Archive for the ‘Tips'n'Tricks’ category

Not Cinderella

May 1st, 2009

I am not entirely Cinderlla material.  For one I’m a man, secondly I don’t have a step-mother.  I have a sister, but she’s not a step-sister.  I don’t own enough pets to have a fairy godmother whip into a kit to go to a dance to marry someone besides my wife.  On top of all of that the sea monkeys we do have are probably not going to turn into a flight of horses at all.  Anyway, I’ve bought inexpensive ’sports shoes’ for most of my adult life.  Shoes that have been pretty bad on my feet.  Shoes that hurt my feet when working out.

Tonight I purchased running shoes.  I purchased $100.00 running shoes.  I am going to have feet that don’t hurt when I exercise and knees and a back that don’t kill me after having attempted to get healthy.  I will spend more on shoes, but less at the doctor.  I want to go hiking and hike a 14,000 foot mountain this summer, but my knees are going to need to be able to handle that and I don’t think they will unless I have shoes that support and work with consistent exercise to get my knees back into shape.

Don’t spend crazy amounts of money on shoes unless you’re going to use them, but watch out that your not doing damage to your body by wearing shoes that don’t cut the mustard.  I’ve got to go run to the closet and see if I’ve got something to wear to the ball.

Don’t Rock the Casbah By Yourself!

March 19th, 2009

I have seen post after post over the last 6 months about how you need to make sure that you are the best on your team.  I’m all for people being their personal best, but lets be honest: a company with a bunch of departments with one stand out employee is hosed!  If you Rock the Casbah by yourself then you’re going to have a hard time keeping a job at your company.  Instead, may I propose doing things very purposefully to help build your team (even if you’re not a manager) and also work to help spread awesomeness throughout the company.

If the weak companies die off and your company isn’t weak you’ve got something, but if you’re a rock star on a sinking ship you’re not any better off just because you’re a rock star.  Read the articles about being your best, learn those things, then pass them along.  Make your department the best darned department in a company of amazing departments.  If you’re in a startup with very few employees then your excuses dwindle because you should all be busting your backside.

Stand and deliver.  If it takes little to be above average then do it… just not alone.

Saving Money From an Old Folly:Back to Cable

November 18th, 2008

Yesterday we switched from Qwest to Comcast.  We had no choice.  Qwest clearly did not want our business, and Comcast was very eager to get our business.  Through word of mouth we heard of a deal Comcast was running wherein we would pay $55/month for basic cable (network shows), telephone/long distance, and internet access for six months, then the following six months we’d pay $75/month, and then after a year the price would go to $102/month.  I work from home so I need all of those services (besides basic cable, but we sort of need that due to our location as network television doesn’t travel to our television any other way).  We were paying $140/month through qwest for those services, but this month we got our bill and it went up another $12.00.  In short the switch, including free installation, gained us around $600.00 in savings this year.

Further, we were using DirectTV’s DVR for recording shows as part of the Qwest bundle, which has a horrible interface.  With cable, which we had before switching to satellite I can use the Windows Media functionality in my family computer to record the shows I want, and even better than that: I can use Windows Media Center to play the shows back, and the Windows Media Center UI is polished, clean, and lets me jump 30 second intervals  in the video instantly.  DirectTV definitely needs to get their act together because the software that I have from Microsoft, which is for general use, is better than the DirectTV junk that they force on their customers.  I did have to buy a second TV card for my Media Center PC to be able to record two conflicting shows at once, so that was an added $110.00.  But for the amount I’m saving, I’m still way ahead of using Qwest for their ‘bundled’ package.

To cap things off when my wife called Qwest yesterday to cancle service they had the audacity to tell us that they’d be glad to try to get us a better rate after having jacked up the price on us just this month!  Why charge customers more if you don’t have to?  Because some customers will just take the rate increase and ignore the loss.  If we run into any other hiccups or problems, I’ll be sure to post them, but I couldn’t believe the savings.

