And welcome to my place on the web, were I share.....

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

99 things OKOA

A friend and one of the blogs that I follow, had this cute list posted. As I read thru the list, I started to laugh. “When will I get to one that I have not yet done?” I wondered. I guess that it just proves that I’ve been around some time. And it not a bad idea to take stock in what one has done every now and then. This will allow you to check where you are at and what you still have to do yet in life.

And if this list is not of your liking, fine make your own, but make it now! Do not allow time to slip by in your life without a things-to-do list. A true list of dreams and goals in anyone’s life will always lead to great things and other kinds of answers…

To participate just copy the list as is and paste in your own blog,
and bold all of the things you have done.

01. Started your own blog
02.
Slept under the stars
03. Played in a band
04.
Visited Hawaii

05. Watched a meteor shower
06. Given more than you can afford to charity
07.
Been to Disneyland

08.
Climbed a mountain
09.
Held a praying mantis

10. Sang a solo
11. Bungee jumped
12. Visited
Paris

13. Watched a lightning storm at sea
14.
Taught yourself an art from scratch
15. Adopted a child
16.
Had food poisoning
17. Walked to the top of the Statue of
Liberty

18. Grown your own vegetables
19. Seen the Mona Lisa in
France

20. Slept on an overnight train
21.
Had a pillow fight
22.
Hitch hiked
23. Taken a sick day when you're not ill
24.
Built a snow fort
25.
Held a lamb
26.
Gone skinny dipping
27. Ran a
Marathon

28. Ridden in a gondola in
Venice

29.
Seen a total eclipse
30.
Watched a sunrise or sunset
31.
Hit a home run
32. Been on a cruise
33. Seen
Niagara Falls
in person
34. Visited the birthplace of your ancestors
35. Seen an Amish community
36. Taught yourself a new language
37. Had enough money to be truly satisfied
38. Seen the
Leaning Tower of Pisa in person
39. Gone rock climbing




40. Seen Michelangelo's David
41.
Sung karaoke
42.
Seen Old Faithful
geyser erupt
43. Bought a stranger a meal at a restaurant
44. Visited
Africa

45.
Walked on a beach by moonlight
46.
Been transported in an ambulance
47.
Had your portrait painted
48.
Gone deep sea fishing
49. Seen the Sistine Chapel in person
50. Been to the top of the
Eiffel Tower in Paris

51.
Gone scuba diving or snorkeling
52.
Kissed in the rain.
53.
Played in the mud
54.
Gone to a drive-in theater
55. Been in a movie
56. Visited the
Great Wall of China

57.
Started a business
58. Taken a martial arts class
59. Visited
Russia

60.
Served at a soup kitchen
61. Sold Girl Scout Cookies
62.
Gone whale watching
63.
Got flowers for no reason
64.
Donated blood, platelets or plasma
65. Gone sky diving
66. Visited a Nazi Concentration Camp
67.
Bounced a check.
68. Flown in a helicopter
69. Saved a favorite childhood toy





70. Visited the Lincoln Memorial
71. Eaten Caviar
72.
Pieced a quilt
73. Stood in
Times Square

74. Toured the
Everglades

75.
Been fired from a job
76.
Seen the Changing of the Guards in London

77. Broken a bone
78.
Been on a speeding motorcycle
79. Seen the
Grand Canyon
in person
80. Published a book
81. Visited the
Vatican

82. Bought a brand new car.
83. Walked in
Jerusalem

84.
Had your picture in the newspaper
85.
Read the entire Bible
86. Visited the White House
87. Killed and prepared an animal for eating.
88.
Had chickenpox
89.
Saved someone's life.
90. Sat on a jury
91.
Met someone famous
92. Joined a book club
93.
Lost a loved one.
94.
Had a baby
95. Seen the
Alamo
in person
96. Swam in the Great Salt Lake
97. Been involved in a law suit
98.
Owned a cell phone
99. Been stung by a bee


Well, got this entire list, but #37, 98 0ut of 99 is not too bad! But this is someone’s else’s list just comparing for fun, and you can bet that I going to add that last one to my own list on the wall of my office, and always keep looking for Other Kinds Of Answers… You do the same...

Sunday, May 10, 2009

“LILO’s” Other Kinds Of Answers…

As I hinted at very plainly in my last post, Inflationary Other Kinds Of Answers… It's time to stop crying over the spilled milk, kick the people out of the sandbox who did not play nice with others, Bury the Unions, for at last they have kicked in the cash bucket and let’s all watch Uncle Sammy’s Tea giving party even closer. A whole lot of folks getting my taxes as hand-outs that I do not think should. If I wanted to invest in them, I would have myself.

