richard68
Richard
richard68

who wrote this -- a dog? it’s anti-cat propaganda, it is.

We have lived in our house for 12 years, and see enough of these things that spiders don’t even bother me anymore. Heck, even the small centipedes no longer give me pause. Only the type large enough to hiss at you bother me these days. 

the problem with a phone wallet case is if you get mugged, they’ve got your phone, driver license, credit card and or bank card.

Tiktok and slideshows. You’ve hit a new low LH.

Me.

I work with a bunch of well paid people. At least half of them need way more help with their budget than you think and those are just the people that talk about it.

Yeah... don’t do this in the very subtly hidden situation this article is pointing at. If someone zipties things together that you feel the need to un-ziptie, there is a very real possibility they won’t respond well to you undoing the ziptie.

Hell, I’d appreciate it if some of the people that text me at least try to form a complete thought before sending. There are at least a handful of them that seem to hit enter after every few words because they’re afraid that the message will disappear forever if they don’t send it RIGHT NOW and I get 8 rapid-fire

Wow.  How far into the B-roll of blog ideas are we by now?

I almost always send single texts with multiple sentences vs separate texts for each sentence. Maybe this makes me an old, but I prefer receiving texts this way as well. I hate hearing my phone sound off three different alerts for what is essentially one text/thought from a friend. I feel the long text with proper

There’s some interesting psychology when it comes to itemized fees. Rationally, I know that if I am comfortable with the total bottom-line price, it shouldn’t matter how it’s broken down. But my dumb monkey brain sees a surcharge and thinks: “They’re trying to screw me!”

Won’t matter, the attack will come from the sides anyway.

And if it has many sharp teeth... back away slowly and do not show any fear. 

People are arguing over masks because for four months, we’ve been receiving conflicting information about them from the CDC, the media, and you.

I personally found category-by-category budgeting to be way too much of a pain, and also not really necessary. Groceries are the only category I can think of where detailed accounting is really helpful, since that can have both an essential and an optional component. But other than that, it doesn’t really matter to me

I just play a 1-minute loop of Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock from The Bus That Couldn’t Slow Down.

I’m spending FAR less money now.

If anything good comes out of this we should have definitely advanced things like vaccines. We currently have some of the brightest minds in the world all focused on this very problem, there is no way we don’t come away with some big breakthroughs/innovations even if there isn’t a COVID-19 vaccine.

I know you might be right, but... can you not?

Something missing from this analysis is Microsoft’s Office 365. As long as you don’t paying yearly, rather than monthly, and especially if you already need to use the desktop versions of any Office applications, it should be the clear winner in the ~$5 range. $60/year (equal to $5/mo) gets you one terabyte of OneDrive