We’ve Joined the 80’s!

November 17th, 2008

This weekend I did something that proudly puts our household firmly into the middle of the 80’s: I installed a microwave.  This is one of those awesome contraptions/appliances that heats up food in a matter of minutes and allows us to defrost meat if we’ve had one of those boneheaded days where we forgot in the morning to get out food for the evening that we froze last January.  In essence we’re in shape now to save money on eating out because we blew the frozen meat schedule.  I cannot tell you how many times we’ve been low on pantry items, low on other non-pantry items and then had the meat not be defrosted.  It took me until this month to figure out that a microwave, which is not as expensive as a dishwasher, could save us money in the eating out department.

This isn’t revolutionary by any stretch, but we’ve been living without a microwave for 3.5 years now and so having one kinda feel cool and funny.  Various things get hot quickly in the microwave instead of dirtying up several pots and pans, which means I may not have to run the dishwasher as often, or wash as many dishes as often.  Its funny to think how much we’ve been spending on some things because of the fact we didn’t have a microwave.

I actually ended up having to do the following, in case too much information is something you like to have:

  • Remove old ventilation unit over the stove
  • Remove old cabinet above old ventilation unit over the stove
  • Do some electrical magic to make sure the microwave plugged in just right and didn’t cause electrical fires
  • Fabricate a spacer/mount for the microwave so as to make sure that it stayed securely in place.  This was not in the directions, but I am overly concerned about things staying on my wall.
  • Mount the microwave with help of the wife
  • Partially unmount the microwave with help of the wife and fix the direction of the ventilation fan as per the step skipped in the directions I apparently didn’t read carefully enough
  • Re-mount the microwave
  • Re-mount the cabinet above the microwave and spacer/mount.  This changes our cabinet configuration, but in a good way.

For those of you keeping track I got to do electrical work, wood work, cabinetry (a slight exageration), and install a money saving device.  The only major casualty was my thumb when a random hammer flew out of nowhere and struck it.  I feel like the lovechild of Tim “The Toolman” Taylor and Suze Orman**.

** not really, that’s disgusting.  I’m really glad I have the parents I have.

Formula Four-Oh-Nine

November 8th, 2008

Nothing chaps my hide like when I discover I’ve dropped hundreds of dollars on something that I could have NOT dropped hundreds of dollars on.  For example: I just installed a new dishwasher at my house in the last couple weeks.  Roughly $409.00 worth of dishwasher.  It is a dishwasher that I might not have needed had the previous dishwasher been installed correctly and had the previous owner, who installed the other dishwasher, not been a cheapskate instead of a frugal appliance installer.  You see most dishwashers could use a handy contraption called an Air Gap [picture of one at Amazon.com].  The air gap prevents backflow, which prevents funky dishes, possibly jamming up your drainage line and a bunch of other things.

My old dishwasher probably could have used this and when the dishwasher repairman came out BEFORE the problems got bad and suggested things he didn’t mention this as a good idea.  So if you have a dishwasher and its not cleaning your dishes as well as it should, you might confirm that this contraption exists (or doesn’t exist) on your line, and if it doesn’t, get one!  It cost me less than $20.00 to get the air gap preventer, 72″ of rubber tubing and a few clamps to make sure that my dishwasher drains appropriately.  I could have saved $389.00.  Lesson learned!

Hard Pressed with Extra Starch

October 14th, 2008

I grew up hearing stories of my dad’s college days.  One such story included an acquaintance that owned a pair of pants that he did not wash until they were told to have disentigrated.  The pants at one point in time could stand up in a corner on their own from all of the materials that had been collected in the fibers of the fabric.  My personal hygiene alarm goes off every time that story comes to mind.  My skin crawls with the imaginary microbes, bacteria and germs that those pants must have harbored.  The pants were not standing up because they were filled with something, namely legs, but instead they were standing up because of external influences.

