While watching Smallville…
Me: Wow. They must really hate Jeep Cherokees on this show. That’s like the fourth one they’ve destroyed.
Wife: It’s probably because they’re really cheap.
While watching Smallville…
Me: Wow. They must really hate Jeep Cherokees on this show. That’s like the fourth one they’ve destroyed.
Wife: It’s probably because they’re really cheap.
Dianne Feinstein is in trouble in the polls.
Please let Senator “Turn them all in” end her career in a crushing electoral defeat. That would make my year.
Via Insty.
Get your free copy here.
This is what Canton, OH, is begging for by keeping Officer Daniel Harless in any capacity. It’s also what any other police force should expect to see by hiring him.
Just got my car insurance renewal in the mail.
Despite my car going down in value, no tickets, and no accidents, premiums went up 18%.
So, recommendations that aren’t State Farm, Progressive, or Travelers?
I really, really hate shopping for insurance.
Can you tell which days SayUncle linked to me?
A few weeks ago I bought a Logitech Revue when the price dropped from $299 to $99.
Here are my thoughts on it after two weeks:
Meh.
We don’t really watch a lot of live television, so a box that is most useful when you’re watching live TV doesn’t have a lot of value to us. I have used XBMC as my home media player since it’s inception back in 2003-ish. Originally I used original XBOX’s, but now I have a quad-core desktop running the package in the living room.
XBMC basically does everything the Revue does except allow me to watch live TV. Most things are done better with XBMC, like the Youtube link that really just opens the web page in Chrome.
At $99 I’m not upset at the purchase. Eventually it’ll end up replacing the aging XBOX in the bedroom. At $299 I would’ve been upset.
At the $99 price point it’s really competing with something like a Roku. At $299, it’s competing with HTPCs like this one.
As of this post, Google TV still doesn’t have the Android Market nor any easy way to install third party apps. I think when that happens (supposedly with the update to Honeycomb, which was supposed to happen in August of 2011. It’s now September) the device will be a lot more valuable. Until then, I’ll stick with my XBMC.
So, you want to be completely debt free? The steps are simple. The execution is difficult because it involves telling yourself “no” a whole lot. You can do it, I promise.
I am a huge Dave Ramsey guy. I followed his program and it’s done wonders for me and my family. Here’s something a lot of people don’t know or understand about his program:
You don’t have to buy anything.
Seriously.
The first two years I was doing “the plan” Dave got exactly $0 from me. All I did was listen to the radio show, which you can do over the internet for free if there isn’t a local affiliate. I didn’t go through Financial Peace University until I had already completed Baby Step 2.
Wait, what?
There are seven (really, there are nine) Baby Steps that walk you through to retirement. Step 0 is to be current on everything.
Steps 0 through 3b are done in order, to the exclusion of all other steps. Yes, this means stopping the 401K while paying off Visa.
Steps 4, 5, and 6 are done concurrently. Step 7 is obviously started when the house is paid off.
That’s it. That’s the entire plan. No “buy this software!” or “attend this seminar!” required. I will tell you that there is value in going to FPU, and it’s well worth the money, but if you’d rather take the $199 (or $99 when you catch it on sale) and put that on your Capital One card, by all means do that. That’s pretty much what I did.