My OKOA Readers, our dear economy might seemed to be melting down like a pat of pure butter on a hot used car roof, but for some OKOA people — even you, maybe? — This is a very very good thing indeed. It is time to dust off every OKOA that ever woke you up in the middle of the night. I have six good ideas that I’m pretty sure that have not been tried yet. I’m currently pushing them thru the starting phase, background checking and research… Stay tuned.

First, as always, this is just my opinion and these are actions I am currently doing, as you that read on will find out about! I have been watching and paying close attention for the last number of years, always looking for my other kinds of answers. Not all the answers are of only the Knowledge and wisdom kind that I am looking for. Financial and business OKOA’s are worth looking for also.

What is a “LILO’s”…?

Here is the skinny why and how. At no other time in recent history has it been easier or cheaper to start a new company, maybe even a very profitable company over night, so to speak. We’ll call this type of start-ups “LILO’s”, for “little in, lot out." These are Web-based businesses that cost almost nothing to get off the ground yet can turn into great moneymakers. This only if you work hard, mind your own business and are uncomplaining but know when & how to Twit out about your idea and about the .biz there from.

How do you get started? All that's required is a great idea for a product that will fill a need in today’s 21st century. These days you'd do best if your idea either makes people money safely or saves them money surely. It really needs to work at a level that anyone can understand and use, if you really want it to rocket. Do check that any idea and name there of are clear every way that you can. In other words make sure that they are yours, and make them yours legally.

I first pushed my ideas past a group of “25ish” old friends that are open to this kind of thinking, and do even read this blog. I really can get them all going when the old guy looks over their code-du-jour, and points out errors. Yea, this old guy can read code, and has even come up with a few OKOA things that the friends have liked. That and he shows up with good bagels and Jolt for everybody now and then.

Why these friends as a sounding block, well, they are all of the right age and are code-eaters, and they have one or two LILO sites just starting to get off the ground themselves. Learn from the do-ers and share what you have picked too! That keeps all the costs down and folks living life.

As for their revenue incoming, they just have sold the first site based ad, for the low three figures a month. But it's a foundation: "We've already reached ramen profitability." The main math here: they spend about $100 a month on server space fees and other minor expenses. And they have a start-up company that is up and going! And more important, true cash inflow other kinds of answers…!

True Noodleconomics

The term ramen profitable is coined by Paul Graham, a Silicon Valley start-up investor, essayist and muse to LILO entrepreneurs. It means that your start-up is self-sustaining and can eke out enough profit to keep you alive on instant noodles while your business idea gains traction.

"At this point, it would be hard for companies to get any cheaper," he is quoted. Since everyone already has an Internet-connected device somewhere in their lives, "it's gotten to the point that you can't detect the cost of a company when added to a person's living expenses. A real world company is no more expensive than a semi-full time hobby these days."

Will your idea be the next Facebook? The next Blogger, Digg or Twitter? Who knows? It almost goes without saying that many more start-ups fail than succeed. "The biggest problem facing any website biz is words of mouth distribution." In a world where it's so easy to start a company, how can anyone find yours? Only if a friend shares it with you, out of love, heed or need.

But here again, a bad economy is the LILO's friend. It is easy to say, "The cost of failure is cheap. It's even so low, you can afford to swing the bat way more times." In our bad economy, no one really notices or cares about more failure. Everyone fails at something or somehow, and those that keep trying will make it. That creates a safer and better environment for risk-taking, which is the only way true innovation can occur.

And while not many folks could get hurt from a total failure that you can walk away from. At the same time, launching in a bad economy imposes it own kind of disciplines, forcing entrepreneurs to keep costs low and be smart about marketing and distribution. You can even say it should keep them always looking for other kinds of answers…

 

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Inflationary Other Kinds Of Answers…

If you watch the news daily, you’d think that our economy was in un-recoverable shambles, that our financial worlds are ending and all investors should stay away from windows in tall buildings. Even to the point that we all should be buying only food, fuel, ammo and toilet paper preparing for the hostility at the end times. 

I do not think it is that bad quite yet… As Seasoned Human that has seen times like this before, I think that saving all of your money is a BIG mistake right now.

First, this is just my opinion and these are actions I am currently doing, as the deals right now are better then they have been in years! I have been watching and paying close attention for the last number of years, always looking for my other kinds of answers. Not all the answers are of only the Knowledge and wisdom kind that I am looking for. Financial other kinds of answers are worth looking for also.

