mwatson2
mwatson2
mwatson2

Good call. I was given a floorplan when I bought my house, but it didn't look quite that appealing.

This is definitely one of those novelty apps. I spent Sunday morning mapping out my house only to realize there really wasn't much use afterwards. The app was gone by 6pm.

The first one had me in tears laughing, they went downhill after that for me. It goes from novel to really hard to watch. This guy is in some serious pain!

I know this is really going off on a tangent, but I've heard so many complaints this week about paying off student loans and then I find articles about making sure you don't overspend on the internet. Then I follow the link to a large article about avoiding impulse buying. On Monday, I'll go back to work and tell

You know, I failed to say "RSS app", but I'm glad you mentioned the undock feature because I always seem to forget it's there. When I fill up the text box I'm not able to see further down. Does it scroll down when the keyboard is undocked?

So this is slightly off-topic, but the keyboard is definitely a part of the issues. For those of you that read lifehacker and the related blogs on mobile devices, what app makes it easiest to leave comments? Commenting in feedly is near impossible due to keyboard placement and usually results in you deleting your

My wife is your average Spender, I'm an extreme Saver to the point that I don't worry about money because I don't spend it in the first place. It works perfectly because if we ever get tight on finances and she wants to argue about it she's already lost. In the last 3 years she has learned that she can't really

It's called personal preference. Shall we call people who only buy dark colored cars "color whores"?

I work for Nissan, and I have to say that the electric car really does make since. Unfortunately the LEAF was built as a landmark production car so it doesn't have the looks/tech that the Tesla does. When manufacturers get the aesthetics and technology in a Tesla and can sell it at the price level of a LEAF then we'll

You're completely right. The lack of retention defeats the purpose of what we would define as studying. Then again(this is from a US perspective), I can confidently say that 60% of what I had to learn in college was irrelevant anyways. I had a broad idea of where I was headed (tech related) so things like history,

Then in a single weekend you'll realize that you've pretty much maxed your gear and have your new legendary ring from ubers. You'll realize that all the non-upgrade legendaries are account bound and are 100% garbage because you can't trade them. I'm confident that all the expansion features will help break up the

My method of learning changed drastically somewhere between middle school and the start of high-school, but unfortunately it took until my midpoint of college to really figure it all out. Since then I've been able to identify with others who had to resort to the same methods I did.

The study all week, or take good

I will stand down and agree with you once you prove that my continued research, certifications, and skill development were luck.

The problem is that everyone today is willing to get their hands dirty, work 60 hours a week, come home exhausted, and work for minimum wage are they not? I'm waiting for you to tell me what

I think that's a fair opinion on the rhetoric of "working hard", but hopefully you saw how my personal example differs from the way you explained it - if was vague I apologize. I personally define hard work in this instance as pushing myself "off the clock" to be better than the guy next to me. It's how I advanced

Oh there are failures, many many failures involved in my success ;).

It's not worse, it's harder. In the context of the job market, the difference between "worse" and "harder" is that "worse" is out of your control, harder means you can still affect the outcome. I'm confident that I am living proof that we can still affect our outcome if we give it a go.

I was actually branching off another comment to start a similar conversation, but if you like we can branch off of my comment and talk about yours.

My comment had nothing to do with economics and everything to do with motivation (which technically can be economics).

I'm sorry, you have perfectly illustrated my point. You are fighting your hardest to argue that you can't beat your peers and get a job? What sort of attitude is that?

I got a job at a fast food restaurant when I was 16. I went to college. While I was in college I taught myself how to use photoshop and picked up jobs

I'm not making a judgement call either way on the complaints. I'm saying that I hear a lot more talk compared to action by recent graduates. It's become an established mind-set in many college students that the job market sucks, and you probably won't get hired. Then once they don't get hired out of college they