Agree totally. I can’t believe it’s 2018 and we can share calendars and there’s no way to share or co-manage contacts. I’m sure there are a million other features more sophisticated users would like, but to me that one’s a real no-brainer.
Agree totally. I can’t believe it’s 2018 and we can share calendars and there’s no way to share or co-manage contacts. I’m sure there are a million other features more sophisticated users would like, but to me that one’s a real no-brainer.
Slow motion seems to reveal he/she/it got hit in the knee. So was he/she/it faking the junk shot or does it just look like the knee area from the outside of the costume while actually being someone’s balls on the inside?
Generally speaking, I would have the same reaction as you. But I like that app better than other podcast apps I’ve used, and the problem I described only started happening months after I’d used it, which suggested that some update or another was the cause. If donating for the ad-free version hadn’t solved the problem…
If you’re using the free version of Podcast Addict and notice it’s chewing up tons of data even when you set it never to do so, pay the $2.99 and get the “Podcast Addict - Donate” version. Apparently it was the ads sucking up tons of data (like 1GB+/month even when I told it not to use data) and paying turns the ads…
If someone knows how to get Fortnite on a Chromebook, I’d be forever grateful. (I mean, it would generate so many family fights in my household but at the same time my kids are pretty desperate to play it. Tradeoffs.)
Can I ask what you do?
This will be free for kids (and adults!) no matter what state you live in come September 21 thanks to the EGRRCPA...perhaps the one positive thing the Trump Administration has accomplished, but I digress.
I’m a little late to this conversation, but I’ve been using this for a couple of weeks now and I love the convenience. However, every time I shut down and restart my browser, Android Messages forces me to log in again using the QR code, even though I never logged out and the messages app on my phone still shows my…
A secondary factor for me in evaluating these cards is what they pay back for purchases outside their stores. And in that respect, the Costco Visa is pretty good - it does 4% for gas, 3% for restaurants and travel, 2% for Costco, and 1% for everything else. We use the Amazon card for purchases there, and still…
I lost my job - or more accurately, was forced to resign - about a year and a half ago. About two years prior I had taken a new job at the same organization that I was very excited about. Then a few days into it, my boss was replaced. Everyone knew this guy was a hatchet man, and indeed he laid many off and drove away…
I love this question. I posted before that for years I’ve used a spreadsheet to track my finances. For at least a few years I still did my checkbook registry side-by-side for some reason until I finally dropped that habit.
My wife and I literally never fight about our money. I’m fortunate to have married someone with a similar financial mindset of valuing modesty in our lifestyle and diligently managing money.
I think it’s great that every media outlet is now publishing waves of stories about how to reduce what you share with (or outright delete) Facebook. What I keep wondering is, given that we know we can’t trust Facebook, how can we be assured that when we tell Facebook not to share our data with advertisers, that…
That I realized 20 years ago as a college student that if I was going to have very little money, I’d better figure out how to manage it.
Hmm...I’d have to do some prep before I could release it into the wild. Aesthetically they’re fine, most of it would make sense to a new user, but there are probably some sheet cross-linked to one another and other little hacks I’ve done that would only make sense to me.
Not a criticism, because to each her/his own, but that seems like a lot of apps to me. Twenty years ago I created a spreadsheet to start tracking my finances and I’ve added to it pretty extensively over that time. I think even with programs like Quicken and especially newer apps that come and go more frequently, I…
Sure. I don’t mean literally don’t buy anything. I mean don’t buy “stuff.” Stuff has a short shelf life, gets used little (if at all) and then just takes up space. Stuff brings little utility or enjoyment.
Don’t buy stuff. I responded elsewhere but that’s something I failed to mention. Your stuff will mostly serve as a drag on your life because you’ll have to spend more money and time storing it, moving it, and ultimately discarding it. (Or your children will when you die. And having helped family members who are not…
I am fortunate in having begun to develop an interest in personal finance when I was in college. I’ve made a lot of mistakes along the way but nothing too serious. I probably could have scaled back an expense here or there to free up money for something more useful, but for the most part we’ve done things pretty well.…
So I’m a huge personal finance geek and I have a spreadsheet that basically tracks everything all year long - paychecks, taxes withheld, tax tables, you name it. So basically after 12/31 I know exactly what my tax returns will look like when I complete them, within a few dollars (for rounding). The only variable is…