I now believe our situation, as a whole, seems dire enough now and First, Yes, an emergency fund is a requirement for any sound financial planning effort and I do have mine in place. But saving every last penny is the last thing you should be doing right now! It is the time to buy the things that you’ve been putting off because every signal out there is telling you to save everything.

The laws of supply and demand are in our favor because very few folks are buying, which means the people who are, will be getting incredible deals, if they are willing to negotiate and put in the time for research, exploring and planning. This goes for minor cost items like simple tools and supplies of life or business, all the way to major capitol Items, such as second homes, rentals and whole businesses.

With no one spending their money, because they’re saving or holding… this means banks won’t be giving you great interest rates because they don’t have to, and they have too much money, or even too much bad debt! That’s only the beginning of this very large financial story…

Apparition of Inflation

The government seems pretty savvy; they know you’ll get upset if they raise the taxes without giving you a very very good reason. Fortunately they have another weapon, printing presses. When the government pumps more money into the money supply, the value of your dollars can decrease. The government has made trillions of dollars in promises to financial institutions, automakers, and many other smaller profile parties through its actions the last few months and it will have to fund them somehow.

Part of it will be funded by borrowing, but some of it will come through increasing the supply of money. Inflation won’t be an issue while we’re in a recession, but it’ll be a beast of a problem whenever we’re no longer scared of the recession. Be warned now and be thinking ahead for Other Kinds of Answers…

Negotiate Deals

The time to buy is when others are panicking. When you have the benefit of timing, you control all the power in periods of economic uncertainty. I’m not talking about just the stock markets, I’m talking about everything! If you wanted a house, now is the time to buy because interest rates are low and home prices are even lower. Heck, even the Government, Federal and State maybe willing to give tax breaks and grants, if you will move now.

If you wanted to make improvements to your house, start talking to contractors because their business is slow and they will be willing to cut deals just to stay in business. If you wanted a car, dealerships will offer great incentives because they need to boost their sales numbers. Even if it’s something as simple as an appliance, you can negotiate the price down and get an energy savings tax credit to boot!

And don’t buy things you don’t need just because they’re a deal, that’s reckless, buy only things you need and negotiate it down to the bare bone pricing. Watch out for hooks in the deal also, things that you have to do to get the GREAT Deal, or are added at the sale’s close…Required Install labor, shipping charges or more fees can eat up any great deal in a hurry

Bank like Banks Do

Ever received one of those offers in the mail that seems like the solution to all your problems? It may have said, "Your home is an untapped resource. Refinance your loan with us and you'll get quick cash to buy something, fund college, add to savings or pay off your debt." You may have been tempted by the idea, but hopefully you didn't bite. There are much better ways to solve problems with debt. Refinance your loan; in the long run could actually cost you much more money. Keep reading…

There is a newer option in the USA and Canada you may not have heard about. You should really consider a look at what can be found at www.aboutu1st.com and I know that everyone has to look at what is best for their own requirements, and this will not be a good fit for everyone. In full disclosure, my own family has been using this idea, and it is working very well, even enough for me to take the time to become an agent sharing the idea with others. And NO, it not a MLM!

Lower Interest Rate Doesn’t Always Equal Saving

First, make sure that you are really saving money if you do refinance. It’s not enough to compare 6% to 4.5%. What you need to do is determine how much interest you’ll be paying if you keep the original loan versus the total cost of the refinanced loan (i.e., interest plus closing cost). To do this correctly, you’ll need a good mortgage calculator. There are many worthy FREE ones on the web. For example, let’s assume your original $300,000 loan is a 30-year fixed rate loan at 6% and you’re refinancing to a 15-year fixed rate loan at 4.5%

Age of the original loan (years)

Interest remaining on old loan

Principal balance to refinance

Interest cost of new loan

Savings before closing costs and other fees

10

$180,620.08

$251,057.36

$94,645.79

$85,974

15

$110,611.51

$213,146.93

$80,353.74

$30,258

20

$53,828.02

$162,011.42

$61,076.08

($7,248)

As you can see from the scenarios above, you could lose money by refinancing to a lower interest rate. In general, it’s more advantageous to refinance newer loans than older ones, because most of your money goes toward paying interest at the beginning of most loans.

Interest Rates Are Low NOW

The federal funds target rate “range” is 0.00% to 0.25%, which means the government doesn’t want you to save, they want you to spend! The federal funds target rate is the target rate the Fed wants banks to lend to other banks on an overnight basis (to meet capital requirements). They achieve this rate by expanding or restricting the amount of money available. If a bank can borrow money from another bank for 0% - 0.25%, what incentive do they have to pay you anything for your savings? Almost none. The end result is that you get almost no interest from your savings, or bank investing, as another way to look at it.

