What Are You Doing Right Now
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Got back from lunch, first thing I hear is "That box on the wall has been beeping at me for the past hour, it's really annoying." It's the UPS for the time clock system. The entire circuit is dead... extension cable and maintenance summoned.
That's a loss of almost an hour
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On a demo call with Comodo One.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jt1001001 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Depends on the miles you drive. I ran the numbers last year when the wife and I were both shopping. It came out that if you're less than 15K (even on a 10K/year lease with extra $$ per mile over) its cheaper. As I'm the farther driver, its was cheaper to lease her SUV and purchase a used car for my day-to-day driving vs buying new or even buying 2 used vehicles. So we bought mine used paid CASH (never take an auto loan, my fathers golden rule for some reason), and lease hers and just put a few extra seat covers and padding to hopefully keep the kids from tearing it apart
I'm the opposite. I always take the loan but hold the cash in case it is needed. Loans, when paid on time, normally cost less overall. One of those life lessons from working in banking. Loans give you more buying leverage because so many people will pay penalties that the banks will happily lose money on the rare people who pay on time.
Right now Toyota has 0% financing for 60 months... it's crazy..
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@coliver @scottalanmiller Good idea, see I never worked in banking so I always looked at it as debt=bad but you're right with as cheap as loans are now so long as you make you're payments take the extra couple % and put away some place
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@travisdh1 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Got back from lunch, first thing I hear is "That box on the wall has been beeping at me for the past hour, it's really annoying." It's the UPS for the time clock system. The entire circuit is dead... extension cable and maintenance summoned.
That's a loss of almost an hour
is it really a loss? I'm assuming it's part of your job to troubleshoot, even if you aren't the one to ultimately fix it.
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@Dashrender said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@travisdh1 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Got back from lunch, first thing I hear is "That box on the wall has been beeping at me for the past hour, it's really annoying." It's the UPS for the time clock system. The entire circuit is dead... extension cable and maintenance summoned.
That's a loss of almost an hour
is it really a loss? I'm assuming it's part of your job to troubleshoot, even if you aren't the one to ultimately fix it.
To the company, nope. To me and my project, yes.
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@jt1001001 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@coliver @scottalanmiller Good idea, see I never worked in banking so I always looked at it as debt=bad but you're right with as cheap as loans are now so long as you make you're payments take the extra couple % and put away some place
Yeah, I look at it as debt=good. It just needs to be smart debt.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jt1001001 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@coliver @scottalanmiller Good idea, see I never worked in banking so I always looked at it as debt=bad but you're right with as cheap as loans are now so long as you make you're payments take the extra couple % and put away some place
Yeah, I look at it as debt=good. It just needs to be smart debt.
Then why do financial guys always tell you to not borrow money from your home to invest into the market with? My home rate is 2.675%, If I can get a rate of 8% why wouldn't I?
Personally the risk reward for most people probably isn't worth it.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jt1001001 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@coliver @scottalanmiller Good idea, see I never worked in banking so I always looked at it as debt=bad but you're right with as cheap as loans are now so long as you make you're payments take the extra couple % and put away some place
Yeah, I look at it as debt=good. It just needs to be smart debt.
Well, if you're able to get a lone at 0%, that's free money. Be silly not to take advantage of it. I'm generally debt=bad, but exceptions exist.
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I put pretty much every purchase on credit cards, took and paid off a car loan, loan on bike and my credit score continues to increase.
So i dont believe debt=bad unless your irresponsible.
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@Dashrender said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@jt1001001 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@coliver @scottalanmiller Good idea, see I never worked in banking so I always looked at it as debt=bad but you're right with as cheap as loans are now so long as you make you're payments take the extra couple % and put away some place
Yeah, I look at it as debt=good. It just needs to be smart debt.
Then why do financial guys always tell you to not borrow money from your home to invest into the market with? My home rate is 2.675%, If I can get a rate of 8% why wouldn't I?
I think defining "financial guys" here is important. Are you talking about real investors and experts? Or those people that trick consumers into paying them for bad advice at the local "financial advice" office down the street where they've shown that monkeys throwing darts have a better chance of success?
Of course taking money out of your house and investing well pays off. That's how investing works... borrow well, invest well. That's how you magnify your investment power.
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@Dashrender said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Personally the risk reward for most people probably isn't worth it.
Low risk ... that's the problem, most people actually prefer high risk, as odd as that sounds.
Low debt, bonds, low average returns, inflation exposure... all high risk and all things that average people like for some reason.
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@gjacobse here is what Comodo is using that is killing us: http://www.vicidial.com/
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@gjacobse here is what Comodo is using that is killing us: http://www.vicidial.com/
Fun..
Seems like there are a number of usable options thus far
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If you make less than $116k as a single person and (I think) $183k as a couple you should be putting $5500 per year into a Roth IRA and using it as a container for mutual funds. Any debt you incur to make that a reality, lowers your gains. It's not as big of a deal with a Roth IRA because your gains and dividends aren't taxed. I would rather have zero debt than have debt, but if you can't afford to invest at all then you really need to make something happen. Outside of very successful short sellers the stock market is playing for the long game. The more years you have, the more time you have to recover. Those super variable index funds become more attractive the younger you are. Anyone who isn't doing this is making a mistake. Prepare for retirement. Sometimes you don't have a choice whether or not you are retiring.
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@tiagom said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
I put pretty much every purchase on credit cards, took and paid off a car loan, loan on bike and my credit score continues to increase.
So i dont believe debt=bad unless your irresponsible.
Well, all debt isn't bad. But with the education system (at all levels), pushing the debt=good drum ad nauseam, and combined with sales minions, well, the majority of loans end up being bad.
My grandfather always used to say "If it takes you 30 years to pay for something, you can't afford it." While a terrible generality, I think the idea behind it is good. Basically, if you will be paying for it longer than it's expected to last, you can't afford it.
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@travisdh1 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Well, all debt isn't bad. But with the education system (at all levels), pushing the debt=good drum ad nauseam, and combined with sales minions, well, the majority of loans end up being bad.
Do they? I hear the opposite, that debt is bad and that school isn't a decision. They don't push it by claiming that debt is good, but only that other things are more important. That's very different than debt being good.
Microsoft doesn't claim that cost is good, only that their products are worth more to you than they cost.
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@travisdh1 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
My grandfather always used to say "If it takes you 30 years to pay for something, you can't afford it." While a terrible generality, I think the idea behind it is good. Basically, if you will be paying for it longer than it's expected to last, you can't afford it.
Houses should last far longer than that, though. And they are tax shelters.
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
If you make less than $116k as a single person and (I think) $183k as a couple you should be putting $5500 per year into a Roth IRA and using it as a container for mutual funds.
I do neither. No mutual funds, no retirement accounts
And by doing that is how I retired at 39.