I had a realization this week as I was pondering the significance of the numbers of trillions of dollars that have been lost globally in various financial markets.  The realization was not one that I should have had to wait until 31 to have and I wanted to pass it along in case others had not been exposed to it: The stocks in the market may very well need a good washing because there are not always legs holding up their pants.  Each stock is not worth the value that is given to it on the market that day, it is worth the value the people (thankfully not germs) put on it and built into the fibers of the stock the minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, or years before.  But unless the companies behind the stocks are actually doing amazingly good things and you’re owning a piece of a real company that is worthy of ownership, you could be buying extra crunchy pants.

You could be hard pressed to find a company that is worth the esteemed value of the stock, but it is important to remember that not each person who owns a $132/share stock paid $132 per share.  They might have paid $32.00/share and others after them paid more than that.  Obviously that’s why the investor makes money if they buy at $32.00 and sell at $132.00, but when the market tumbles and share values drop its not a loss of actual wealth, its the loss of unrealized wealth.  There’s a BIG difference.  Its not that the estimated value doesn’t matter, but instead it is important to have the principles of the theory behind the market in mind as you’re looking at the numbers.  If I buy a stock at $32.00 and sell it at $30.00 I very literally lose $2.00 per share (plus any trading fees to buy the stock and to sell the stock).  What you need to realize is that as an investor I may have also missed the unrealized reward of the stock jumping to $64.00 per share and in an attempt to ‘hold out for more’ the stock reversed and dropped me down to where I realized the stock was going to go down to less than I paid for it and by the time I could find a buyer, it had devalued to less than my original buying price.  Realized and unrealized wealth are two different things and when the media or overly dramatic persons speak about trillions of dollars in wealth disappearing, it isn’t all like real dollars going up into real smoke (we’ll ignore the carbon footprint of that smoke & money fire), it is some real smoke and some real fire shot from an impressive camera angle that makes the pants look taller than they are.  They’re standing in the corner, looking tall and legless, but they’re still pants, and they still need to be estimated at a reasonable value that reflects the worth of the company – much like pants that really, really should have been washed so that I never, ever had to hear stories of my dad’s friend’s pants that probably smelled foul.

Ewwwwww.

Pulley

August 4th, 2008

Sunday afternoon after a drive through the Eastern Rocky Mountain range by Denver and visiting the Red Rocks Amphitheater I came home and discovered my swamp cooler was making a lot of racket.  Squeaking and sounding like nastiness.  My neighbor approached my house as I exited my vehicle to say, “Did you hear me knocking?  I wanted to tell you about your swamp cooler making a lot of noise”

“Nope, I was up in the Rockies.”

“Let me know if I can help!”

I’m glad to have a friendly, helpful neighbor, but the idea of fixing the swamp cooler was not on my top ten list.  I crawled up on the roof after shutting the cooler off and took several panels off and hollared down to have it turned on.

Squeak, wobble, rotate.  Squeak, wobble, rotate.  I hollared to have it turned off again.  The pulley was spinning along with the motor, but it was not sitting correctly on the motor’s shaft.  I tightened the pulley on the shaft, turned the swamp cooler back on.  Squeak, wobble, rotate.  Apparently the pulley was funky and beyond de-funking.

I drove down to Lowe’s and picked up a new pulley.  I came home, installed the pulley on the motor shaft, re-attached the drive belt, and hollared down to have the cooler turned back on.

Hummmmmm.

The cooler turned on more quietly than it had before while we’ve lived in this house.  Apparently I could have had a quieter cooler for just under $8.00 had I noted the pulley was getting wonky.  I need to get new pads to hold the water for the cooler, but those can wait until next season.  I was glad I didn’t have to pay $85.00 to have a technician come out and service this with the pulley costing $15.00 with $40.00 in labor (or some other made up number).  All was well, quieter, and I think we’ll be good for at least another couple years in the pulley department.