Another quick point, you may even be able to get 18 to 36 month 0.0% financing right now on many items, so you do not have to spend your cash savings right now. Yes, in some cases, you do have to spend at least a certain minimum amount to get those deals, but in many cases, you can reach the minimum by buying two, three, or four items together. Just be sure that you understand all the details of the deal and all the fine print.

In other words, the government doesn’t want you to save your money; they want you to spend it and help boost the economy! And let’s be honest, unless you start spending, the government will only get worse in how it pumps more money into the system, or even has to manage everything by taking over everything.

Reward the Entrepreneurs

The United States was built on the shoulders of entrepreneurs; reward them by giving them your business. Don’t overpay for things because you feel badly about their financial situation, that’s not necessary, but spend your money at the places you like and the businesses you enjoy dealing with. They won’t close a sale unless it makes financial sense to them but they do need the sales. Giving them business will give them additional capital to work with and, if they’re doing well in the downturn, expand and add more available jobs to the system, thus more people out spending.

I firmly believe that the way out of this whole big mess is through business growth spurred on by something, whether its consumer confidence and increased spending or whatever that improves our infrastructure, it will be led by small businesses and entrepreneurs, with other kinds of answers.

Think carefully before you borrow money to do anything. When you borrow, you are guaranteed to lose the amount you pay toward interest. However, you are not always guaranteed a better return on investment on borrowed money. I know this article is heavy on mathematics, but I hope you will enjoy learning about the process and it is pretty clearly about Other Kinds Of Answers...

Friday, April 10, 2009

Tax Day Other Kinds Of Answers…

Maybe just to see a brighter perceive of other answers, as far as taxes goes, here is a semi-holiday from my own calendar, which I hope by sharing and telling everyone about will help in these days when there seems so little. Always remember, it is when the times are the toughest, the other kinds of answers are both most needed and the easiest to find.  Read on...

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America
 Celebrates Tax Freedom Day® April 13th, 2009

America
Will Work 8 Days Less to Pay Taxes in 2009 than in 2008; Recession, Stimulus Package Push Date of Celebration Up

Read the full Tax Freedom Day report here.

Washington, DC, March 31, 2009 - Tax Freedom Day will arrive on April 13 this year, according to the Tax Foundation's annual calculation using the latest government data on income and taxes.

This is eight days earlier than in 2008, and a full two weeks earlier than in 2007, for two reasons: (1) the recession has reduced tax collections even faster than it has reduced income, and (2) the stimulus package includes large temporary tax cuts for 2009 and 2010. Nevertheless, Americans will pay more in taxes than they will spend on food, clothing and housing combined.

In the study, Tax Foundation Special Report No. 165, "America Celebrates Tax Freedom Day," Tax Foundation staff economist Josh Barro traces the course of America's tax burden since 1900, examines the composition of today's tax burden by type of tax, and finally calculates a Tax Freedom Day for each state.

Taxes and Federal Deficit

Tax Freedom Day moves somewhat independently from an alternative calculation that adds the federal budget deficit to total taxes collected. In 2009, an unprecedented budget deficit over $1.5 trillion produces a date of May 29. This is the latest date in the year this deficit-inclusive measure has ever fallen. The only previous years when taxes and deficit spending comprised a similarly large share of national income were 1944 and 1945, at the peak of World War II. In the postwar era, this date had never fallen later than May 9 (in 1992). Figure 1 below shows Tax Freedom Day as traditionally presented and with the inclusion of the federal budget deficit, since 1967 (click to enlarge).



Tax Freedom Day Fluctuations in Recent Years and Predictions for the Near Future

In 2000, Tax Freedom Day was celebrated May 3, the latest date ever. A string of tax cuts between 2001 and 2003 pushed Tax Freedom Day up by more than two weeks, so that it fell on April 16 in 2003 and April 17 in 2004. For the next three years, incomes and tax collections soared, pushing Tax Freedom Day back to April 26 in 2007.

Since 2006, corporate tax revenues have fallen sharply and are projected to do so again in 2009. Personal income taxes also fell in 2008 and are expected to fall again in 2009 due to the weakening economy and tax cuts in the stimulus package. Because most of this year's stimulus package's tax cuts continue through 2010, Tax Freedom Day could be expected to shift later by a few days next year only if the economy improves. For 2011, both the stimulus package's tax cuts and the earlier Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 are set to expire. The future timing of Tax Freedom Day will depend on which tax cuts Congress and the Obama Administration choose to extend through 2011 and thereafter.

