AmphetamineCrown
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AmphetamineCrown

Thanks for checking!

Yeah, but even if she had access to the folder, she'd only get the LastPass mobile capabilities if she also went premium? The problem we're trying to deal with is password management across my home PC, my Macbook, her iMac, her Macbook, my work PC, two iPads and two iOS phones.

Which of the premium versions of these are suitable for family use—there are certain passwords that I'd love to share with my wife and other work-related crap that I can't share with her. Do we both have to buy a LastPass premium subscription, for example, to use the premium features, or could that subscription be

I still dislike router jigs that trap the router between two rails. The issue with actually using both as guides is that if the rails aren't aligned just right, you either get slop or it pinches the router. I always use a single rail, which also reinforces your thinking so that you apply constant pressure against

He he. There is an awesome joke in there somewhere. But sadly I'm too tired to find it.

Maybe I'm not remembering correctly—I thought Spax came with the Torx head, which is not like Phillips at all, and I don't think you could do a combo Phillips/Torx head. If they are combo heads, that usually means Phillips/Robertson, so did you try them with the square drive? I've used the Phillips/Robertson combo

If you use an impact driver, you don't necessarily get feedback that the screw is binding in time to do anything—by the time you feel it, the cheap metal they are made of just turns and breaks. If you are religious about pre-drilling and use a driver with a torque limiter, you'll probably be fine. But I also harbor a

I'm still working through my piles of McFeeley's square drive screws but reports from others seem to now be that McFeeley's screws are more expensive than they warrant these days. When I finally have to start refilling my bins, my inclination is to go to Spax, which seems to be sort of the same concept as the Fastap

With poor (big box store) screws, you can easily break them with an impact driver. Make sure you stock up on decent screws.

I don't get the write-on-desk-and-wipe-it-off. If you value efficiency, what's wrong with write-on-paper-and-throw-in-recycling? I imagine, unless you really spent a lot of time cleaning, it also means the forearms of any light-colored long sleeved shirts you own are discolored with stray ink.

1. It still isn't a glue ready cut

Maybe I don't react like everyone else, but every time I've been in a room with one of those scenic wallpapers, it always made the room I was in feel really, really small.

I would strongly advise against using two. Getting them parallel, properly located for your cut, and exactly the width of your saw will be nearly impossible. That means that they will either bind when you are pushing your saw through, which isn't good, or that there will be play, which isn't good. When you have one

Why would you use a pair? Instead of just one? If they weren't exactly parallel, you'd either bind up or have play, neither of which is good. Better to use one and know that it the edge you have to hold too. BTW, Wood River (Woodcraft's house brand) and BORA also make edge guide clamps too—http://www.woodcraft.com/

Now playing

I think I'd still argue if that what you want to do is square, flat work, getting over the noise/blade size threshold is probably still worth it. About the only time the jigsaw ever gets used in my shop is when I'm finishing a cut I made with a circular saw or table saw that isn't a through cut—those cuts where you

In some circumstances, I think I'd probably start people with a circular saw rather than a jigsaw. While you can—in theory—cut a straight line with a jigsaw, you will get a much cleaner, straighter edge with a circular saw. Besides the cut not being glue-ready (jigsaw blades leave pretty jagged lines), the fact that

Yes, but if this is structured so that you can quickly add a new activity stick when you think of the activity, you might find there are more options than you can come up with when suddenly put on the spot with "I'm bored... what can I do." But, you could always just keep a running list.

I started my response to you rationally—was going to note that I really don't think people in this thread—including you—understand what "smarmy" actually means. And observe that if you read all my posts in this thread, you should see that I answered anyone with even the glimmer of an actual intellectual response in a

Interesting that medical debt can be treated differently. And a sad commentary on the state of medical/insurance billing.

I think we may be in violent agreement. I think where we differ is that I would say the broader issue of addressing unwarranted harassment from debt collectors isn't the central issue in this LH post—the post does reference other LH articles on addressing harassment, but this particular article is really about