lady-dee-cee
Lady Dee Cee
lady-dee-cee

Stating its subtracted cost is equivalent because of a savings account is a gigantic dodge, because the fact remains that you will still be paying more money regardless of where the money is coming from. Any responsible person gains interest on his Savings account regardless of what you use it for. The end result is

Agree. I’m not going to miss $2 a month. So if it helps them continue to be awesome and bring great content to my screen, then so be it. Still cheaper than Cable by a long stretch.

Still cheaper than cable, I’ll live.

Thanks for posting this. Reading it reminded me that I needed to cancel the free month of Blu-ray access on my DVD plan before I got charged the $2.00 up charge. While I am sure Blu-ray looks better my eyes really can’t tell the difference with my equipment.

Finally a benefit to having giant, old TVs from the 90s.

I’ve been using Netflix since 2001, and remember the ‘only DVD’ days until now with harsh contempt. I remember the ‘we’re stopping DVD’ campaign, that drove many away and the rest of us onto a ‘similar based plan’ that was streaming with promises of ‘full catalog streaming by 2002', which never came (note to Netflix:

I love Netflix and find no issue with this. It’s a whole new service compared to two years ago. What I am afraid of is its competition. Network TV is a dying model. The advantage it had over Netflix was current original content, and now Netflix has that, ad-free with marathonability. At this point, Youtube has a

Previously you paid $7.99. Now you’ll pay $9.99.

I fail to see how saving $48 dollars covers the extra cost of the subscription for another two years...

I'm a nurse, and have worked at various hospitals and medical offices, and every single one insists on using very strong antibacterial soap. I've never been at a medical job that didn't have it. In my current job, I mostly do phone work for a few of the days, and would rather have regular non-AB soap, but they just

MOST importantly, wet your hands first, BEFORE you apply soap.

Except that every hospital I've been to for the last 6 years, when my 2 children were born and my wife had some procedures done, they always told you to wash your hands when going into the recovery room, and by the sink was anti-bacterial soap on the wall. I know it was, since I checked and saw the active ingredient.

Only recently did I understand why soap and water are needed to wash away germs. In layman's terms, organic materials don't bind to water molecules so the chemical process requires soap. Soap binds organic material to water molecules thus washing the bad stuff down the drain. Otherwise you are just giving the germs