vannavada
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vannavada

That’s some mind blowing reporting/life hack. Next up, use your faucet to get hot, cold, AND warm water!

That’s not what I’m looking for, thank you very little. I’m being very clear about this: plugging an app for it’s ability to make automated decisions about your money isn’t helpful for people who don’t have even an entry level understanding of budgeting and finances, because if something goes wrong financially and

A big part of the budget is putting the savings into that plan, and making that deposit at the top of the month, instead of at the bottom. Look, I’m all for making things easy, but not at the expense of developing an actual well of knowledge about how to manage one’s money. Thus, one makes the transition from

I don’t know about the women’s stuff,but you can get the men’s trunks, briefs, and t-shirts at TJ MAXX or Marshall’s for literally half of the price of the “sale” on Amazon, all day,whenever.

I don’t know about the women’s stuff,but you can get the men’s trunks, briefs, and t-shirts at TJ MAXX or Marshall’s

”This is one of the easier projects to do and doesn’t require much in the way of power tools.”

If you don’t disclosure your salary up front, your resume goes in the trash can. I’ve tried the “I don’t discuss that” tactic and it failed every time. So the advice offered in this article is terrible. Companies have all the power and workers have none, so I would not fuck around with them.

I love that header image. I can imagine the sequence of events leading up to it:

I gave up at the $100 backpack. The kid will outgrow that thing fast. The one pack I paid that much for will last me decades.

And why the compass? Are you planning on dropping your kid off in the middle of the woods and making him find his way out?

I am super confused by the wooden elephant teething ring. If your child is still teething, I’m pretty sure they are going to be too small to carry around a backpack and way too young to be using a “writing implement”.

I’m thinking, “Is this a new feature for Iphones?”

Hasn’t that been a feature on every mobile phone for years - even pre smartphones?

Let us assume that Couple A invest a total of $70,000 in their daughter’s 529, but they do it at the rate of $14,000 a year for the first five years of her life. Couple B decides to superfund and puts in the whole $70,000 in the beginning.

agree, very lame review, or is it a paid advertisement?

How does it obliterate Echo? Sounds like you just prefer its aesthetics. Not sure why, it looks like a cheap automatic air freshener. I much prefer the look of Echo. Regardless, as of now, Echo does everything Home does plus more. There is WAY more integration with third party hardware. Until that changes, Echo

Every feature of Google Home highlighted in a positive way has such a caveat that it actually is a failure. Software like OCR and Speech-to-text are not in wide use because of a very small failure rate. Text-to-speech still fails more than 5%. That’s OK for a quick tweet or text message (though often embarrassing once

The title of your article says that Google Home “obliterates” the Echo, but your article basically says the only thing better is the speaker, at lower volumes. Since most people won’t buy these things for the speakers, the $50 Echo Dot seems like the way to go.

You haven’t quite explained how it obliterates the Echo other than how you personally like the looks of it better and how it has a few pro’s to the Echo, but you also mentioned things it’s missing. Maybe a new title?

This is an important conversation, but can we talk about it after X?

I’m actually fine with, “Nope, we’re not going there,” or something similarly abrupt. If it’s an “uncomfortable” conversation such as described, then it’s uncomfortable not just at that time but probably any time. Unless a company has a set aside time to discuss politics, personal values, etc., then it needs to be