threeLetterMeyhem

joined 1 year ago
[–] threeLetterMeyhem 4 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Prohibit ALL public burnings of books? Ok I think it’s stupid, but whatever.

I'm OK with prohibited public burnings for the purpose of fire safety, I guess. Beyond that, I don't think I'd want to limit free speech in this manner.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 1 points 1 year ago

More than that now, actually. There are two just in Colorado Springs and a bunch up in Denver Metro.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

They never really acknowledged it was here. I live near one of the Colorado locations and it has been (in)famous for COVID outbreaks the entire pandemic. And, for whatever obvious reasons, In-N-Out hasn't had the same closures enforced on them that every other restaurant did. During an outbreak they're supposed to close for a few days in our state, but they're basically the only restaurant that has refused to close and has never faced repercussions out here. It's maddening.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 11 points 1 year ago

More research is emerging that gas stoves kick off carcinogens and are, in the US at least, often poorly ventilated.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 2 points 1 year ago

I just put an 85" in my basement. That thing is annoying enough that it can stay with the house if/when I move. A 98" TV seems like it would be impossible to get down the same flight of stairs. If I upgrade again in this house it will 100% be a projector.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 8 points 1 year ago

This is so frustratingly common. I worked for a company I loved and it got bought out by a company I hated. When people (including me) started quitting, the CTO said "but why? We have video games in the break room."

Large companies are often run by crazy people, I guess.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 8 points 1 year ago

A whole lot of Americans who don't work from home look like that today :/

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 4 points 1 year ago

That would be the "dystopia" part.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

He's generally non-optimal on other things, but I certainly wouldn't call his advice straight up bad on anything. Overall most people are signficantly better off following his advice than doing average-person personal finance things - the average person is pretty terrible with money and Dave's plan is a huge step up from that.

It's kinda like calling one diet bad because it's not as optimized as some other diet, but really both diets are amazing when you compare them to eating McDonalds 3 meals a day.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Yup! I'm a fan and a current customer (have been with them over a decade)... except that it's kinda expensive now. For people new to it I'd recommend actualbudget instead and just do manual/semi-manual imports.

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 2 points 1 year ago

Haven't really used spinning disks for anything but my home NAS since 2010 or so. Which means all my old drives come out of the NAS... And either get cycled into my backup NAS or put into a multi-disk jbod enclosure that I use as "scratch" space for random data projects I'm doing on the side.

Ones that cycle out of scratch space are wiped and, if I'm being honest, sitting in a stack in my storage room. I really should stop procrastinating a trip to the recyclers...

[–] threeLetterMeyhem 19 points 1 year ago (10 children)

Very simply: consistent budgeting. We (my wife and I) go envelope-style and budget/plan or money every paycheck. I swear it's magic that turns money into more money.

It's also let us systematically pay off all our non-mortgage debt and save/invest a large amount over the last decade. Now we have enough that we don't worry about money anymore.

The single most important thing I've ever done for my finances was learning to budget so I could have a plan and manage my money on purpose.

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