Are you aware that organic does not mean pesticide free?
Are you aware that organic does not mean pesticide free?
Why? What on your driver's license do you think is secret?
So, that's the coolest thing I've read this week. Thanks for the link. I find it interesting that the article suggests some sort of chemical signal instead of a light signal to change the leaf shape. I wonder how many different leaves it can mimic. I would want to put up a fake plant with strange leaves to see how…
"there's no reason(*)"
They won't give you a checking account or an account with a debit card, they should still give you a deposit account.
They do have a choice, and while it sounds worse than the payday loan, it probably isn't. The option is to NOT pay their existing debt on time. If your credit is already terrible this isn't going to make it worse. If you're at the eviction/repo stage this is still the answer. Taking on usurious debt is not going…
It has no "eyes", sure, but it is literally covered with light sensing cells. Plants can detect light and dark. What good would high resolution vision do to an entity that can't move?
According to "The Evasive English Dictionary" Should means "but I'm not going to" e.g. I should clean the bathroom (but I'm not going to).
Also known as "The Quotative Like", http://www.xkcd.com/1483/
Do you turn the water off before or after you dry your hands?
You seem to be missing a lot of obvious options:
Random thoughts:
I assume they pay a per stream fee to the copyright holder. They don't want to pay that fee to stream to an empty room and then pay it again when the customer is actually watching.
At least for the catering example I'm not convinced. If a caterer gives me a range of $100 - $120 per plate, I want to know what the difference is between those two prices. What am I getting for the extra $20?
@thanksAlot
I read just one article on the round robin method and it doesn't make sense. Credit score compares total available credit to total used credit, not per card. So, why not just pay each card off instead of pulling one down to 30% and then the next down to 30%, etc? You're going to get down to the same percentage of…
I agree, while the snowball method might (probably will) cause you to pay a little bit more in the long run, it is the only method that seems to take cash flow into account. If you have at least a minimal emergency fund and don't have a cash flow issue then any method that you can stick to will work. If you are in a…
This makes me concerned that they are not applying your extra payment to principal but are applying it toward your next payment. This is not what you want.
Every phone I had before a smart phone had a ring setting of "Vibrate then Ring". I don't understand why they got rid of that.
Actually if you are to learn anything from the study it is: