budwhysirbones
BudWhySirBones
budwhysirbones

This is pretty good advice, well everything except autopay. While autopay does have it’s benefits, it also leads to financial ignorance. If anything at all changes the dynamic of how your bills are paid, it’s easy to lose track of what bills you have, how much, and who you pay it to.

You should take your wireless device to the said window seat and see if it even works.

I think the question is valid given the condition that my wireless devices never leave the house. The chances of Logitech’s software ruining my day when attempting to upgrade with their software is greater than the chances of someone being within range to hijack my wireless device.

Yeah, that’s what I was thinking

How realistic is it really for an average consumer who uses a wireless Logitech device in their household to succumb to this “MouseJack”.

Oh, I also forgot, I have a Logitech K400 wireless keyboard/mouse combo which had issues installing properly. I had to locate the SetPoint software and even then, I found out that I had to install that software before plugging in the wireless receiver else, it wouldn’t work.

Same with me. I’ve been mostly a Logitech only user for about 20 years now and can see a significant decline in the quality of the hardware and software. A few examples:

I’ll take the red pill please!

I don’t mind the crusts, I typically eat the whole slice of pizza but when I do, then I can’t share anything with my best friend, my dog.

Cool for you I guess but I have no desire to frequent any restaurant that has their employees spitting in the food of anyone, regardless of reasoning.

Completely understandable. To be honest, if I was at a restaurant and heard that conversation, I too would leave despite not being involved with that altercation.

Do you want to live in a world where you could only exist if you shared the same opinions of those further up in the societal hierarchy?

You’re right, perhaps time management isn’t necessarily the correct word for this. What you want to have happen though is for them to learn the necessary skills to wrap up their tasks at designated increments.

I don’t necessarily think the point of this is telling time per se and time management probably wasn’t the right word for it however, what you’re teaching them is structure.

People have no concept of anything until you start planting the seeds on learning it. For example, reading. You don’t just wake up one day and understand how to read and write. At some point you start learning those skills.

Whatever happened to real challenges in life? Like doing the right thing, kicking a bad habit, landing a good job, etc.

I mean if this works for a parent, good for them however, what are you teaching the child? It sure isn’t time management.

From my experience with 3rd party call centers, college degrees are coveted because its a selling point to prospective clients. That’s pretty much it.

I think putting in the effort is one thing but to say a majority of employers actually use cover letters is probably incorrect. There’s a lot of employers out there and based on the job, sometimes cover letters are useless.

I don’t think the majority of hygienic people worry about these things. It’s just basic hygiene. Wash your hands after you use the bathroom, brush your teeth at least once a day, shower daily, wash your clothes, wash your dishes, etc.