Which Taxes Are the Biggest?

Five major categories of tax dominate the tax burden. Individual income taxes, both federal and state, require 38 days' work. Payroll taxes take another 27 days' work. Sales and excise taxes, mostly state and local, take 15 days to pay off. Corporate income taxes take 6 days, and property taxes take 12. Americans will log 4 more days to pay other miscellaneous taxes, most notably including motor vehicle license taxes and severance taxes, and about 1 day for estate taxes.

Tax Freedom Day by State

Residents of Alaska will bear the lowest average tax burden in 2009. Because of their modest incomes and extremely low state-and-local tax burden, we estimate Alaska's Tax Freedom Day for 2009 to be March 23. Louisiana, Mississippi, South Dakota and West Virginia round out the five states that we project will experience Tax Freedom Day earliest in 2009.

The residents of Connecticut will celebrate last, as usual, working until the 120th day of the year, from January 1 to April 30, before earning enough to pay all their taxes. Because Connecticut's income per capita is higher than in any other state, its residents pay extraordinarily high federal income taxes. Nearby states New Jersey and New York are second and third, respectively, California and Maryland round out the top five.

Tax Freedom Day by State, 2009

State

Days Spent Working to Pay Taxes

Tax Freedom Day

Rank

United States

103

April 13

 ---

Alabama

92

April 2

44

Alaska

82

March 23

50

Arizona

100

April 10

23

Arkansas

94

April 4

37

California

110

April 20

4

Colorado

102

April 12

16

Connecticut

120

April 30

1

Delaware

101

April 11

20

Florida

99

April 9

27

Georgia

102

April 12

17

Hawaii

103

April 13

14

Idaho

102

April 12

18

Illinois

103

April 13

15

Indiana

98

April 8

28

Iowa

94

April 4

39

Kansas

98

April 8

30

Kentucky

93

April 3

41

Louisiana

87

March 28

49

Maine

96

April 6

33

Maryland

109

April 19

5

Massachusetts

106

April 16

7

Michigan

100

April 10

24

Minnesota

105

April 15

9

Mississippi

87

March 28

48

Missouri

96

April 6

34

Montana

93

April 3

42

Nebraska

98

April 8

31

Nevada

98

April 8

29

New Hampshire

100

April 10

22

New Jersey

119

April 29

2

New Mexico

92

April 2

43

New York

115

April 25

3

North Carolina

99

April 9

25

North Dakota

91

April 1

46

Ohio

101

April 11

21

Oklahoma

94

April 4

40

Oregon

99

April 9

26

Pennsylvania

104

April 14

11

Rhode Island

104

April 14

10

South Carolina

94

April 4

38

South Dakota

88

March 29

47

Tennessee

95

April 5

36

Texas

96

April 6

32

Utah

103

April 13

13

Vermont

102

April 12

19

Virginia

106

April 16

6

Washington

106

April 16

8

West Virginia

91

April 1

45

Wisconsin

103

April 13

12

Wyoming

95

April 5

35

District of Columbia

103

April 13

--- 

How Tax Freedom Day Is Calculated

Tax Freedom Day answers the basic question, "What price is the nation paying for government?" An official government figure for total tax collections is divided by the nation's total income. The answer this year is that taxes will amount to 28.2 percent of our income, and the stretch of 103 days from January 1 to April 13 is 28.2 percent of the year. Income and tax data are then parsed out to the states, yielding 50 state-specific Tax Freedom Days.

Tax Freedom Day: Origin and Methodology

Tax Freedom Day was conceived by Florida businessman Dallas Hostetler in 1948. He performed the calculation himself and promoted his copyrighted concept until his retirement in 1971. He deeded the intellectual property to the Tax Foundation, and since then the Tax Foundation has used historical data to calculate Tax Freedom Day back to the beginning of the 20th century. In 1990 sufficient data became available to calculate a separate Tax Freedom Day for each state.

Tax Freedom Day is a vivid, calendar based illustration of government’s cost, and it gives Americans an easy way to gauge the overall tax take. We count every dollar that is officially part of national income according to the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis, and every payment to the government that is officially considered a tax is counted. Taxes at all levels of government are included, whether levied by Uncle Sam or state and local governments. We assume that the nation starts working on January 1, earning the same amount each day and spending nothing. When the nation has finally earned enough to pay all the taxes that will be due for that year, Tax Freedom Day has arrived.

 

For more information and a full copy the report,
go to http://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/93.html.