Archive: July, 2008

Daniel’s Tweets for 2008-07-18

  • 3 hours until I’m at the theater. #
  • Testing out ping.fm for the first time. #
  • Getting ready to leave for the Dark Knight. Need an extra ticket for Scott though. #
  • Let you know how the movie is tomorrow after I stumble to work and drink gallons of coffee. #
  • Dark Knight is freaking awesome. Go see it. #
  • I’m regretting midnight movie showings. #
  • Yay. Em is picking up lunch for me. #
  • Taking lunch earlier than usual. I’m tired and need something to eat. #
  • Wendy’s is awesome. (says the fat guy) #
  • I’ll say it again – go see the Dark Knight. #
  • Trying to dispose of CRT monitors in a good way. #
  • I am very disappointed in my RAZR. White screen of death. #

Taxes from every angle…

Have you ever sat down and thought about how many taxes you pay?

Think about it: property taxes, income taxes, sales taxes, gas taxes, bed (hotel) taxes, and on and on and on…

How do we survive? I mean, all levels of government keep taxing us from before we get paid, to yearly taxes on our homes, to taxes on our gas to get to our jobs, to sales tax on everything. I just keep thinking about how much money is given to the government by an average person and I am amazed.

Have you ever figured up the amount you pay yearly? It’s astounding. I did a guesstimate of what the government takes from us over the course of a year, and I was shocked. I won’t share the amount here for personal reasons, but we wound up at about 25%.

Can you belive I work 10 hours per week so our government can exist? So they can spy on me. So people can starve on the streets daily. So our borders can be wide open. So they can criminalize everything and keep Haliburton building prisons. So the prison-guard unions can keep influencing to make more laws to keep those prisons full. So we can invade other countries that have been at war for thousands of years and think we can solve it.

I’ll stop now before I really get upset.

You send your job across the ocean daily

Lots of people today like to bitch about how all of the good old American jobs are hard to find, going overseas, etc. Well, guess what? You are the one supporting China, lowering wages, and ruining our country.

It’s sad but true. Every time someone shops at Wal-Mart, K-Mart, or any other place that sells goods made overseas they are shipping our dollars across the ocean. You are supporting some little asian kid making $.03/hour and depriving an American of a job.

“But everything is like that…” “But I can’t afford to shop anywhere but Wal-Mart…”

Can you afford to live in a third-world country? That’s where we are headed. Think about it – no manufacturing, corporations owning farming, lazy population, tech jobs moving overseas, and more I’m sure I’m missing.

What do we have left? White-collar jobs? Not after everything leaves. We will become China just to survive. Talk about the most surprising flip ever, and it is coming. Thanks to our laziness and inability to see the obvious screwing of ourselves we will soon be hosed.

Perhaps we should all wake up and quit sending our money overseas? Maybe quit sending half of your cell-phone bill to Europe? Yes folks, 1/2 of Verizon Wireless is owned by Vodafone, a European mobile company. Good job America!

This is going to require some serious thought and planning on your part to stop supporting other countries, but it can be done. So, will you continue screwing yourself, or make the tough sacrifices now and save our future?

Linux pure?

I’ve watched the debate prattle across the internet for years – Should GNU/Linux allow closed-source code into it’s channels/repos/the kernel?

This has to be the stupidest argument that I have had the pleasure of staying out of until now. Reasoning is simple: Linux is free as in beer, and free as in freedom. You can take it and mold it as you wish. Anyone can add code, modify code, and generally do whatever they want with it.

If people want to add non-free (as in freedom) code to their flavor/version/distribution of Linux, why not? If Linus Torvalds wants to allow non-free code into the kernel, why not? (not that he ever would)

No, you aren’t free to see it or do what you want with it, but some of the code is the only opportunity for good/great drivers and more. People will always have the choice to not use whatever sliver of code is in a flavor if they disagree morally, ethically, or any other-ly you can think of to throw in that spot.

That’s the beauty of GNU/Linux. You do what you want. I mean, if some guy in Alaska wants to take it and compile a one-off distribution, he can. If Microsoft wants to compile a Windows clone and redistribute it, they can.

With this freedom, why does the argument continue to exist?

7 Steps to Savings from real world experience

  1. Change to CF (compact fluorescent) lights. Yes, it’s been a really popular subject over the past 2 years, but I am amazed by the number of people who haven’t switched. In our home we only have about 15 bulbs (small house), but we realized about a $20 savings monthly. That’s better than $1/bulb! Of course your mileage will vary according to usage and natural lighting. Even at just $1/bulb, these lights quickly pay for their higher price and begin saving you cash every month. “…But I don’t pay separate electricity…” – Then enjoy the fact that these lights will last much longer than standard bulbs.
  2. Ask your cable company for a discount. I have read about and spoken to many people about calling the cable company and threatening to leave to get cheaper rates. I did that once. Now I call every 6 months to a year and just tell them that my budget only allows $xx for cable/internet. Generally the service representative will take a minute, flip through promotions and come back under what I stated. The most recent go-round, I asked if there was anything to do to replace my online rental service since we don’t have time over the summer to plan out our movie viewing. The Rep came up with a combination of EVERY channel available and internet service for less than $90. That was a $30 savings from the ‘normal’ rate I was on when I called, plus I will also save $20/month by not having the rent-by-mail service.
  3. Wash your clothes on cold. Yes, there are exceptions to this, and every other rule. In general though, our family has not noticed any difference in the cleanliness of our laundry from the switch. No, you don’t need to buy the special cold water formula detergent to make the switch. This will save you by not having to heat water that you will shortly send down the drain with grass stains. Save the energy and let the stains flow down the drain cold.
  4. Close unused rooms and their vents. Common sense, but our electric bill has dropped ~$10/month from closing off our master bedroom, closet, and bath during the daytime hours. Yes, this isn’t a huge saver, but it is a little something to help. During the day (or perhaps night in your case) heating or cooling unused space is a waste of energy that only costs you money, and the power companies are more than happy to charge you for keeping carpet cool.
  5. Turn off lights. This is the second ‘duh’ on my list. Everyone knows to do it and has heard it a hundred times, but do you do it? I find myself constantly following my children and wife around switching off lights. I can’t track this to a specific savings, but our power bill stays under $130/month with me playing nanny to my family.
  6. Put a brick in your toilet. No, not like that. I’m talking about in the tank that holds your water before you flush. If you put a brick (or anything else that won’t float) in the there to take up space, you will save that volume of water every time you flush. Yes, this is a very low-tech solution. If you are a little more advanced you can opt for an adjustable kit that will garner the same result. Personally, our family of 4 saved ~$10 on our water billing monthly.
  7. Wait. Yes, just wait. That shiny new object that you plainly see a use and need for right now, is just another piece of clutter that will take up precious space in your home. At the same time you are plucking from money could be saved and used in other ways. I have learned to wait as long as a year or two before diving into a new technology. By then the price has dropped and technology improved, although I usually discover I just don’t want to buy it any longer.

There you go. 7 actions that save our family money and let us save for the future. I think all of them have been said by many people in many places, but they work by saving our family money. Hopefully these tips help you.
Let me know if you have more simple things I missed in the comments.