Archive for the ‘Spend Page’ Category

What You Should Know Before You Budget

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

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Credit: apium

Sticking to a budget is more or less like sticking to a diet: It sucks, and you’re almost guaranteed to fail.

BUT! There’s another way. With a few simple tricks, you can take control of your spending and avoid feeling guilty all the time. Here’s what Tara Siegel Bernard from the New York Times has to say:

  • Let the robots take control. Set up automatic transfers to your savings and investment accounts. It only takes a few minutes. If your savings is being automatically transferred out of your spending account every month, you don’t have to worry about spending it!
  • Start at the finish line. What are you saving for? Saving is easier when you have a goal in mind (a vacation, a new car, an obscenely expensive pair of shoes). Figure out how much money you need and you’ll know how much money to have automatically transferred each month.
  • Separate the fun money from the serious money. If you have a phone bill or rent to pay, keep that money separate from the money you plan to squander irresponsibly at the mall. Obviously.
  • Brace yourself for big surprises. One of the easiest ways to muck up your budget is to suddenly spend a lot of money you hadn’t planned for. This one’s easy, though. Put a little extra away somewhere each month. You can use that to cover your surprise expenses without feeling like a total budgeting loser.

Best Quote:
“Ultimately, what we want our money to be is an energy source. It should help us get somewhere or do something.”  – Amanda Clayman, Financial Therapist (only in New York!)

Your New Apple Gadget Might Be Selling You Out

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

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credit: Unhindered by Talent

On the night before the night before Christmas, a disgruntled fellow named Jonathan Lalo decided to drag Apple Inc. to court. Why? He says that the UDI (Unique Device Identifier) built in to iPhones and iPads allows apps to collect data on their users without their permission. (He called out some of these apps right in his complaint: Pandora, Paper Toss, the Weather Channel, Dictionary.com.)

Why is that a big deal? Well, appmakers can do pretty much anything they want with the information they collect about you. They can make their products better, customize offerings, or, you know. Sell your most intimate details to the highest bidder.

The suit says: “Some apps are also selling additional information to ad networks, including users’ location, age, gender, income, ethnicity, sexual orientation and political views.”

JLa wants to make his legal challenge into a class action suit – which means that he wants to sue Apple on behalf of everyone who has downloaded an app from the Apple Store in the past two years. If he wins, or if Apple agrees to some kind of settlement, everyone in that “class” (or category of people) would share in the settlement benefit.

Other Countries Outpacing U.S. in Internet Tomfoolery

Monday, December 27th, 2010

Check this out. It’s a crazy interactive site showing you how different countries/ regions around the world compare when it comes to digital adventures.

Which country do you think does the most online shopping?

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Fun facts!

  • Hong Kong is totally beating everyone at Angry Birds
  • South Korea and Vietnam are shopping online when the boss isn’t looking
  • Residents of China and Singapore all have a part-time job, and that job is surfing the Internet
  • Everyone in Brazil and Malaysia has more Facebook friends than you

The Art of Christmas Money

Monday, December 27th, 2010

moneyisnotimportant:

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Merry Christmas from Money Is Not Important!

Merry Christmas from TILE, too, although we think money is pretty darned important. Not having the most of it, but knowing how to use it. The real art of money is more than budgeting. It’s about spending thoughtfully, planning for the future, and giving to causes and charities you believe in. (And it’s also a little bit about folding up dollar bills into pine trees.)

Be honest. You’ve done it.

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

What is it about a ridiculously expensive education that brings out the ramen-eater in all of us?

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ilovecharts:

On my 3rd cup, on my way to the 4th

-lanzeee

Keep pushing, kids! Finals week is almost over!

^Very important comma placement

Following a $10 bill across Middle America way more interesting than you would think.

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

This guy followed a single $10 bill as it changed hands across Middle America. It’s amazing how far and how fast the bill traveled, but what’s more amazing is that people actually let this writer follow them around until they used the bill to pay for something. Which was sometimes days later.

Click to read: http://bit.ly/eO3hhB

This holiday season, let’s try to avoid destroying the rainforest

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

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When you crack open a fresh copy of Where the Wild Things Are, do you smell rainforests in Indonesia being decimated? Well apparently, that actually happens.

Our friends at the bad-ass Rainforest Action Network just pulled together a shopping guide for the kiddies in your life. Download the 2-page guide here (pdf), or read more about the project at ran.org.

If Spider-Man had been our first president…

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

Reblogged from moneyisnotimportant:

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Do you think this dollar would be accepted anywhere?

What’s a few billion here and there?

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

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  • Bill Gates net worth: $40 billion
  • Amount donated to charity by Americans in 2008: $308 billion
  • Wall Street bonuses in 2009: $114 billion
  • Interest per year on the U.S. budget deficit: $199 billion

Click to see the whole image.

Lenin! Get your Lenin heeeere!

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

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This is probably not what he was going for when he commissioned all these pictures and sculptures of himself.

The Hungarian government is auctioning off a bunch of Lenin memorabilia to help pay for cleanup of the massive wave of toxic waste that flooded Budapest this October.

Some bourgeois bidders are just picking up kitschy decoration for their homes, but others appear to be having a little Communist-bloc nostalgia.

“When I was young, I didn’t really look deeply into the faults of the system,” says Mr. Torok, a real-estate entrepreneur who says that his business is struggling amid the economic downturn. “I lived a calm, secure life where bread cost 3.5 forints and everyone had a job.”

Hmm.