to cleaning but at the moment time is on your side.

    I shudder at the stuff i gave/threw away, angle grinders, bench saws all sorts thinking i'll never need them again. and i do. -  especially if you get to buy a house again!!!

  12. it likely depends on a lot of variables.

    Some stuff will be looked at others not so much. and not always what you expect.

    Our Christmas decs and a box of shoes were looked at, but my mountain bike remained bubble wrapped and apparently not even looked at

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