Found 7 bookmarks
Custom sorting
lemonade-stand
lemonade-stand
A handy guide to financial support for open source. This document aims to provide an exhaustive list of all the ways that people get paid for open source work. Hopefully, projects and contributors will find this helpful in figuring out the best options for them.
·github.com·
lemonade-stand
Squashed: It’s My Fault. I Didn‘t Read the Fine Print
Squashed: It’s My Fault. I Didn‘t Read the Fine Print
The point isn’t that all the boilerplate should be inherently unenforceable. Most of it is pretty benign. “This is the address to which you should address your billing dispute.” “We really can’t promise that our network is so robust you can run a hospital or nuclear submarine on it. So please don’t try.” “In case for some reason you were confused, the trademark ‘Verizon’ is not yours, even though it’s stamped on your phone.” But sometimes there’s something nasty in there. Forced arbitration clauses. Class action waivers. Undisclosed charges (or whatever it is that makes AT&T think it can just tack on a few dollars in extra charges every month to pad its bottom line). There’s really nothing an individual consumer can do about any of this. Anyway, two points. 1. The Consumer Financial Protectin Bureau is really important to curb the worst of these abuses. 2. Let’s not blame people for “agreeing” to things that they didn’t actually agree to in any meaningful way.
·squashed.tumblr.com·
Squashed: It’s My Fault. I Didn‘t Read the Fine Print
Keynote Index Fund
Keynote Index Fund
"Steve Jobs gives a legendary keynote at Macworld SF every January, launching products and giving a state of the union view of things at Apple. What if you invested $10,000 the day before the keynote, then sold at the end of the keynote day?"
·keynoteindexfund.com·
Keynote Index Fund
Consumerist: How To: 13-Step Method for Buying a Car While Controlling the Sale and the Price
Consumerist: How To: 13-Step Method for Buying a Car While Controlling the Sale and the Price
It takes time and a lot of guts, but you'll save money. "It really works... but it works only if you truly are willing to walk away... and then refuse to bend when they try to put you off or change the terms. Stay civil, do not let any emotion in."
·consumerist.com·
Consumerist: How To: 13-Step Method for Buying a Car While Controlling the Sale and the Price