Archive for June, 2008
Our favorite personal finance blogs: Wise Bread
With a different approach then our first reviewed blog, Get Rich Slowly, Wise Bread is a community of bloggers writing on vastly different topics under the financial advice umbrella. With the tag line ” Living large on a small budget ” the site encourages readers to make sound financial decisions without sacrificing the fun in [...]
Our favorite personal finance blogs: Get Rich Slowly
Sometimes the name really does say it all. Get Rich Slowly is one of the most widely-read personal finance blogs out there because it provides advice for all of us from an everyday kind of guy. The blogger, J.D., doesn’t have a secret agenda to promote some side business, book or other project. He’s completely [...]
Our favorite personal finance blogs
Today, we are kicking off a series (our first) spotlighting our favorite personal finance blogs. While we are by no means experts in this arena, after you take a look at the series of blogs we profile, you will certainly be enlightened in all things money.
When I first started my search for unbiased financial advice [...]
Dear John Letter, the Mega-Cineplex Version
As I get older my perceptions on things change, and I feel like I’ve become cold to you. I wasn’t always this way, in high school I was up for any movie, any time, but back then it was more about the act of going to the theater than the actual film itself. And [...]
Facebook follow-through
Although I’ve used the site for years, Facebook continues to amaze me. We all take mental memory lane trips every so often and remember the one friend from 10th grade that convinced us to skip class and hang out at IHOP. Not too long ago, the best the Internet had to offer a wannabe private [...]
Format war fallout
Don’t tell anyone, but I have an HD DVD player.
I know it’s embarrassing, but it’s really not my fault. It was a gift, two years ago nonetheless. And it’s just an add-on to my Xbox360, so at least it’s not an expensive standalone player. At the time, I thought it was great–we could finally really [...]