How To Get a Job as a Software Developer

July 28th, 2008

A client I work for is looking to fill a position.  They’re looking for someone who has certain qualifications as you might expect that just hiring anyone who has used Microsoft Office might result in a bad piece of software.  The responses that have come in have consistently been bad or worse.  For example, one person actually gave an answer to a question that was very short, but the second sentence was “Use a search engine.”  The answer should not be use a search engine unless the question is, “What are you doing if you ask Jeeves?”  And in that case, its still grammatically incorrect.

Furthermore, if you’re filling out a series of questions, please don’t make a fool out of yourself by using the search engines.  Well, you can use the search engines, but I wouldn’t recommend simply copying and pasting the answers into the response.  There is very little that impresses me more than a good, efficient worker, but copy and paste from Google, Wikipedia, or any other source and blatantly plagerising the answers and passing them off as your own is completely unethical, lazy and useless.  A company that discovers you’re a liar, even if they’ve hired you on, will can your sorry bum rather quickly.

If you want a job as a software developer you’ll want to actually know your stuff.  Actually know the languages you’re reporting you know, actually list projects you actually worked on and helped complete (I can’t believe the number of folks who fake resume work).  If you want a job as a software developer, study up by learning about the company you’re trying to get hired on at.  Find out what software you’ll be working on, if at all possible, and focus in on knowing what you’re getting yourself into.  Don’t get surprised in the interview if you thought you were working on one project and the company discusses a different product, but at least be aware of the projects.  Be knowledgable.

Be prepared to ask questions and interview the company employees as well.  Be prepared to find out what sort of time restrictions exist at the company, find out what their development process is.  Ask what tools they use.  Make sure you know what they’re using and you’re comfortable with it.

In the end you need to be a worthy candidate, put forth the effort to be that candidate.  Make sure you’ve got your ducks in a row and that you’re prepared to take the position on with passion.  Lastly, make sure you’re a person who asks why a project, task or code change is done because it will help you excede the requirements, and knock out the interviewer (figuratively, of course).  And don’t use the search engines to knock them out ;)

Watch My Money Maker Weekly – 07-20-2008

July 20th, 2008

This week we’ve got three more great articles from the last week’s blog roundup:
Christian PF’s Ten Things Worth Spending More On
The Simple Dollar’s 100 Things to Do During a Money Free Weekend
Free Money Finance’s Our Real Estate Agent Has Never Met Sane People Before

You can download the MOV file here (requires Quicktime to watch)

I’m Wearing My Dumb Consumer Shirt Today

July 15th, 2008

I must be a dumb consumer.  Really.  Because when small appliances break my first thought is that I’ll just buy a new one.  I have had a home coffee roaster at my house for several years and it broke slightly less than several years ago.  I was going to buy a new one but something always prevented me from buying the new one.  However, today I got to the point where I actually called to see what parts to repair it would cost.  Would you believe $18.00?  A new one is easily $70.00, but the repair parts are simple to repair (with a screwdriver or two) and the savings is way too big to ignore.

So, take off your dumb consumer shirts and burn them.  Throw them in the trash.  At least hang them up and don’t put them on very often.  Look at what’s broken, and if you’re not sure, find out if anyone you know is willing to help you trouble shoot the problem, and hopefully fix it (my neighbor helped me with some of his electical tools so we could pin-point the roaster’s issue).  There is no need to have the consume, destroy, replace mentality, despite what the marketers tell you.

Embrace the fixit mentality.  Think about the actual costs involved, and if you don’t know, do the research.  If your time is money, figure out what its worth.  Some tiny appliances can be replaced cheaply, but some are a little more high-end and should be repaired if possible.  Some repair places make it hard to repair for less than the cost of a new item, but sometimes you can do it yourself, in which case: do it yourself.  I believe smart consumer shirts are available, but you’ll have to hunt because most retailers don’t want you to have one :)