JJ_Cool_Bean
JJ_Cool_Bean
JJ_Cool_Bean

He would have made it, if it wasn't for Bob.

Vote: Emacs

Vote: Notepad++

Excellent, informative and explained clearly, thank you!

Yes, the Y-axis is how much you need the thing. Food is at the bottom because it is absolutely vital. I'm guessing a mortgage is higher on the scale because you could be renting for less, or living with someone, etc. It's necessary to have housing of some sort, but the mortgage itself is not necessary. Likewise,

I'm confused, so how do you actually read the graph in relation to itself?

I'm missing something. Can someone explain the graph? What do the spacial difference between the items mean? ie- mortgage, insurance, 1st car, clothing utility and food - Is the chart telling us that a mortgage is a need but it's more of a want than a 1st car? What does the location of the food tell us? That it's a

Awesome, awesome. Thanks so much for this addition, JJ!

WoW! You know your stuff!

You could take the subjectivity away from occasional by measuring as frequency per year and converting to fit the +/- scale.

Could you please explain this in a bit more detail? Thanks in advance.

You just rocked my world.

You can create a graph like this in excel. It will be listed under other charts and it called a bubble chart. You will need a table with 3 columns (price, want, occasional). rate want and occasional on a -10 to 10 scale.

I can get behind that addition to the definition, "apps the user cannot remove, easily." I certainly didn't ask PSN to add Redbox to my PS3, but there it is and there's nothing I can do about it.

That makes sense as I would think that you would probably take longer strides when pushing a stroller.

Yes, yes it is

This makes me feel behind the times... Cable uses hdmi now?

Especially when making fried eggs!

Beware of freaking spiders!

Turbo Tomy Dashboard